Syllabus
for English 203G,
Business
& Professional Communications
New Mexico
State University at Alamogordo
Spring
Semester 2002
Mondays
& Wednesdays, 2:30-3:45
CB 402
| NMSU-A Mission Statement | Instructor Contact Information: New Office Hours as of 3/6/02 |
| Course Description, Goals, & Objectives | Course Schedule |
| Grading Matters, as amended by unanimous agreement, April 10, 2002 | Classroom and University Policies |
| Required Textbooks & Materials | Useful Links |
| What's New: Part
6 Quiz for Feb. 25
Assignment for Letters of Application & Resumes Due Date for Resumes & Application Letters: M, March 18 |
Useless Links: Dilbert Cartoons |
The mission of the Alamogordo Branch of New Mexico State University, a comprehensive community college is to
Business & Professional
Communications
Prerequisite: Credit for English 111G
Catalogue Description: Effective writing for courses and careers in business, law, government, and other professions. Strategies for researching and writing correspondence and reports, with an emphasis on understanding and responding to a variety of communication tasks with a strong purpose, clear organization, and vigorous professional style.
Background: In the past, many business and accounting students at NMSU-A have found that the course English 218G, Scientific and Technical Communication fits--or is accepted--in their degree plans, including business degree plans. There will still be some overlap of rhetorical information and communication skill development between English 218G and English 203G. But, in order to better prepare students for specific disciplinary demands and work place demands, we offer English 203G to target the skills needed for success in the business environment. To that end, this course will draw upon communications assignments, such as case analyses, commonly found in the fields of business and law.
Course Objectives: Students will gain the ability to
| Grade Points | Assignments |
| 0, but required | Self-introduction posted to the Class Notice board |
| 10 | Quiz #1, Part 1 |
| 20 | Individual Project: 1 pg. Memo. May be revised |
| 10 | Quiz #2, Part 2 |
| 20 | Group Project: 1-2 pg. Bad News Letter. May be revised. |
| 10 | Quiz #3, Part 3 |
| 10 | Quiz #4, Part 6 |
| 10 | 1 pg. Application (Cover) Letter. May be revised. |
| 20 | 1-3 pg. Resume. May be revised. |
| 10 | Quiz #5, Part 4 |
| 20 | Group Website: 1-2 pg. Project Plan |
| 20 | Group Website: 1 pg. Progress Report |
| 40 | Group Website: Publishable Product. 3-4 web pages. |
| 10 | Quiz #6, Part 5 |
| 20 | 1 pg. Proposal for Formal Business Report, Proposal, or Plan |
| 40 | Annotated Bibliography for Formal Report, Proposal, or Plan |
| 90 | Formal Business Report, Proposal, or Plan. 4-8 pages of text, not counting formal elements; requires graphics |
| 360 Total Points | |
| 10 extra credit | Oral Report, Apr. 24th |
Bovee, Courtland, and John Thill. Business Communication Today. 6th ed. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 2000. [Referred to below as BCT]
Hacker, Diane. A Pocket Manual for English. St. Martin's, 2000.
Optional Texts:
Brusaw, Charles, Gerald Alred, and Walter Oliu. The Business Writer's Handbook. 6th ed. New York: St. Martin's, 2001.
Other Required Tools: A computer lab account; 4-5 computer disks,
constantly checked for viruses;
A good dictionary; a medium three-ring notebook, filler paper, dividers,
pens and pencils
| Instructor Contact Information | email: mcneel@nmsua.nmsu.edu
website: http://alamo.nmsu.edu/~rmcneel |
|
Ron McNeel Instructional Coordinator for English & Reading Professor of English |
Office Hours: New as of March 6, 2002
Mondays & Wednesdays, 10:30-12:30 Tuesdays: 2-6 Thursdays: By appointment only Office #115, Faculty Office Building Office Phone: 439-3742 |
Any changes will be announced in advance.
| Session # | Class Date | Activities and Assignments |
| 1 | W, Jan. 9 | Introduction to the course: "The Rules We Play By." Introduction to the text. |
| 2 | M, Jan. 14 | Discuss Chapter 1. Introduction to English 203G Classboard on Pegasus Mail, our intranet email program. Ungraded Assignment: Post a self-introduction to the classboard by Thursday, 1/21. Bring and discuss business communications artifacts. |
| 3 | W, Jan. 16 | Discuss Chapter 2. Exercise in ethics: case study. Formation of volunteer Total Quality Classroom Team. |
| Martin Luther King Jr.Holiday, Monday, Jan. 21
& Tuesday, Jan. 22.
Take action in the community for social justice. |
||
| 4 | W, Jan. 23 | Discuss Chapter 3. TQC meeting. |
| 5 | M, Jan. 28 | Assignment of memo. Lecture on correspondence. |
| 6 | W, Jan. 30 | Quiz #1 on Part 1. Discuss Chapter 4. Formation of teams for bad news letter assignment. |
| 7 | M, Feb. 4 | Discuss Chapter 5. |
| 8 | W, Feb 6 | Discuss Chapter 6. In-class work on bad news letter assignment. TQC meeting |
| Session # | Class Date | Activities and Assignments |
| 9 | M, Feb. 11 | Quiz #2 Part 2. Discuss Chapter 7 and 8. In-class work on group letter project. |
| 10 | W, Feb. 13 | Discuss Chapter 9. In-class work on group letter project. |
| 11 | M, Feb. 18 | Memo Assignment Due. Discuss Chapter 17. |
| 12 | W, Feb. 20 | Quiz #3 on Part 3.Discuss Chapter 18. Assignment of Application Letter and Resume. Possible tour of Career Center. TQC meeting. |
| 13 | M, Feb. 25 | Discuss Chapter 10. Quiz # 4 on Part 6. Formation of website project teams. |
| 14 | W, Feb. 27 | Bad News Letters are due from teams. Discuss Chapter 11. In-class work on website projects. Assign proposal for formal report. |
| 15 | M, Mar. 4 | Discuss Chapter 12. |
| Last Day to Drop individual courses with a grade of W, Wednesday, March 6 | ||
| 16 | W, Mar. 6 | Library Tour for Business Information Literacy. TQC Meeting. |
| Session # | Class Date | Assignments and Activities |
| 25 | M, Apr. 15 | Individual Conferences on formal reports. Website development. |
| 26 | W, Apr. 17 | Formal Report Construction. |
| Last day to Withdraw from the University, Thursday, April 18th | ||
| 27 | M, Apr. 22 | Formal Report Construction. |
| 28 | W, Apr. 24 | Extra Credit Oral Reports. Formal Reports are due. |
| 29 | M, Apr. 30 | Presentation of websites by groups. |
| 30 | M, May 6 | Final Exam Period, 1:00-3:00 P.M. Course Wrap-up and evaluation. |
1) The university administration insists that you do not use tobacco products, eat, or drink in the classrooms or laboratories.
2) Excessive absences may affect your final semester grade. Three unexcused absences may lower your grade by a full letter grade. Six absences, for any reason, will result in your grade being lowered by a full letter grade. Absences are reported to the administration so that the university may recover financial aid funds.
3) Chronic tardiness is unacceptable. If--on a rare occasion--you happen to be late, quietly take a seat in the row of desks or computers nearest the door. This row is to be left vacant for just this contingency. Two times late to class will count as one unexcused absence.
4) If you do not attend your individual conference on the formal written report, you will lose 20 points on this assignment.
5) Assignments turned in late, for whatever reason, will lose 10% of the maximum possible points for the assignment. The last day to turn in a late paper will be Wednesday, April 17.
5) You are responsible for the information presented at each class session whether or not you are there. In the case of some personal emergency, you must make an appointment with me, preferably in advance of the absence, to determine whether or not the absence will be excused and whether or not make-up work will be allowed.
6) Work that is missed and not made up, or make-up work that I will not accept, will receive a grade of zero.
7) If you plagiarize a paper or cheat on a test, you will be urged to drop the course. Also, you will receive a zero grade on the falsified assignment. The Student Handbook details disciplinary action which the University may take against students guilty of plagiarism.
8) A plagiarized research paper is sufficient cause for failure in the course. I reserve the right to ask for all your pre-final draft materials, such as your note cards or photocopied notes and your rough drafts--paper or electronic--before agreeing to grade your research paper.
9) Students with Disabilities: If you have or believe you have a disability, you may wish to self-identify. You can do so by providing documentation to the Counselor for Special Populations, Mr. Jim Payne (phone: 439-3724). Appropriate accommodations may then be provided for you.
10) If you have a condition which may affect your ability to exit safely from the premises in an emergency or which may cause an emergency during class, you are encouraged to discuss this in confidence with the instructor and/or the ADA Coordinator. If you have general questions about the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), call the ADA Coordinator, Doris Lynch, at 439-3717.
11) IN CASE OF EMERGENCY
If someone in your family needs to contact you in an emergency, use the following telephone numbers:
DAYTIME 439-3720
EVENING 439-3751 or 439-3761
To make it easier to find you, the person calling should know the class
(i.e. English 203G, the instructor, and the section that you are attending.
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