Dr. William P. Banks
Assistant Professor of Composition/Rhetoric
Phone: 252.328.6674
Email: banksw@mail.ecu.edu
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Time: 3:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Place: Bate 2016
Office Hours: By Arrangement
Office: 2143 Bate Bldg.
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Teaching Composition: Theory and Practice
Introduction
For the last 150 years, no course has been so pervasive, so fundamentally wanted by college personnel and so fundamentally hated by first-year college students, and yet so absolutley remembered by college graduates as the ubiquitous first-year composition course, often known as "English 101" or "Freshman Comp." The course began in the mid-1800s at Harvard (as most historians tell us) as a direct response to the perception some faculty had that students entering college could not write, even though they had gone to elite private schools and had been extensively trained for entering college. Interestingly, although we have taught college composition as a required course at almost every college or univeristy, and despite the fact that we've done so for over a century, we continue to hear one constain refrain: college students can't write. Ask any professor on campus and you're likely to hear that.
So why do we keep teaching this course? Do we have some desire to see ourselves as martyrs for an abstract cause? Do really think we're teaching students to be better writers (even if they don't always produce better writing in every situation)? Regardless, the university and the community invest in this course, and our job (should we choose to accept it) is to do the best work we can in the teaching of first-year composition. Such work can be accomplished in several ways. For one, we should know the history of composition instruction, what has and hasn't worked in teaching writing. Second, we should know the research on cognition and literacy so that we understand the possibilities and problems we face in trying to teach "writing." Finally, we should know a great deal about what writing is and isn't, how it functions and doesn't, and what rhetoric can do to help us understand the socio-cultural dimensions of the writing act.
This course exists to help graduate students in English Studies to understand these three big concerns and to be as knowledgeable as possible about the discipline they teach.
Goals of English 6625
Upon completing English 6625, graduate students should
be able to
- recognize and articulate the primary epistemologies at work in
various methods of teaching writing at the college level;
- understand a history of how composition instruction became part of the university and what that history means to how we teach writing;
- differentiate between "rhetoric" and "composition" and recognize the role each concept plays in a first-year writing class;
- demonstrate a working knowledge of the primary issues facing the composition instructor (assessment and evaluation, the "grammar debate," language acquisition, cultural issues in teaching, the role of gender in teaching, etc.) and begin to develop methods for addressing these issues in their own courses;
- and understand their own biases and prejudices regarding language, literacy, and writing, and thus begin to develop methods for working in, around, and through them to better writing instructors.
To meet these goals, graduate students will generally read between
100 and 150 pages per week, take part in online discussion boards,
post responses to readings on individual student blogs, and engage
in other projects listed below.
Texts
- Villanueva, Victor, ed. Cross Talk in Comp Theory, 2nd ed. Urbana, IL: NCTE, 2003.
- Dunn, Patricia A. Talking, Sketching, Moving: Multiple Literacies in the Teaching of Writing. Portsmouth, NH: Boynton/Cook, 2001.
- Zak, Frances, and Christohper C. Weaver. The Theory and Practice of Grading Writing: Problems and Possibilities. Albany: SUNY Pr, 1998.
- Course Packet of Readings To Be Assigned (at times, these will
be PDFs available from links on the course
schedule and/or
assignments links)
- Internet-based websites/articles as listed on the course schedule
Instructor Expectations
Obviously, I expect a great deal of commitment from graduate
students. By choosing to tackle graduate school, you have plunged yourselves
further into the world of the "scholar." I hope you will enjoy that
work and take advantage of this time to read, write, and think about
issues and ideas you haven't considered before, or to go further than
you have in the past. "Reading" in graduate school, especially for
doctoral students, is an exhausting activity. While I expect graduate
students to "read" everything I assign, I hope that you will learn quickly
how to "skim and save." Do NOT try to read all these texts like you
would poems or novels, pouring over each sentence looking for nuances
of meaning. Try to get the big picture, isolate the key arguments/points
of the text, and keep it archived for future reference. Some texts,
I expect you to devour; others may not hold your interest. That's normal.
Regardless, I expect you alwaysto have a passing acquaintance
with ALL our readings and an engaged friendship with selected
others. Obviously, I expect that we'll have tremendous fun as we work
hard together this semester.
Projects
The following brief annotations will provide some context for
the sort of projects that this course will require this semester. More
thorough explanations, where necessary, will become available over
the course of the semester through the "Schedule" and "Assignment" links
that bookend this document.
- Reading Responses (30%)
Students will write responses (300 - 500 words) to course readings on Mondays & Wednesdays. Class members are expected to write responses to their classmates' blogs (usually around 100 words). Reading responses are due no later than 8:00 a.m. on the due dates so that classmates can write responses by 12:00 p.m. (noon). Students should have a total of ten (10) reading responses by the end of the semester and a total of twenty (20) peer responses.
- Literacy Narrative (10%)
Students will write an 8 - 10 page literacy narrative, much of which will be "invented" in class. These narratives will be due at the end of the semester in their final form, though interim dates may also exist so that the professor may check on progress and offer suggestions.
- Assignment Sequences (15%)
As the semester progresses, students will be responsible for preparing two assignment sequences: one for a unit from the standard 1100 syllabus and one for a unit from the standard 1200 syllabus.
- Essay Evaluations (15%)
Students will be given sample student-written essays from first-year composition courses and will be asked to write assessments and provide evaluations of the essays. Students will then participate in a "norming" session based on their evaluations.
Students will also complete a final exam (20%) during the last week of class and will be held accountable for appropriate "studentship" in the course (10%). Studentship means attending class everyday, participating in face-to-face discussions, participating in online "discussions," and meeting assigned deadlines for projects.
Attendance
Graduate students by default should be at every class meeting, especially
for a course which meets during a short summer session. Emergencies and problems
arise, so I can overlook your missing a couple of days of class, especially
since individual students can contribute significantly on the course
blog the days they miss in order to "make up" for not being physically
present. Missing more than twice, however, will dramatically impact a student's course
grade. Graduate classes rely on the students to be successful;
as such, your absenses will jeopardize learning for others, which
isn't acceptable. Because this course is required for those who wish to teach, I will be especially annoyed by absences; this class is simply too important for you to miss because each absence means that much more you'll not know before you start teaching, and that puts your future students' education in jeopardy!
Late Work
We all have very busy, trying lives, and as such, there come
times when we have to complete some work late. Each student in this class
is allowed an occasional late blog response, or other
short piece of writing. Neither major projects nor drafts of major projects may
be turned in late, as turning the drafts in late would invalidate the
reason for drafting in the first place and turning in final
projects late would prevent me from reading and evaluating them in time
to turn in grades at the end of the semester. Students may always turn
projects in early.
Conferences
Students
should schedule conferences with me when they do not understand comments
I've made on their projects or when they become confused about the expectations
of this course. Likewise, I may require a certain number of individual
and/or group conferences
during
the semester. After midterm, I will schedule conferences to discuss major
project proposals.
Academic Integrity
Students
are expected to be honest about individual effort and responsible
to peer/secondary
source materials that are included in their projects. Both plagiarizing
and turning in work written partially
or completely by someone else are forms of academic dishonesty and carry
serious penalties, the least serious of which is a grade of zero on the
particular assignment (and thus a D, at best, in the course), but could
also result in failure of the class and even expulsion
from the university. Students who keep up with their work and consult with their
peers and their professor have no reason or need to "cheat." Since
this course is focused on research ethics, I expect that students will
see me if they are unsure about how to cite or represent ideas/writing
by others so that we can figure it out without ending up in a nasty plagiarism
case.
Computers in the Classroom
Because we
meet in a computer-mediated classroom, we will make frequent use
of the machines. However, certain computer-related behaviors will
not be tolerated. You may check your email or free-surf the web
as you please before and after class, but after I announce the beginning
of class by starting the roll, any student still using email, chat programs,
or web browsers for non-class-related activities will loose
points for participation or may even be considered absent from class
for the day. **Likewise,
students retain sole responsibility for keeping electronic copies of
all their work.** Lost or stolen disks, erased disks,
home computer crashes, printer problems, etc. do NOT excuse you from
turning in work or having copies of all your work on disk at the end
of the semester. Remember to make frequent back-up copies of files
and keep copies on multiple disks.
Accommodations for Students with Special Needs
East Carolina University seeks to comply fully with the Americans with Disabilities
Act (ADA). Students requesting accommodations based on a covered disability
must go to the Department for Disability Services, located in Brewster A-114,
to verify the disability before any accommodations can occur. The telephone
number is 252-328-6799.
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