UNIVERSITY OF PUERTO RICO – ARECIBO
ENGLISH DEPARTMENT
INGL 3103, INTERMEDIATE ENGLISH, FALL 2009
PROF. JANE ALBERDESTON CORALIN
COURSE GUIDELINES
Office: Department of English, Room 10
Office Hours: Monday, Wednesday, and Friday: 2:30 – 4:30 pm
Email: jane.alberdeston@upr.edu
Course description: Intermediate Writing explores and analyzes select readings such as essays, stories, poetry and drama. It also includes writing, grammar and the use of idiomatic expressions. The Department's course syllabus is posted on the following website: http://ingles.upra.edu/
Penfield, Elizabeth. Short Takes: Model Essays for Composition, Ninth Edition. New York: Pearson Longman, 2007.
Online reserves, UPRA Library
A college-level English dictionary, such as Merriam-Webster or American Heritage
8 ½ x 11” lined loose-leaf paper
Welcome to Intermediate English 3103!
Important Course Information
Email:
Several times during the semester, I will send email messages to your university email address. Your university email inbox should be checked frequently for important messages from me.
Office Hours:
You are encouraged to meet with me throughout the semester. I realize class, work or life schedules might not allow for multiple meetings, however, I hope you will make an effort to talk with me about your work AT LEAST twice during the semester.
Student Responsibilities
Attendance:
At the beginning of every class, I will leave an attendance sign-in sheet at my desk. Every student in attendance should sign the sheet on entering and then return to their desks. The sign in sheet will remain on the desk for ten minutes after the start of class.
Missed Work (this includes missed assignments, exams):
It will be solely your responsibility to turn in missed work after an absence. All missed work and exams must be turned in one class week after the absence to receive credit. Work cannot be accepted via email. Work not turned in will receive a “0". Exams will need to be re-scheduled, at the request of the student. Quizzes cannot be made up.
You should remember that the course involves a hefty amount of in-class assignments, group exercises and peer-instructor discussion. This work is valuable to your experience and cannot be made up.
Assignments:
All work written outside of class must be typed and submitted in hard copy, Times New Roman, 12 font, with one inch margins all around. I will not accept any electronic submissions.
All typed essays must have your name, date, class number and section, and assignment title. Essays without this information will not be accepted and will receive a “0.” Please follow the format below:
Paulina Rubio, Intermediate English, 3103-ME5
November 24, 2007
Assignment: Essay 3: Classification
Handwritten work will be limited to in-class writing assignments. In-class essays must be neatly handwritten, double-spaced on lined paper, with one inch margins all around. Your name should appear in the upper-right hand corner of each page. If the paper does not meet this format, the paper will be returned with a reduced grade.
Significant Revision:
Because revision is a vital part of becoming a strong writer, all essays will revised.
‘Significant revision’ will be the only revision accepted. All significant revisions must be turned in with the original graded essay. We will discuss significant revision early in the semester.
Electronic devices: Cell phones, PDAs and pagers MUST be turned off during class. If an electronic device rings during class, I will ask you to leave for the remainder of the class time. Additionally, please leave your laptop computers closed.
Classroom Behavior:
Your classmates and I expect you to conduct yourself in ways that create a safe learning and teaching environment, free from violence, intimidation, and harassment. This space is created by mutual respect.
I expect you to take full responsibility for your own learning, As an active (rather than passive) learner, you should ask relevant questions, share your insights, participate in small and large group discussions, take notes, and complete assignments. You should do your best to accomplish these goals without interrupting others or being physically or verbally abusive. I expect you to work collaboratively with other students to support their learning; when you do this, your own learning will benefit as well.
Academic Honesty:
If you use words or ideas from another source (a book, friend, relative, website, etc.) without crediting that source in your paper, you are committing plagiarism, which is a form of academic dishonesty. Typical penalties range from being asked to redo an assignment to failing the course. Further discussion of plagiarism and the proper ways to cite sources will come during the semester, but if you have doubts or questions, please ask me at any time during the semester.
Friday, August 14, 2009
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