English 10002: (Spring 2002)
(sec. 109, call #: 18951, 3 credit
hours)
Instructor:
Onur Azeri (aka: “O”)
Office:
Satterfield Hall 208A (upstairs)
Mailbox: English
Dept. Office, Satterfield Hall 113
Phone Numbers: Office: 330.672.1754, [emergency: 330.554.5057]
Email: oazeri@kent.edu,
philbomb69@hotmail.com
Office Hours: Weds.4-6pm, and by appointment
(please contact me)
Web page: www.personal.kent.edu/~oazeri
Required Text: A
Guide to College English 3rd
Edition, Dept. of English, KSU (Pearson Publishing)
Required Items: 1 manila folders, Internet access,
email account, and an OPEN MIND !
The goal of this class is two-fold: to encourage you to
continue working towards higher levels of thinking, reading and writing at the
college level, and to encourage you to mature in your understanding of
language, its uses, and the influence of language in the formation of how you
perceive the society and world around you.
To achieve both of these goals, we must work together to find the best
path of success for you. Doing ‘work’
at the college level varies from university to university. We will concentrate on getting ready for
reading, writing, analyzing, deciphering, contemplating, theorizing, and
questioning at the level expected from your future (or current) professors here
at Kent State University.
Class Policies:
Attendance and Class
Participation: (20% of overall
grade)
No more
than 4 unexcused absences of any kind through the semester. After 4, your grade will be dropped and
entire letter grade, and so on. If you
know that you are going to be absent ahead of time, please contact me and let
me know so we can make alternative arrangements for you to make up work and the
like. Also, if you have an official
function to go to (court, doctor, family emergency, let me know and get some
sort of documentation). Please be here ON
TIME ALL THE TIME. If I have to be
here, so do you, and besides this is your class and your chance to learn—the
more responsibility you take upon yourself to be present, the better your grade
is going to be, the more you are going to learn, and the more you are going to
have fun.
It is essential
that you contribute to this class—I do not want it to be all me lecturing
all of the time. There will be certain
class periods that I will talk a lot, but most of the time I would much rather
have you talking and interacting and engaging one another. I want this class to resemble or be a
community of respect, understanding, and inquiry. You are in college for a reason.
Students with
Disabilities:
In accordance with University Policy, if you have a documented disability and require accommodations to obtain equal access to this course, please contact me at the beginning of the semester or when given an assignment for which the accommodation is required. Students with disabilities must verify their eligibility through the Office of Student Disability Services (SDS) in the Michael Schwartz Student Services Center (672-3391).
Grades:
Incomplete grades will not be given in this class. Only in extreme circumstances will
they even be considered. Please see me
if you have any questions regarding this policy.
Plagiarism:
It will not be tolerated and you will fail this class if
you are caught. Please do not
plagiarize. More than likely I have
already read it before in another form, and I will recognize what is your writing
and what is not. There are wonderful
programs on the Internet that allow me to basically see if you plagiarized
something off the Internet. If you have
any questions, please see me.
Class Workload and Class Content:
Papers: (65% of final grade: 20% for first 2
papers, and 25% for final writing project)
We will be working
on two shorter papers (4-6 pages long) and one longer, sustained piece of
writing that will resemble and mimic the work that will be commonly asked of
you in college by your other professors.
The longer “writing
project” will be roughly 8-10 pages in
length. The first two writing
assignments will be primers for the longer work to be done the second half of
the semester. The first two will
prepare you, inform you of what is expected in the class, and will get you on
your way to writing like university students.
The third will require substantial work in the library and on the
internet researching our topic matter.
The point of the third paper is not to just regurgitate the information
that you find and read, but to think of a way to integrate those other people’s
words and ideas into your paper, and then to move beyond them, keeping them in
the rearview mirror. These other works
will provide a foundation for you to try and come up with something that is
original, interesting, well argued and supported by what others have to say on
the topic. But ideally, and for my
class, you will rely on your own position and your own argument that you will
defend with some conviction. Remember,
most of your future professors will expect that you can do this already and if
they see that you cannot, your grades will suffer—believe me.
Please
read, in your required handbook, the section on papers. I will be mostly following these guidelines
in constructing assignments and rhetorical/mechanical strategies. This is a WRITING CLASS—the thematic
of the class will only be the content for the framework already provided by the
language we use and the guidelines provided by the department and the university. We will learn much about the theme, but I
intend to make sure that you leave my class with at least the tools necessary
to succeed during the rest of your career as a student in college.
Along with these three more major writings, I will also be asking you to
write occasional writing homework assignments and in class—these will all be
connected with and will inform the three large papers we will be working
on. If you keep these points in mind
and you are present daily and you work hard, you will succeed.
If you are not happy with the grade that eventually shows up
in my grade book, don’t worry about it because, you have the option to
revise your paper as many times as you want before the end of the semester. This means that you can take the paper,
rework it, re-think it, re-envision it, and turn it back into me for another
grade (only papers that have been substantially changed may be given a new
grade). So basically, I am giving you
as many lives as you want. It will be
up to you to take advantage of this option.
My only warning is that you not wait until the end of the semester
to use this option because I do not want to read 500 papers at the end of the
semester--I do have some life outside of school (not really). I will talk about this in class for more
specifics.
Other Activities: (15% of your final grade)
Along with the three papers that we will be working on, I will also ask
you to write occasional reports for me about the readings that I assign to
you. These occasional assignments will
be for me to know that you are doing the work and that you are progressing.
These aren’t throw away papers—they require that you think about things and
that you write well. These writing
assignments will usually be associated with some reading assignment that I hand
out.
I hope that
you find English 10002 fruitful and enjoyable.
I know that General Education requirements can be mundane, boring, and
bland, but I will try to do my hardest to avoid all of these. We will be working hard. My emphasis is upon personal development
within the framework of the University and our society at large. I want you to not view this class as ‘just a
writing class,’ but more of an experience, more of a chance to write what you
want to write about, think about things you might not have questioned before,
and to allow yourself room to explore.
The end of the semester will come quickly, I promise. Seize this opportunity to think for
yourself, because in the future, the opportunities for you to do so come
with many strings attached and under many pressures and constraints.
If there is
anything that you want to see changed, anything you are having trouble with,
anything that is bothering you at all, please feel free to come and talk with
me. I am on your side and I am here to
help. That is what my position is all
about. Good luck and I look forward to
seeing all of you succeed.
“nihile est
sine rationale...”
“nothing
is without a reason...”
-Leibniz