Formal Written Assignments
This semester, you will be responsible for three full-length critical analysis essays and an annotated bibliography. A critical analysis essay expresses the writer’s opinion and/or evaluation of a text by breaking the text down and studying its parts. Unless otherwise stated, all written assignments should be double-spaced, typed in 12-point Times New Roman font with one-inch margins. You will submit these assignments to Canvas.
Tentative Schedule of Formal Written Assignments
A1 (Critical Analysis Essay) | 3-5 pages | Due Week 4 |
A2 (Critical Analysis Essay) | 3-5 pages | Due Week 7 |
A3 (Annotated Bibliography) | 5-6 pages | Due Week 11 |
A4 (Researched Paper) | 8-10 pages | Due Week 15 |
Workshop Format
Much of this class is run as a workshop; that is, you will bring sections of your major writing assignments to class for students to read and comment on. These workshops are a substantial part of your grade. If you favor writing papers a day or two before they’re due, rather than constructing them piece by piece well before the due date, then this class might not be a good fit for you.
Response Papers (QUACs)
For each course text (beginning Week 2) you will write a 150 to 250 word response. These responses will be part of our discussion when we meet together. You might also find that ideas for your longer assignments grow out of these short responses. We will discuss the format for these responses in class during the first week. All QUACs are to be uploaded to Canvas by the beginning of class or they are late.
Grading
Formal Written Assignments (A1, A2, A3, A4) | 60% |
Attendance and Participation | 20% |
QUACs & Other Ancillary Work | 20% |
Your grade in English 2010 is based largely on improvement. I am more interested in your steady effort, growth, and achievement throughout the semester than in the letter grade of any individual assignment. Developing your reading and writing skills takes diligence, patience, and dedication. You will be rewarded for steady improvement on your papers. You will also be rewarded for consistent and thoughtful participation in class. Coming to class with missing or incomplete work or coming without having read and reflected on the required texts, will lower your participation grade. I will gladly discuss your progress with you throughout the semester, but I will not forecast your final grade.
As outlined on the course rubric (which we will review in class), I will assign a grade for your essays based on six areas: argument (thesis), support, organization, depth of topic exploration, style, and use of sentence variety, grammar, spelling, and usage. Broadly, an A essay is exceptionally well conceived, developed, organized, and expressed. A B essay offers a consistently strong response to the assignment. A C essay will generally demonstrate the competence expected of college-level writing and reasoning while exhibiting certain shortcomings. A D essay will offer a limited argument/analysis in response to the assignment wherein shortcomings largely outweigh the positive qualities of the writing.
While I will provide comments in these six areas as I evaluate your essays, my grade will be holistic rather than analytic; that is, I will base my grade on an overall impression of your performance in these six areas.