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Instructor: Dr. D.E. Haley Office: Burleson 106 |
Term: Fall 2000 Phone: 439-5991 |
Place/Time: Burleson 204; MWF Ofc. Hours: 9-11 a.m. MWF & by appointment |
Read this document
COMPLETELY at the beginning of the semester!|
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REQUIRED TEXT
Carbone, Nick. Writing Online: A Student's Guide to the Internet and World Wide
Web. 3d ed.
NOTE: A separate text, English on the Internet, will be proved free.
Additional Materials:
(1) Internet Access: By the end of the first week in class, you must have
established the ability to email me from somewhere other than the English
Department Computer Lab. Generally this means you'll have to arrange for
"dial-up access" to the internet (either through the University, if
available, or through an Internet Service Provider).
(2) Internet Browsing: Since you'll need internet access if you are to check
syllabus/course outline changes, and if you are to successfully complete all
the assignments for this course, you'll need access to the internet as
mentioned above. Email is the beginning; however, you'll also be
"surfing the net" early in the semester.
(3) Data Storage: You'll need at least two 3.5-inch diskette for data
storage; ideally, you'll have several on hand. I suggest that you keep your
disks in a portable storage box (we'll discuss ways to protect your disk).
Under no circumstances are you to attempt to keep all your information on the
hard drives in the EDCL.
(4) Portfolio Organizers: You need two file folders for your Portfolio. You'll need
these to keep the Portfolio organized into their two basic sections: Assignments
and Projects. These file folders must be letter-size (the color doesn't matter,
but they must be new).
Optional Materials:
You may want to purchase a small floppy disk carrier (I'll show you a couple
of examples, if you haven't seen them before). When you take data out of the lab
on disk, protect it with a carrier–many people don't
realize that scientific calculators and other typical book-bag items can erase
the data from a disk!
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COURSE POLICY
Basic Skills: I expect you to begin this course with
rudimentary typing and internet browsing abilities. Do not expect me to spend
class time teaching these very basic skills.
Attendance: You MUST attend class. Exams, quizzes, and paper
topics may be drawn from class discussion and other material not in your
textbook. There are NO excused absences in this class. Notes from the
health center, your therapist, faculty or staff in other ETSU programs, or
others do not constitute an excuse absence in this course--please don't show
me such notes. The ETSU English Department's policy concerning absences clearly states that
eight
absences constitute failure in a
course; due to the cumulative nature of this class, you will find it
difficult to pass the course if you accumulate more than three absences. You
may, occasionally, arrive late to class--by "occasionally," I mean once or
twice during the semester. Repeated tardiness will be recorded as absence
from class (scale: one absence for each two "tardies"). Note: If you must
be absent from class in order to complete work for another class, or to
attend or participate in University activities, you will still be "counted
absent." NOTE WELL: You will receive an "F" for this course if you
accumulate more than eight absences. In addition, I will reduce your final
percentage grade by two percent (2%) for each absence.
The Workshop Environment: Because we're meeting every day through the week,
I've set up a workshop environment for this class. Keep in mind, however, that this is
a class, which makes the atmosphere somewhat more formal than some other workshops. What
this means is that you may not disrupt the class by arriving late or leaving early (without
my permission), nor may you bring visitors (i.e., your spouse, therapist, or child) to class.
Email: ALWAYS begin the "subject line" of your email with the
identifier, ENGL3134; I get a lot of email from list-serves and
individuals, and may miss yours if you don't clearly identify yourself. The
first line of the "body" of your email is for your name; although many email
programs allow your full name in the "sender" area of the message, typing
your name as the first line of every email to me assures that I'll know who
you are, no matter what email program you use.
Electronic Communications Devices: Other than those we share in
class, you will disarm any noise-making devices you carry (i.e., cellular
phones, beepers, small children).
A Note About Children: Under no circumstances should you bring a
child into the computer laboratory. The university's insurance does not cover
non-students in laboratories, nor do I wish to compete with the obvious
attractions of the average tot. If you are concerned that your child care
provider may not be available during all of your class hours, I strongly suggest
you make arrangements for another provider to take over during these times. You
will not receive an "excused absence" for any reason. This policy
includes family emergencies, sudden nuclear attack--anything short of your own
demise.
Plagiarism: At this point I expect you know that plagiarism is
presenting in any way, deliberately or not, the work of another person as
your own. The penalty for plagiarism is outlined in university policy, and I
will strictly enforce it. All ETSU students agree to the University's Honor
Code; if you're not already familiar with that code, I suggest you read it at
your earliest opportunity.
Deadlines: These are NOT NEGOTIABLE. I will impose severe
penalties upon work that is submitted late -- those penalties may include,
but are not limited to, assigning a failing grade to the late assignment or
reducing of final or late work grade.
Appointments: In most weeks you may visit me without
appointment. You may also make an appointment to see me during office hours
or at other times. I encourage you to meet with me as often as you need to.
By the way, some professors consider failure to show up for an appointment to
be evidence of a character flaw or "controlling personality."
Students With Disabilities: If you have a disability that
should be brought to my attention, please have the appropriate University
office send me appropriate documentation. ETSU has well-established
guidelines for faculty and students to use in determining what arrangements
should be make for students with disabilities.
On Professional Academic Behavior: This is an "upper-level"
class. I am not your parent or guardian, nor am I a morals monitor. Now
that these obvious points are stated, we can proceed to behave as adults. I
don't care what internet sites you access (the EDCL does not keep track of
users' internet sessions); however, when you're in my class you may not
entertain yourself by using the computer for activities not directly related
to this class. Neither may you change any of the desktop or system settings
on the lab computers. I am not interested in discussing with you, in or out
of class, issues such as restricting access to certain internet sites,
private behavior on the internet (other than behavior that directly affects
this class), or business opportunities involving computers, the internet, or
writing. You may not use the lab for non-academic work; you may not
install or use "chat" software or games in the lab, nor may you print out
long, personal documents using lab equipment.
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ABOUT YOUR PORTFOLIO ASSESSMENT
Your grade for this course will be determined via a programmed portfolio
assessment. Each assignment will be assessed on a five-layer scale; at the
end of the term, your Portfolio of assignments will be assessed using a
similar rubric. The point values for each assignment, and for the final assessment,
will be distributed among these five layers (the percent values I've given are
based on a 100% scale). Each of you will have a file, in which
you'll put your assignments and other materials as instructed–this is your Portfolio.
Although the individual assignments are explained in detail later in the
syllabus, I want to list and explain, here, the five levels of grade that
each assignment may receive:
| V. Superior: (90%-100%) This is a text that exceeds the requirements for the assignment. The text (and you should know by now that a multimedia presentation–including the oral portion–is a text) meets professional requirements: worthwhile content; sensible organization; readable style; and appropriate design, visuals, and mechanics. |
| IV. Acceptable: (80%-89%) A text that satisfies most of the requirements for level V, above, or one that satisfies all these requirements but contains a reasonable number of mechanical errors that can be corrected easily. |
| III. Marginal: (70%-79%) A text that satisfies some of the requirements for level V work, or one that satisfies all the requirements but contains numerous errors that will require extensive correction. |
| II. Possible/Provisional: (60%-69%) A text that is barely acceptable, but that contains material I feel could be developed–with a lot of work–into a level-V text. |
| I. Unacceptable: (Less than 60%) A text that needs extensive revision to meet all the requirements of level-V work, or that has the type or amount of mechanical, rhetorical, or design errors that would distract readers. Texts that do not show improvement from first to final draft will also be assigned a level-I grade. |
CREATING YOUR PORTFOLIO
Note Well: Never take your Portfolio out of the lab. If
you need to review information in it, save a draft of the texts you need on a
3.5" disk and take that out of the lab. The EDCL is monitored at all open
times; the lab staff will keep an eye on your Portfolio while you're away. If
your Portfolio is empty, missing, or incomplete when I evaluate an assignment or
project, I will decrease your grade accordingly.
At the end of the semester I will evaluate, for a grade, your
entire Portfolio–it's in your best interests that you keep your Portfolio neat
and in order. Here's the basic organizational strategy:
If you want to record any of the data from your Portfolio, you may photocopy the materials; at the end of the term I'll allow you to remove, briefly, that material from the lab. Do not remove material from your Portfolio until I give you permission, and take the entire contents of the Portfolio out of the lab! I will keep the original documents in your Portfolio, including the disk(s) containing your final data; however, I won't use your name in research or teaching without written permission from you.
COURSE GRADE AND GRADING SCALE
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Projects: 4 @ 100 points Web Assignments: 50 points Final Portfolio Evaluation: 50 points |
Divided by 5 = | Your Scaled Grade (see below) |
For your semester grade, I follow the following scale:
|
96 - 100 = A+ 93 - 95 = A 90 - 92 = A- |
86 - 89 = B+ 83 - 85 = B 80 - 82 = B- |
76 - 79 = C+ 73 - 75 = C 70 - 72 = C- |
66 - 69 = D+ 63 - 65 = D 60 - 62 = D- |
Below 60 = F |
Note Well: Remember that your final grade can be reduced, if you miss classes or have excessive "tardies." |
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A TENTATIVE COURSE OUTLINE
As the semester progresses, this outline may (read: will) change. Check your course
outline regularly. The due dates are particularly
tentative; however, unless I tell you otherwise, these dates will apply.
| Week One M – Aug. 28: Introduction to the Course W – Aug. 30: Establishing and Sending E-Mail; Overview of On-Line Writing F – Sep. 1 : Assignment One– Web Page Review Week Two M – Sep. 4: The Browser and the World Wide Web W – Sep. 6 : HTML for Beginners; Creating a Sample Web Page F – Sep. 8: Assignment Two–Web Page Review; More HTML Week Three M – Sep. 11: Workshop on Web Page Design W – Sep. 13: Demonstration–HTML Editors & Web Page Builders F – Sep. 15: Assignment Three–Web Literature Review; Work Day Week Four M – Sep. 18: Portfolio Review [Last day to drop without a "W"] Project I Due W – Sep. 20: Literature on the Web F – Sep. 22: Assignment Four–Web Site Review; Exploring, Saving, and Evaluating E-Texts Week Five M – Sep. 25: Organizing Electronic Research W – Sep. 27: Writing for the Internet F – Sep. 29: Assignment Five–Web Site Review Week Six M – Oct. 2: Integrating Visuals and E-Texts W – Oct. 4: The Electronic Publisher's Office F – Oct. 6: Assignment Six–e-Journal Review Week 7 M – Oct. 9: Workshop–Developing Editorial Guidelines for the e-Journal W – Oct. 11: Small Groups–Preparing Individual Reports F – Oct. 13: Small Groups–Preparing Group Chapters for e-Journal Week 8 M – Oct. 16: [Mid-Term] Portfolio Review; Self-Assessment; Project 2 Due (e-Journal) W – Oct. 18: Literature on the Web F – Oct. 20: Assignment Seven–Web Site Review |
Week 9 M – Oct. 23: The Full-Length Internet Research Project W – Oct. 25: Qualitative and Quantitative Research Methods F – Oct. 27 NO CLASS (Fall Break) Week 10 M – Oct. 30 NO CLASS (Homecoming) W – Nov. 1: Confluence of Electronic and Print Data F – Nov. 3: Sample Presentations; Assignment Eight–Review of e-Text Week 11 M – Nov. 6: Portfolio Review W – Nov. 8: Small Groups–Revising and Editing for Project 3 F – Nov. 10: Workshop–Implementing Revisions; Assignment Nine–Review of Internet-Driven Presentation Week 12 M – Nov. 13 NO CLASS W – Nov. 15: Using PowerPoint; The Traditional Essay–Project 3 Due F – Nov. 17: Scanning, Storing, and Saving Images Week 13 M – Nov. 20: Preparing the Final Presentation; Small Group Workshop; Assignment Ten–TBA W – Nov. 22 NO CLASS (Thanksgiving) F – Nov. 24 NO CLASS (Thanksgiving) Week 14 M – Nov. 27: Preparing the Final Presentation–Q&A; Portfolio Review W – Nov. 29: Final Presentations F – Dec. 1: Final Presentations Week 15 M – Dec. 4: Final Presentations W – Dec. 6: Final Presentations [Last day to withdraw from university] F – Dec. 8: Final Presentations; All Portfolio Revisions Due [ Last class] Final Examination: 8:00-10:00 a.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 13 |
Project II:
The Class e-Journal
Project III:
A Traditional Paper with Internet Sources
Project IV:
Final Presentation (Multi-Media)
Self-Evaluation: Preparing Your Portfolio for Final Review
A Sample Web Page
Project II: The
Class e-Journal
In Project I you discovered ways to prepare and evaluate material from the
Internet. In this Project, you'll use that knowledge (in addition to your own
creativity and interests) to prepare a class e-Journal. We'll work on this project in class, via workshops and one-on-one work. You must
use the "template" style (from your textbook and lectures), and you
must remain consistent within the editorial guidelines set in class.
Step I: More elements of style. The Internet is more
than a place for expression of individuality and–admittedly–eccentricity; it
is an interchange of ideas, a confluence of experience and training that allows
unique intellectual investigations. One of the most exciting recent trends on
the WWW is the e-Journal, an electronic magazine that employs many of the
elements of print media with rapid communication of ideas, diverse staff, and
mutable formats. We'll examine some examples of e-Journals, and begin to design
a journal of our own.
Step II: Writing for the Internet. How does writing for the WWW differ–particularly
in e-Journals–from writing one produces for more traditional publications?
Here we'll examine some of the aspects of this form of writing, and we'll set
writing guidelines for our e-Journal.
Step III: Developing an editorial structure. How will our materials move
from writer to reader? At what point is the material edited? Who translates the
texts into HTML? Who manages and maintains hyperlinks? What do we do if any of
these people is run over by a bread truck? These decisions can make or break an
e-Journal, whose audience is bound to be as demanding as it is diverse.
Step IV: Getting to work. As the title of this step implies, we'll begin
to produce the texts for our e-Journal. Our various editorial groups will shape
the material into a coherent whole (a whole that meets the editorial standards
we've set for ourselves). As the sections of our e-Journal are completed,
they'll go to our publisher (that's your instructor) for posting.
Step V: The finished product? Now that we've created our sections,
written and translated our texts, and posted the e-Journal to a secure site,
we'll test the product before calling the draft "final." We'll employ
cross-testing–one group will test another's pages, and yet another group may
proofread the text–to evaluate our own success in this project.
Step VI: The finished product! Having done our best to produce an
attractive, consistent e-Journal, we'll post our final product and invite
comments from readers outside our class. We can't guarantee that comments will
be forthcoming; however, your instructor will pass along to you any comments
that come in.
A Traditional-Style Paper with Internet Sources
Having explored some of the possibilities of e-Publishing, we turn now to more traditional writing methods. In this Project you'll demonstrate the confluence of electronic and print research–in other words, you'll use strictly electronic media (i.e., the Internet and its various search engines, along with material from CD-ROM) to produce a traditional essay on a major author or work.
Step I: Determining your topic.
Step II: Using lab (and home computing) resources to conduct research.
Step III: Integrating visuals.
Step IV: Qualitative and quantitative research.
Step V: Organizing your data.
Step VI: Producing a first draft; assertive collaborative editing.
Step VII: Producing a second draft, with integrated elements
(graphic/text/hypertext/etc.).
Step VIII: Small group work.
Step IX: Developing consistent style and citations.
Step X: Producing and submitting a final draft.
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Handout: "Citing Internet Sources" (this is MLA-style, specific to
this class)
Final Presentation (Multi-Media)
Click this button to see the evaluation rubric for this project.
Web Assignments (an overview)
As the semester progresses, so with the variety and complexity of your web assignments. You begin by examining and reviewing web sites and web pages, progressing through examination of e-texts, to evaluation and commentary on the state of the Internet. At various points during the term you'll receive rubrics for determining the types of web sites you'll be evaluating. For more information, refer to your tentative course outline (and your instructor's lectures).
Click this button to see a printable web page review form
Click this button to see some examples of the web pages you'll be evaluating
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Self-Evaluation and Final Portfolio Evaluation
In the last two weeks of the semester, you'll evaluate your performance in the class (as demonstrated by your Portfolio and your participation in workshops and small groups). This self-evaluation is required and will be considered in the determination of your grade for the final portfolio assessment. Toward the end of the semester, look here for more information.
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Tentative Evaluation Form for Multi-Media Presentation
(Scale: 1-5 points, ascending qualitatively)
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Process: 1. Began with Clear Purpose 2. Command of Material 3. Creativity of Approach 4. Integration of Handouts/Visuals 5. Gave Sufficient Information 6. Clarity of Conclusion 7. Cited Sources |
Product: 8. Quality of Handouts 9. Quality of Visuals 10. Gave Sufficient Information 11. Clarity of Instructor’s Copy |
Presentation/Style: 12. Confidence/Relaxed Pose 13. Pronounced/Spoke Well 14. Good Posture/Eye Contact 15. Appropriate Gestures, etc. |
Of the TOTAL POINTS for this project, 75% are from the actual presentation
(determined by the above rubric) and
25% from your instructor's evaluation of this project and the accompanying
materials in your Portfolio. Of the final 25%, points will be distributed as
follows:
Superior (21-25 points)
Acceptable (16-20 points)
Marginal (11-15 points)
Possible/Provisional (6-10 points)
Unacceptable (0-5 points)
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