Tutorial: 8 hours per week
Classroom instructional mode will vary with instructional goals. Lecture, large-group discussion, small-group discussion and learning activities, cooperative learning, and individual learning activities may be employed.
Lab tutorial and scheduled individual appointment time will be available as appropriate. Student-directed learning outside of the classroom will also constitute a component of instruction.
Writing
Where appropriate, students will receive instruction concerning:
- Strategies
- generating ideas and accessing information
- setting purpose and recognizing needs of the audience
- planning design and organizing material
- initial drafting techniques
- obtaining and handling feedback
- redrafting and editing
- proofreading and producing final copy
- Standard Written Expression
- mechanics and punctuation (end marks, commas, apostrophes, quotation marks, semi-colons, and capital letters, etc.)
- usage errors (verb forms, agreement, inflections, pronoun reference, and fractured idioms, etc.)
- Syntactic and Semantic Control
- sentence construction (simple, compound, complex, and compound-complex sentences)
- sentence variety (use of infinitive phrases, appositives, and other adjectival and adverbial constructions)
- avoiding sentence errors (fragments, run-ons, faulty parallelism, dangling modifiers, etc.)
- use of abstract and specific language
- choice of appropriate words (formality, connotation, precision, etc.)
Reading
Students will receive instruction in the following areas, using reading materials selected from a variety of academic contexts covering a range of topics:
- Identifying main idea
- Differentiating main ideas from supporting details
- Drawing inferences and determining implications
- Distinguishing fact from opinion
- Identifying cause and effect
- Recognizing author's tone, intent, and point of view
- Paraphrasing
- Making generalizations
- Summarizing
- Making comparisons and synthesizing ideas from different sources
- Compiling a brief report based on a lengthy article or book
- Critically evaluating ideas in text
- Conducting library research
- Participating in class discussion
- Developing flexibility in reading speed
- Using context to determine meaning
- Making a short oral presentation
Upon successful completion of the course students will be able to:
Writing
- develop confidence and experience using the process of writing;
- augment experience and effectiveness at composing a variety of practical writing assignments;
- gain initial experience with forms of writing that promote the development of analytical and critical thinking abilities;
- gain initial experience with the techniques and styles of essays and reports;
- improve awareness and control of the degrees of language formality suitable for different writing tasks;
- improve ability to make appropriate word choices;
- demonstrate growth in ability to create texts characterized by effective unity, organization and support;
- demonstrate growth in ability to convey feelings, ideas and opinions in appropriate written formats;
- demonstrate initial competency constructing multi-paragraph composition.
Reading
- develop and practice effective strategies, skills, and approaches to reading that are directed at the improvement of comprehension of academic text;
- broaden and deepen general as well as content-specific knowledge in order to improve comprehension;
- demonstrate comprehension of text both orally and in written form;
- participate in group discussion and work cooperatively in an academic setting.
Assessment will be in accordance with the Douglas College Evaluation Policy using a mastery model of evaluation.
Progress will be monitored in an ongoing and cumulative fashion by the instructor, based on written and oral demonstrations of skill. Course credit will be granted on the basis of achievement of course objectives as demonstrated by satisfactory completion of course assignments. Satisfactory progress and undertaking of independent learning are expected. Specific feedback will accompany completed assignments, and more general feedback on progress will be provided periodically by the instructor as appropriate.
A minimum of 40% of the grade is allocated to 3 reading-based papers (minimum of one in-class). No more than 60% of grade is allocated to additional various reading and writing assignments such as quizzes, summaries, paragraphs, journals, responses, tests, debates, oral presentations, etc.
Instructors may use a student's record of attendance and/or level of active participation in the course as part of the student's graded performance. Where this occurs, expectations and grade calculations regarding class attendance and participation will be clearly defind in the instructor Course Outline.
Students may be required to purchase a textbook, coursepack, and/or computer disks.
or
ENGU placement test and interview
or
English Studies 12 or English First Peoples 12 with a minimum final grade of "C-"