Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Course Description
English 101 provides instruction that focuses on writing skills, evaluating and explaining ideas,
conducting library and internet research, developing a research paper, and documenting research.
Placement is based on assessment and/or successful completion of ENGL 052 or ESOL 052 and
RDNG 052 or ESOL 054.
Basic Course Information
Instructor: Barbara Crawford
Office: HUMM 213 (Catonsville)
Phone: 443-840-3882 Email: bcrawford@ccbcmd.edu
Department phone number: 410-840-4138
Office Hours: Tuesdays: 11am 1pm (Owings Mills, Room 309, phone # in RM 309, 443-8405891)
Class Meeting day/time: Online (Instructor will log-in MTWR)
Class Work Expectation: This is a three-billable hour class. You are expected to complete at least
9 hours of work per week of reading, course preparation, homework, studying, etc.
Materials:
Kennedy, X.J., Doroty M. Kennedy and Marcia F. Muth. The Bedford Guide for College Writers, 9th
ed. Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2014.
Print.
Strunk, William and E.B.White. The Elements of Style, 4th ed. New York: Pearson-Longman,
2000. Print.
Course Objectives
Upon completion of this course, students will be able to
1. Employ a writing process that includes invention, planning, drafting, revising, editing and
proofreading.
2. Write whole essays with clear thesis statements and coherent and unified paragraphs
3. Think critically and support their thinking with details, examples, reasons and evidence
4. Write essays for a purpose, such as argumentation or exposition
5. Vary sentence structure and length for clarity, coherence and interest
6. Employ a variety of rhetorical strategies and modes to express complex ideas
7. Use language appropriate to a given audience
8. Conduct research using both print and electronic sources
9. Incorporate direct quotes, summaries and paraphrases into their essays
10. Use parenthetical documentation and provide documentation for sources on a Works Cited
page.
11. Edit their writing to conform to the grammar and punctuation rules of standard written English.
Major Topics
Writing as a recursive process
Unity, coherence, and clarity
Rhetorical Strategies
Revision
Editing and proofreading
Summarizing, paraphrasing and quoting
Documenting sources
Grammar, mechanics and usage
Evaluation
English 101 is designed to help you become a more effective and more confident writer through
practice, revision and editing, and studying the writing process. As the first course in a two-course
sequence of writing courses, English 101 is one of the essential components of the CCBC General
Education Program, providing knowledge, skills and attitudes that enable you to achieve many of your
academic and career goals. The course provides you with knowledge that includes basic methods for
planning and writing essays, methods of revision, and techniques for editing and proofreading. Most of
these methods and techniques can be readily transferred to life-work situations in which you will be
required to communicate your ideas and arguments in writing. The fundamental skills that you learn in
this course the thinking as well as writing skills- will enable you to develop exam responses and
longer essays for a variety of academic courses as well as job-related writing assignments. In addition,
the writing experiences that you have in this course will help you develop attitudes of persistence and
corporation that will enable you to succeed within the diversity of the contemporary world.
Requirements:
1. Participate actively in class activities/discussions
2. Write and revise four essays, employing all of the steps in the writing process
3. Submit all pieces of writing by the due dates. Five percent of final grade will be deducted for
every two class/week an assignment is late.* No assignment will be accepted more than two
weeks after the due date.
*consideration given for documented proof of illness or death
Grading Policy: All major assignments must be completed to earn credit for English 101. If your first
submitted essay earns a check mark (V-, V, or V+), instead of a grade, you must resubmit a revised
paper. If no revision is turned in of a paper that did not earn a grade on the first submitted draft, that
paper earns an F at the end of the semester.
The assignments will be graded as follows:
Essay 1
15%
Essay 2
15%
Essay 3
10%
Essay 4
20%
**All essays will include research and working with sources.
MLA Exercise
MLA Quiz
Summary
Drafts/Peer Review
Discussion Board Posts
Module Quizzes
Research items (on time)
Grammar Quiz
5%
5%
5%
5%
5%
5%
5%
5%
Attendance Policy
CCBC Dundalk
410-285-9808 or
410-285-9529 (TTY)
CCBC Essex
410-780-6741 or
410-238-4601 (TTY)
Course outline
Please note: Instructor may change dates and assignments as needed. SEE COURSE CALENDAR
FOR EXACT DUE DATES
Week 1
June 2: MODULE 1--Introductions/Course overview/Evaluation mode /
June 3: MODULE 2 --Introduction to the Writing Process/ Prewriting: How to move beyond writer's
block/ Practice pre-writing/ Use one of the discussed techniques /
READ: Chapter 1 Writing Process
June 4: MODULE 4--Essay structure & Development (thesis, support) / Taking a stand/ Working with
sources/ Summary/Paraphrase/Quoting discussion/
READ: Chapter 2 Reading Process
June 5: MODULE 5-- Summary Exercise due midnight (see course calendar for due date)/
Introductions/Conclusions/Grammar lesson / Begin essay 1 (Download assignment sheet from Writing
Assignments tab)
READ: Chapter 3 Critical Thinking Process/ using your tentative topic for essay 4, Do # 3 under
Additional Writing Assignments at the end of chapter on page 54
Week 2
June 9: Message instructor tentative topic/s for research essay this week: Topic has to deal with a
controversial issuean issue where the two sides find it difficult to agree. (No topics permitted on
abortion, same sex or the topics used for essays 1, 2) Essay 1 due for peer review by 12 noon (see
course calendar for due date)
READ: Chapter 9 Taking a Stand
June 10: MODULE 3 Review MLA lesson and MLA Guidelines on Purdue University OWL website in
MODULE 3/Do MLA Exercise due by midnight / Peer Review responses for essay 1 due back to
students by noon
READ: Chapter 36 MLA Style for Documenting Sources
June 11: MODULE 7 / Essay 1 due to instructor by midnight (see course calendar for due dates)
Begin grammar workshops /Take MLA quiz
READ: Review grammar section in textbook as needed (Chapters 38 42)
June 12: Read The Elements of Style and post to discussion board/ Take grammar diagnostic / Begin
Essay 2 due (see course calendar for due date)
READ: Chapter 32 (Finding Sources) and Chapter 33 (Evaluating Sources)
Week 3
June 16: Give instructor final topic for research essay/ Send 5 sources (in correct MLA format) that you
will use for essay 4 due by midnight/ Essay 2 due for peer review by 12 noon (see course calendar
for due date)
June 17: Peer Review responses for essay 2 due back to students by noon
June 18: Essay 2 due to instructor by midnight (see course calendar for due date)
June 19: Begin essay 3(see course calendar for due date)
Week 4
June 23: Essay 3 due for peer review by 12 noon (see course calendar for due date)
June 24: Peer Review responses for essay 3 due back to students by noon
READ: Chapter 12 Supporting a Position with Sources; Chapter 34 Integrating Sources
June 25: Essay 3 due to instructor by midnight
Chapter 35 Writing Your Research Paper
June 26/ Thesis and outline due for essay 4 due midnightFor thesis, essentially write a sentence
that clearly gives your position on the controversial issue and also include in the sentence three
reasons why you take that position. Outline should provide at least 3 evidence for each reason in
outline format for essay 4 (see outline template under assignment sheets)/ Sign up for Phone
Conferences
Week 5
June 30: Phone conferences
July 1: Phone conferences/ Last day to withdraw with a W
July 2: Essay 4 due for Peer Review by 12 noon (see course calendar for due date)
July 3:
Week 6
July 7: Peer Review responses for essay 4 due back to students by noon