Course Syllabus Ingl 3103
Course Syllabus Ingl 3103
This document may be amended over the course of the semester in order to meet course objectives and correct
unintended errors.
General Information:
Alpha-numeric codification: INGL 3103
Course Title: Intermediate English I
Course Schedule: Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. CH 221. 9:30 a.m. 10:20 a.m.
Number of credits: 3
Contact Period: 3 hours per week
Non-Contact Period: 2 hours of outside assignments for each contact hour (6 hours in total)
Course Description (according to the 2008-2009 Undergraduate Catalogue of the University of Puerto Rico,
Mayagez Campus):
English: Analysis of selected readings, such as essays, fiction, poetry or drama, and practice in writing compositions with
attention given as needed to grammar and idiomatic expressions.
Pre/Co-requisites and other requirements:
Intermediate English I (INGL 3103) is the first course of a sequence designed for entering students at the Mayagez
Campus of the University of Puerto Rico who have scored 570 or above on the College Board Entrance Examination, but
who have not qualified for advanced placement in the Honors Program of the English Department by obtaining a score
of 4 or 5 on the Advanced Placement Test. Those students who receive 3 on this test are enrolled in English 3103. Students
who successfully pass INGL 3103 must pass INGL 3104 and six additional credit hours in the English department courses
to satisfy University requirements. Students who were enrolled in Basic English (INGL 3101 or 3102) in previous
semesters, CANNOT take this course. Please see me if you have any doubts about your placement in this course.
Course Objectives:
After completing INGL 3103, students should be able to demonstrate the following skills and abilities in the area of
writing:
Recognize in the texts they read several of the traditional modes of essay development such as narrative,
argument, evaluation, causal analysis, and rhetorical analysis
Effectively develop and organize the content of their own essays based on one or more of these modes
Apply the various stages of the writing process to his or her written work, including drafting, peer editing,
and publishing
Utilize one or more prewriting techniques
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Narrow a topic
State an authors purpose and intended audience
Write an effective thesis statement and recognize such statements when they are present in the texts they
encounter
Provide relevant supporting details and evidence/justification for relevant statements in their essays
Recognize the organizational structure of essays assigned for reading
Write successful introductory, transitional and concluding paragraphs for their own essays
Carry out an elementary online research project using the campus library and/or internet including the
proper use of outside sources and the basic forms of documentation
Effectively integrate the words of others into their own texts using direct quotations, paraphrasing and
summarizing.
Demonstrate correct usage of MLA documentation with general formatting, in-text citations, and the Works
Cited page
Instructional Strategies:
X conference X discussion X computation X seminar with formal presentation
X workshop research
Minimum or Required Resources Available:
Routine access to computing facilities and Internet (wired classroom), digital projector, overhead screen, speakers, TV
with DVD (available if needed)
Attendance:
Attendance of the course is compulsory and will be verified at the beginning of each class. Students are expected to come
to class all the time and to always be on time. The student is responsible for all material covered on the day s/he is
absent. You must provide the appropriate documentation for an absence to be considered excused and the professor will
reserve the right to accept an excuse or not. Excused absences and tardiness, as well as early departures from class,
count as of an unexcused absence, so make a point of being in class and on-time. After the equivalent of three
unexcused absences, 10% will be deducted from the students final grade per absence. Refer to the below chart for a
general idea of the consequences of absences/tardiness/early departures from class.
Unexcused Absences (and/or equivalent in tardiness)
1-3
4
5
6
7+
Contact Hours
5
10
15
15
Quantity
May Vary
1
1
1
1
1
TOTAL:
Percent
20%
20%
20%
20%
10%
10%
100%
NOTE: Drafts of essays will be shared in class on paper. Final essays will be turned in on paper. Do not send any
document to me by e-mail if I have not specifically requested you to do so.
Essays:
These papers should be written in academic format in response to class discussion and readings. Each paper should be
revised in a series of drafts as you develop your own individual approach to pre-writing, drafting, revising, editing, and
proofreading. As part of your grade you will visit the Writing Center in the Celis Building, office 323.
Journals/Reaction Papers:
Students will open an account on www.schoology.com, join the electronic classroom website and respond to particular
topics discussed in class, which will be announced 24-48 hours prior to the deadline. More information will be provided
on how to join. You should be able to answer in 150 characters or less, and be able to respond to any comments I might
post back.
Persuasive Project:
Students will be part of a persuasive project. They will either record a video or present in front of the class. Students will
invent a product, which they would like to sell, and promote it as to persuade the audience.
Final Exam: Students will have two hours to develop a concise and precise discussion on a topic that will be given on the
3-
This text is available in the General Library rather than in The Writing Center.
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6-