English 2420
Western World Literature II
3 credit hours
| Course Information |
Course Description: |
A survey of masterpieces of Western World literature: the Enlightenment, the Romantics, the Moderns, and the Post-Modern. |
Course Objectives: |
| Students will be able to
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| Prerequisites and Corequisites: |
| Students must have completed English 1010 and 1020 before they enroll in English 2420; students may take English 2420 without having taken English 2410. |
Course Topics: |
| This course includes a survey of the masterpieces of Western World literature from about 1600 to the current day. We will be reading assigned sections of literature from the Enlightenment, the Romantics, the Realists, and Moderns and Post-Moderns. Along the way we will examine selected topics in the cultures, languages and traditions of the societies that produced the works under study. An emphasis will be placed on critical reading and thinking as seen in students' writing. |
Specific Course Requirements: |
| Students should have the knowledge and abilities taught in freshman composition courses: essay writing, argumentation, documentation of sources, writing about literature, and college level writing abilities in grammar, punctuation, and mechanics. Students should also have college sophomore level abilities to read and interpret those readings critically. |
Textbooks, Supplementary Materials, Hardware and Software Requirements |
Required Textbooks: |
| available at http://rodp.bkstr.com |
Software Requirements: |
Microsoft Word is the recommended word processing software for this course. Students who do not have Microsoft Word should be able to submit essays as web pages (HTML files) or as rich text format files (RTF files). Essay assignments will be submitted to the WebCT assignment dropbox. At least one of the course assignments allows but does not require Real Player audio. This is free software available from the Internet at http://www.real.com. |
| Assessment and Grading |
Grading Procedure for Final Grades: |
Grading for the final average includes
See the Orientation section of the Course Content for additional details or differences. |
Grading Scale: |
900 - 1000 points = A There are no plus or minus grades assigned in RODP. |
Tests |
| There are four units of study in the class and four tests for each. Each test is preceded by a practice test for the unit. The tests are timed and administered within WebCT. Students do NOT need to secure a proctor for the tests. |
Essays: |
| The essays are papers in which students write about what they have read. Students will be given several specific topics for the essays, with each topic relating to a specific assigned reading. The essay should address the chosen topic by using the student's critical, analytic, and interpretive powers in relation to the assigned reading and should be at least 500 words in length. The focus of the essay is the student's interpretation about the assigned reading with support for that interpretation. The essays will be evaluated for how well students address the assigned topic, support their thesis and interpretation, and explain their ideas and opinions. Content, form, and MLA format will be evaluated. Internal documentation should be included, but the Works Cited page can be omitted. An example of an informal essay will be given early in the course. Some student essays may ultimately be posted to the class web pages. Also, students should keep on electronic file a record of the evaluations of the essays. |
Homework: |
| During the semester, several short homework assignments will be made for students to complete. These assignments will consist of emails to the instructor or to other students, postings to the message board, and other short activities related to the content of the course. |
Literature Discussion: |
Students will be asked to post messages to the discussion board most weeks during the term, including original messages about student's analyses and interpretations and opinions about the reading and message in response to their classmates' messages for a total of at least 300 words per week. |
Assignments and Participation |
Assignments and Projects: |
| Students will complete four units on the literary movements covered by the course. In each unit, students will read background material online in the course modules, will read assigned readings from the text, will engage in weekly class participation via the discussion board, and will complete a homework assignment. For each unit, there is a test and a practice test to complete. Also, during the semester, students will write two extended essays about the literature they read. |
Class Participation: |
| Students are encouraged to stay in touch with one another and with the instructor by electronic means inside WebCT--sending, reading, and responding to email, discussion, and (optionally) chat. Doing so is vital in an online course, as is keeping up with assignments and maintaining self-discipline and self-motivation. |
Punctuality: |
| All assignments for the entire course are easily visible in the course modules inside WebCT, and each assignment is given a due date for completion. All due dates for all the essays, homeworks, papers, class participations, and tests are clearly posted in the Calendar of our WebCT class. Students should be mindful of those due dates posted in the Calendar and should submit assignments in a timely manner. There will be one letter grade deducted for each day late on all assignments (10 points out of a 100-point assignment). |
| Course Ground Rules |
| On English 1010 and 1020: English 1010 and 1020 are prerequisites to this course and must be completed before students enroll in English 2420. Students are expected to demonstrate in their writing those writing and documentation skills taught in English 1010 and 1020. On English 2410 and 2420: Students may take English 2420 without having taken English 2410. On plagiarism: Plagiarism, cheating, and other forms of academic dishonesty are prohibited. According to Webster's Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary, plagiarism is "to steal and pass off as one's own [the ideas or words of another]; to present as one's own an idea or product derived from an existing source." Also, see the Little-Brown Handbook, page 687, for a checklist to avoid plagiarism. In an online literature course, regular attendance takes the form keeping up with email from the professor and other students, posting to discussions boards in a timely manner, and submitting class assignments on time. If for some reason the student must hand in any assignment late, it is his or her responsibility to contact the professor prior to the due date. |
| Guidelines for Communications |
Email: |
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Discussions: |
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Chat: |
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Web Resources: |
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Library |
| The Tennessee Virtual Library is available to all students enrolled in the Regents Degree Program. Links to library materials (such as electronic journals, databases, interlibrary loans, digital reserves, dictionaries, encyclopedias, maps, and librarian support) and Internet resources needed by learners to complete online assignments and as background reading must be included in all courses. |
Students With Disabilities |
| Qualified students with disabilities will be provided reasonable and necessary academic accommodations if determined eligible by the appropriate disability services staff at their home institution. Prior to granting disability accommodations in this course, the instructor must receive written verification of a student's eligibility for specific accommodations from the disability services staff at the home institution. It is the student's responsibility to initiate contact with their home institution's disability services staff and to follow the established procedures for having the accommodation notice sent to the instructor. |
Syllabus Changes |
| The instructor reserves the right to make changes as necessary to this syllabus. If changes are necessitated during the term of the course, the instructor will immediately notify students of such changes both by individual email communication and posting both notification and nature of change(s) on the course bulletin board. |
Technical Support: |
For HELP with:
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