General course information
Required Texts
- Graff, Gerald, and Cathy Birkenstein. They Say / I Say: The Moves that Matter in Academic Writing. Third edition. New York: Norton, 2013.
- Messenger, William E., et al. The Canadian Writer’s Handbook: Essentials Edition. Don Mills, Ontario: Oxford UP Canada, 2012.
- Yousafzai, Malala. I Am Malala: The Girl Who Stood Up for Education and Was Shot by the Taliban. With Christina Lamb. New York: Back Bay Books, 2015.
Additional Readings
- Bourgonjon, Jeroen, Martin Valcke, Ronald Soetaert, and Tammy Schellens. “Students’ Perceptions about the Use of Video Games in the Classroom.” Computers & Education 54.4 (2010): 1145-56. <resolver.scholarsportal.info.roxy.nipissingu.ca/resolve/03601315/v54i0004/1145_spatuovgitc.xml>
- Carron, Albert V., and Paul W. Dennis. “Strategic Decisions of Ice Hockey Coaches as a Function of Game Location.” Journal of Sports Sciences 17.4 (1999): 263-68. <resolver.scholarsportal.info.roxy.nipissingu.ca/resolve/02640414/v17i0004/263_sdoihcaafogl.xml>
- Gillam, Ken, and Shannon R. Wooden. “Post-Princess Models of Gender: The New Man in Disney/Pixar.” Journal of Popular Film and Television 36.1 (2008): 2-8. <resolver.scholarsportal.info.roxy.nipissingu.ca/resolve/01956051/v36i0001/2_pmogtnmid.xml>
- Hirschkind, Charles, and Saba Mahmood. “Feminism, the Taliban, and Politics of Counter-Insurgency.” Anthropological Quarterly 75.2 (2002): 339-54. <www.jstor.org.roxy.nipissingu.ca/stable/3318265>
- Orwell, George. “Politics and the English Language.” Horizon 13 (April 1946): 252-65. <www.unz.org/Pub/Horizon-1946apr-00252>
Course Expectations or Outputs
By the end of the course, students will be able to:
- recognize and formulate scholarly questions.
- use critical reading, thinking, and writing for sustained inquiry and communication.
- analyze and engage with the arguments of experts in writing assignments and essays.
- approach a writing assignment as a series of tasks, including finding, evaluating, analyzing, and synthesizing appropriate primary and secondary sources.
- critique effectively their own and others’ writing for premise, purpose, structure, and style.
- cite research in an established documentation style.
Course Outcomes
Students who successfully complete this course will demonstrate:
- an ability to identify and attend to their audience, purpose, argument, and possible biases.
- an ability to adhere to the conventions of format and structure appropriate to the rhetorical situation.
- an ability to write effective, coherent, and unified paragraphs.
- an understanding of writing as a process of inquiry, revision, rethinking, and rewriting.
Participation and Attendance
You are expected to participate in class in an informed manner. At the very least, you are expected to come to class regularly, having read all
assigned reading. You are expected to participate in class discussions. Keep in mind that participating in class is usually a highly rewarding
experience, greatly enhancing your ability to understand the course material and helping ensure your success in the course. Everyone is expected to
be courteous and professional at all times in class. The course will occasionally involve in-class exercises: you might be asked to write a
paragraph or two and to read and comment on a classmate’s writing. Not participating in these exercises (for whatever reason) will have an impact
upon your participation grade.
Assignment Submission
All essay assignments (except explicitly digital-based assignments and first-submission assignments) must be submitted on paper and through SafeAssign
on Blackboard. Assignments are due at the beginning of class on the date indicated by the assignment and must have been submitted to SafeAssign prior to
handing in the paper copy. You are always welcome to submit an assignment early. If you cannot submit the assignment to the instructor at the start of
class, you should either find the instructor in his office and submit it to him in person, or submit the assignment under the instructor’s door and send
an email to him as soon as possible after doing so indicating when you left it under the door. If you are unable to submit the assignment in paper for
the due date, you may email the assignment to the instructor and he will count it as submitted based on the timestamp of the email. (It is your
responsibility to ensure that you email the right person with the correct email address.) Note that submitting the assignment through SafeAssign is a
fine substitute for emailing the essay to the instructor. You will then need to submit a paper copy as soon as you can. You must always keep a copy of
your assignment until at least the graded assignment is returned to you: keeping the original file on your computer is usually fine. An assignment will
not be graded until it has been submitted both in paper and through SafeAssign. If for some reason a paper copy is never submitted, the assignment will
be graded without any feedback.
Lateness
Assignments are due in class, on the date indicated by the assignment. A 2% penalty will be applied to
the graded assignment for every day the assignment is late. This will include weekend days and public
holidays. Extensions may be granted for exceptional circumstances, especially for serious medical reasons:
in such cases, you should talk to the instructor as soon as possible and be prepared to submit medical
documentation about the problem (that should include a statement about the beginning and duration of the
issue).
Plagiarism
The Department of English Studies and Nipissing University maintain a strict policy on all forms of academic dishonesty.
Each assignment must be original work produced by the student only for this course. All referencing and documentation must
be complete and accurate for both direct and indirect quotations. Ignorance of what constitutes plagiarism will not be
accepted as an excuse: if you are uncertain about plagiarism, see your instructor immediately. All essays and tests are
subject to an additional oral and/or written test at the instructor’s discretion. All suspected plagiarism will be
reported to the chair of the department, the dean of the faculty, and the registrar of the university.