Who I Am: Noah Mass
E-mail:noahmass@mail.utexas.edu
Office: Parlin 403
Office Hours: TBA
Instructor InformationWho I Am: Noah Mass NavigationUser login |
Course PoliciesNoah Mass RHE 310:
Intermediate Expository Writing T,TH 2-3:30, FAC
10 Office: Parlin
403 Office Hours: T,
Th 12:00PM-1:30PM Course Policies Course Website: http://instructors.cwrl.utexas.edu/mass/node/259 PB Wiki Site: http://rhe310fall2007.pbwiki.com/ (Temporary
password for the wiki site is “supercool.”) ERES site: http://reserves.austin.utexas.edu/eres (Click “Student
Access To Electronic Reserves.” Search for my last name, and select this
class. The ERES password for this
class is also “supercool.”) RHE 310 is an
intermediate-level workshop in writing and editing designed to help students
tailor their writing for specific audiences, and discover new ways to make
their writing powerful, interesting and engaging for readers. This course will give students the
opportunity to examine a variety of written works in different genres: film
reviews, music writing, feature articles, editorials, short stories and
personal essays (among other forms).
We’ll examine the ways that these writers use language to reach their
audiences, and the ways that they use style—vocabulary, syntax, and
metaphor, as well as “tone” and “voice”—to make their work matter to their readers. However, the heart of the class
will be your own work. Examining
the works of other writers and breaking them down will help you to learn to
make your own stylistic choices in your own writing, and help you produce more
sophisticated, lively, thoughtful and engaging prose. Course
Requirements: You will write 3
major essays for this course, For
each major paper, we will have drafting/revision workshops and peer critique
sessions. Throughout the
course I will ask you to produce other short writing assignments, often
in-class, sometimes outside of it.
Some are designed to make you more aware of the choices you can make
about style; others will help you to generate ideas for class discussion and
strategies for your major writing projects. I will also ask you to produce posts on the wiki site
throughout the semester. In addition to
completing the three major papers including drafts, all of us will offer active
participation in peer reviews and during peers’ paper presentations. Finally, there are two major
exercises that will run throughout the course that you will participate in: Glossary
Exercise: When an assigned
reading is due, you must post to the PB wiki site for our Glossary Exercise the
night before class by 8:00PM. This
is an exercise which asks you to look closely at the way that a piece is
written and to identify a single word (and, sometimes, a phrase or group of
sentences) that you think is important in it—important to produce an
effect on a reader, and important to help the writer make his or her point (and
we’ll talk about what we mean by those things in class). You will create a page in PBWiki in the
name of that word, post a definition of the word from an on-line resource, and
write a short paragraph in which you explain why you chose the word, and why
you think it is important for us to consider. The guidelines for this assignment are on the wiki site’s
toolbar, “Glossary Exercise.” You
will not receive a grade for this, but fulfilling the assignment to post will
count for 10% of your final grade. Student
Showcase: For each unit, we'll devote 2 days to this exercise. Each student in Student Showcase will
have to take first crack at the writing prompt before the rest of the class has
to. These drafts will be strictly
for in-class review purposes--they
won't be graded, and I won't comment on them myself. Instead, students who've signed up for this exercise will produce
working drafts of the paper that the rest of the class has not yet begun
actually working on, and the non-showcasers will then break up into four groups
(per day) to critique, edit, provide feedback, and comment on the showcase
participants' work. After these
two days of Student Showcase, the entire class will produce "first"
drafts (second, in a sense, for the Showcasers) and we'll go through the
process of peer review, close edit of selected first drafts, etc, over the next
3 class meetings. Everyone will
also produce final drafts, but the showcase participants will have had a leg-up
on the rest of the class, as they’ve had that much more time to refine their
work. Plus, the non showcasers
will benefit from having reviewed other writers’ work before they’ve begun
theirs. Every student must sign up for Student Showcase once during the
semester. Each student will upload
drafts to the wiki site prior to our class meeting and also print out and bring
in 5 copies to class for the rest of us to review and critique. Although these drafts will not be
graded, fulfilling this assignment will count for 10% of your grade. Grading Policy Your final grade
in this course will be calculated as follows: Glossary and
other Wiki posts: 10% Student
Showcases: 10% Paper 1: 20% Paper 2: 30% Paper 3: 30% Texts: Writing With
Style by John Trimble Course Readings
available on-line at the ERES site Drafts: I don’t grade
first drafts (nor Student Showcase drafts), but I will comment on them
extensively. Not bringing in a
first draft for peer review, and not showing up for peer review, will severely
affect your grade in this course. Attendance: I follow the DRW
guidelines for attendance. After 3
unexcused absences, I will file an absence report with UT. After 5 absences, you will fail the
course. Late Arrivals: I expect you to
show up on time for class. If you
are more than 10 minutes late to class, I will count this lateness as ½
an absence. Be on time! |
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