You are on page 1of 7

Multimedia Writing & Rhetoric (WR 13300-07) Spring 2013 Jeffrey L.

Bain-Conkin MWF 9:35-10:25 Coleman-Morse 330 Office: 300 OShaughnessy Hall Office Hours: Friday 11:00-1:00, before and after class, and other times (by appointment) E-mail: jconkin@nd.edu Course Description Because researching and composing arguments is increasingly linked to technological tools, multimedia sections of Writing and Rhetoric teach students how to make the most of a wide array of resources. From standard tools, such as Microsoft Word, to more powerful Web sites and software, students in multimedia sections use composition technology to its fullest while exploring the unique opportunities and challenges of composing in the 21st century. While students do not need any prior technological skills, they should be ready to learn many of these skills over the course of the semester. Students should have access to computers and the Interweb. Course Objectives 1) Recognize the narratives that surround us in media every day. a) Examine myriad sources. b) Evaluate the goals of these narratives. c) Determine intended audiences. 2) Articulate what makes narratives effective. a) Appreciate various forms. b) Understand appropriate content. c) Comprehend ethics of Writing and Rhetoric. 3) Form narratives using a variety of media. a) Craft theses and appreciate rhetorical situations. b) Research others narratives. c) Support claims using evidence. d) Anticipate objections and alternatives. e) Make appropriate conclusions for imagined audiences. 4) Understand the creative process and its component steps. a) Brainstorm well. b) Freewrite and Draft. c) Rewrite. d) Edit and Format.

Course Materials The Craft of Research (Third Edition) Wayne C. Booth; Gregory G. Colomb; Joseph M. Williams Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2008. ISBN: 978-0-226-06566-3 Fresh Writing (Volume 12) Matthew Capdevielle, ed. Hayden-McNeil, 2012. ISBN: 978-0-738-05175-8 A Pocket Style Manual with 2009 MLA and 2010 APA Updates (Fifth Edition) Diana Hacker Bedford/St. Martins ISBN: 978-0-312-66480-0 A laptop (with wireless capability) or tablet is strongly recommended Notre Dame email account (checked daily) Scribd account Tumblr account Participation and Attendance Policy: I expect students to attend every class, but understand that sicknesses and other obligations occur. Therefore, students can miss three (3) class meetings with no penalty to their participation grade (see below). Officially-excused absences do not count for the three class meetings. One (1) point will disappear from a students participation grade (still below) for each additional absence. Participation comprises the subjective aspect of grading. Coming to class, asking questions, giving evidence of reading the assigned materials, will make borderline grades more likely to go up. Tardiness, sulking, surliness, lack of preparation, sleeping in class, will make borderline grades more likely to remain fixed. Regarding assignments and examinations, providing excuses for absences is the responsibility of the student, as is obtaining any material covered during the missed class. A list of acceptable excuses appears somewhere official, Im sure. Please let me know in advance if you will miss an examination or assignment because of an excused absence. Due dates for assignments remain as posted for students with unexcused absences. Each weekday late will result in the loss of one-third of one letter grade for the assignment. (For example, a paper due on Friday that would have received an A- automatically becomes a B+ before Monday at 11:59 pm) These late penalties remain in effect even after the student submits a revised draft.

Course Cancellation Policy: In the unlikely event that the instructor needs to cancel class, he will notify students via email (or, in emergencies, someone will post a notice on the door). Ultimately, students should not wait more than ten (10) minutes before leaving in the classroom. The instructor will provide his completed discussion and reading notes from the missed class as well as review missed materials upon students requests. Assignments and Grade Breakdown *All assignments will be individually completed unless instructor approves group work. *Instructor will provide assignment sheets for Portfolio assignments detailing expectations. Exams: Zero examinations in this course (Youre welcome) Participation: 5% See above for attendance and participation requirements. Workshops: 5% 1) Presenting at workshop. 2) Participating in others workshop (attending, contributing comments). Informal Writing: 10% 1) Blog/discussion-board entries, of which students will choose three (3) for grading. Grades determined by thoughtfulness and relevance to topic. 2) In-class exercises. Portfolio: 80% Narrative Essay: 20% 1000 words Rhetorical Analysis: 20% 1200 words Research Paper: 20% 2500 words Visual Essay: 20% Portfolio System and Deadlines All grades under the Portfolio component of the grading breakdown are in pencil until the final due date: May 1st at 11:59 pm. Deadlines for the initial drafts appear in the Course Schedule (see below). Students therefore have the opportunity to rewrite all assignments under the Portfolio category and re-submit them for a new grade. Note: grades are not guaranteed to improve, though rewrites using professorial, workshop, and peer-review comments should raise grades. Also, late penalties for initial drafts remain in effect for later draft grades. (For example, a paper that originally was one weekday late can only get an A-,

no matter how improved the newest draft is.) Resubmission Process: 1. Revise the assignment, possibly using instructor and peer feedback. *Note: due to the instructors grading style of prioritization, even making all suggested changes will not guarantee an A. *Note: there is a chance your resubmission could receive a lower grade. 2. Post the new assignment as a new entry on your Tumblr blog. Title it something like revised assignment X. 3. Email the instructor with: a. notice of resubmissions existence b. list/description of changes made to the assignment 4. The instructor will respond with either a new grade, or encouragement to change even more of the draft. Required University Writing Center and Student-Teacher Conferences Students must visit the Writing Center (Coleman-Morse 203) once over the course of the semester. The Writing Center is most effective for larger issues of structure, organization, transitions, et cetera. Although they accept drop-in students, it encourages scheduling appointments. During a class session, a Writing Center tutor will come and explain the appointment process. The visit to the Writing Center must happen prior to Fall Break. Bring your assignment with you! (Or post it to the N: drive.) After visiting the Writing Center, post a 120-word reaction to your experience. What did you expect? Did the visit change your perception of the Writing Center? Will you go again? Students must visit the instructors office hours twice during the semester: once before the break, and once after the break. Students should schedule an appointment with the instructor in advance. When scheduling an appointment, students should briefly state what they hope to accomplish during the conference. For example, students may use these conferences to improve essays for the portfolio submission or complain about the instructors (lack of) fashion sense. Academic Honesty Policy: All Notre Dame students pledge the following at their matriculation and sign multiple statements each semester, thoughdespite rumorsalmost never in blood: As a Member of the Notre Dame community, I will not participate in or tolerate academic dishonesty. Depending on the nature of the offense and the extent of dishonesty within an assignment/exam, penalties will range from a zero of the assignment/exam to failure of the course. (The following appears in an adapted form through permission from Professor Bill Svelmoe of Saint Marys College):

Plagiarism is the most serious academic offense a student or faculty member can commit. It is the passing off of anothers ideas or words as ones own; in effect, it is theft. Plagiarism destroys the educational process itself, inasmuch as education requires that students do the hard work of thinking and forming their own ideas and then sharing those ideas with others. The plagiarist shows disrespect not only for those from whom she steals and for those to whom she presents the plagiarized work, but also for herself. She is, in effect, saying that she is incapable of doing her own work, or that she is too lazy to give proper credit to those from whom she borrows. Students plagiarize primarily as a failure of time management, not character. Therefore, this course includes breaking assignments into component parts, requiring students to plan ahead for what appear to be unwieldy and intimidating projects. Students who still find themselves trawling the interweb at the eleventh hour angling to plagiarize should politely request an extension. Nearly always granted, these new due dates and accompanying penaltiesif anyemerge from an agreement between student and instructor. Plagiarism undercuts the trust that is essential in any community of learning. It will destroy the relationship between instructors and students, making a semesters course feel like an eternity. Post-plagiarism, the classroom experience becomes awkward for everyone. Future encounters on campus require students flee the instructor by hiding in garbage cans, nearby classrooms, or behind sculptures. Students wishing not to be embarrassed by banana peels on their clothes, by interrupting random classes, or by mocking squirrels should simply avoid plagiarism. For all of these reasons, the University of Notre Dame maintains an academic honesty policy. Accordingly, I treat incidents of plagiarism very seriously. At minimum, a student whose work is discovered to be plagiarized will fail the assignment in question. If, in my estimation, the student plagiarized with the deliberate intent to deceive, the student will fail the course, not just the assignment. In keeping with the official policy, I will report instances of plagiarism to appropriate administrators. It is every students responsibility to be aware of what plagiarism is and to learn how to document their work correctly. I will go over these procedures in class and am always available to answer questions. Never let the pressures of academia lead you into dishonesty. Character is more important than what may seem more obvious measures of success. Statement on Students with Disabilities: The University of Notre Dame does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national or ethnic origin, sex, disability, veteran status or age in the administration of any of its educational programs, admissions policies, scholarship and loan programs, athletic and other school-administered programs or in employment. The University has designated the Director of its Office of Institutional Equity to handle all inquiries regarding its efforts to comply with and carry out its responsibilities under Title IX and under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. The Title IX and

Section 504 coordinator may be contacted as follows: Director Office of Institutional Equity 414 Grace Hall (574) 631-0444 Course Schedule Note: Due Dates (**) apply to 11:59 pm (South Bend time) of the noted date, even for those students with unexcused absences. The student is responsible for posting her/his materials (and double-checking availability). Week One: Beginnings 16 January 18 January Syllabus, etc. How to Read

Week Two: Audiences and Situations (Work on Narrative Essays) 21 January Samples and Narrative Theory 23 January Audiences 25 January Situations Week Three: Introductions 28 January 30 January 1 February First paragraphs Peer Review (Narrative Script) **Narrative Script Due 11:59 pm Technologies

Week Four: Arguments, Theses, Topics 4 February Peer Review (Narrative Essay) 6 February Dissecting Arguments **Narrative Essay Due 11:59 pm 8 February Good topics Week Five: Organization and Conclusions 11 February Organization 13 February Conclusions 15 February How to Analyze **Topics/Theses (Research Paper) Due 11:59 pm Week Six: Reading Multimedia and Rhetorical Analysis 18 February Literacies 20 February Literacies 22 February Rhetorical Analyses Week Seven: 25 February 27 February 1 March Peer Review (Rhetorical Analysis) **Rhetorical Analysis Draft Due 11:59 pm Library Visit Library Visit

Week Eight: Evidence and Sources 4 March Finding sources 6 March Evaluating sources 8 March Research Paper **Annotated Bibliography of five sources (Research Paper) due 11:59 pm Week Nine: Visual Essays 18 March 20 March 22 March Week Ten: Visual Essays 25 March 27 March Samples and Dissections Technologies **Visual Proposal Sheet due 11:59 pm Quote Project Work on Visual Essays Work on Visual Essays

Week Eleven: Peer Review and Research Paper help 3 April Peer Review (Visual Essay) **Visual Essay Draft Due 11:59 pm 5 April Research Paper Week Twelve: Workshop Preparation 8 April Revision Process 10 April Rules for Workshop **Research Paper Draft Due 11:59 pm 12 April Practice Workshop Weeks Thirteen and Fourteen: Nothing but Workshops 15 April Workshop 17 April Workshop 19 April Workshop 22 April Workshop 24 April Workshop 26 April Workshop Week Fifteen: Teary Farewells 29 April Workshop 1 May **Portfolios due 11:59 pm (more tears)

You might also like