ENGL 1023H - English Composition II, Honors Description This course continues the writing, reading, research and critical thinking skills developed in Composition I. Further study of principles and techniques of expository and persuasive composition, analysis of texts, research methods, and critical thinking. This is an honors course. Please refer to the NWACC Honors Program section in the current catalog for more information.
Pre-Requisite Completion of ENGL 1013 or ENGL 1013H with a grade greater than or equal to B.
Co-Requisite N/A
Cross Listed Course N/A
3 Credit Hour(s)
Contact Hours 45 lecture hours
3 Faculty Load Hour(s)
Semesters Offered Fall, Spring, Summer
ACTS Equivalent ENGL1023 (ACTS) - Composition II
Grade Mode A-F
Learning Outcomes Students completing this course will be able to:
- Compose focused, coherent, and developed writing in multiple genres.
- Use writing strategies to invent, draft, revise, and edit major writing projects.
- Adopt voice, style, and tone appropriate to the rhetorical situation.
- Control surface features such as syntax, grammar, punctuation, and spelling.
- Read, analyze, and interpret print and non-print texts.
- Locate, evaluate, use, and credit reliable resources.
- Collaborate with peers to plan, develop, and revise projects.
- Demonstrate cultural awareness through knowledge of diverse ideas, values, and perspectives.
Honors Outcomes
Honors classes (and the Honors Program) promote the following core values:
- Community students will demonstrate civic engagement through Service Learning and exploration of local, national, and global communities.
- Curiosity students will cultivate personal and intellectual curiosity through Investigation, discussion, and scholarship.
- Diversity students will explore multiple perspectives through interdisciplinary learning.
General Education Outcomes Supported
- Students develop higher order thinking skills.
- Students gain greater awareness of cultural perspectives.
- Students can write a clear, coherent, well-organized documents, which are substantially free of errors.
- Students employ active reading strategies to extract and construct meaning and educational value from texts and media.
- Students develop effective oral communication skills.
- Students develop information literacy.
Standard Practices Topics List - Rhetorical Situation
- Information literacy
- Critical reading skills
- Critical writing skills
- Analysis
- Synthesis
- Evaluation
- Argument
- Handling source material
- Editing
- Revision
- Formatting
Learning Activities - Individual projects/presentations
- Group projects/presentations
- Field Trips/events
- Guest Speakers
- Service Learning and/or
- Conference Poster
Assessments - Three to four papers in any combination with revisions and with in-class writing experience (at least one research-based with multiple sources to continue building on research skills)
- Quizzes
- Journals
- Out-of-class and in-class writing
Grading guidelines Instructors should assess proficiency in composition, student ability to write to specific rhetorical situations, sentence-level writing, and revision (writing process).
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