ERWC

Course Description

 

Welcome to my class! I am pleased to have a chance to work with you this year. As we begin this semester, it is important that you understand my expectations. By signing this contract, you acknowledge your value as a member of this class and accept the responsibilities of membership.

COURSE DESCRIPTION

The ERWC course is a CSU-designed English course that focuses on non-fiction (expository) reading and writing skills. This course is designed to better prepare students for the type of expository reading and writing skills that they need to be successful in college and the workplace.

The goal of the Expository Reading and Writing Course is to prepare college-bound seniors for the literacy demands of higher education. Through a sequence of rigorous instructional modules, students in this year-long, rhetoric-based course develop advanced proficiencies in expository, analytical, and argumentative reading and writing. The cornerstone of the course—the assignment template—presents a process for helping students read, comprehend, and respond to nonfiction and literary texts. Modules also provide instruction in research methods and documentation conventions.  Students will be expected to increase their awareness of the rhetorical strategies employed by authors, and to apply those strategies in their own writing. They will read closely to examine the relationship between an author’s argument or theme and his or her audience and purpose, to analyze the impact of structural and rhetorical strategies and to examine the social, political, and philosophical assumptions that underlie the text. By the end of this year-long course, students will be expected to use this process independently when reading unfamiliar texts and writing in response to them. Course texts include contemporary essays, newspaper and magazine articles, editorials, reports, biographies, memos, assorted public documents, and other non-fiction texts. Written assessments and holistic scoring guides conclude each unit.

 

OBJECTIVES

Students in ERWC will:

  • Analyze an author’s use of rhetorical devices, patterns of organization, and word choice
  • Analyze an author’s explicit and implicit viewpoints
  • Critique and/or defend an author’s arguments by referring to and citing the text
  • Formulate personal viewpoints and make claims based on the text
  • Develop multiple academic and analytical essays that are focused and persuasive
  • Revise writing to improve argument and organization, and revise the work of peers
  • Record rubric scores for each essay in order to reflect and improve on subsequent essays
  • Practice strategies for “on-demand” timed essay tests
  • Practice Speaking/Listening Skills in a variety of ways

ORGANIZATION

ERWC is designed so that every unit follows the same sequential method of rhetorical reading and writing. Each topic we explore will take 2-6 weeks, depending on the length of the readings and will follow this sequence.

  • Reading Rhetorically (strategies and activities for Pre-Reading, Reading, and Post-Reading)
  • Connecting Reading to Writing (strategies and activities for Referencing Text, Negotiating Voices)
  • Writing Rhetorically (strategies and activities for Prewriting, Writing, Revising, Editing, Evaluating)
    • There may be additional speaking/listening abilities explored in these units (Speeches, Debates, Discussion, Class Presentations, etc)

 

Posts

1/31/18--Class Info

*Journal #8
*TED Talk--Why Privacy Matters
HW: 1. read chapters 7-8 2. Vocab story 3 due Friday. 3. AOW annotations and blog due Friday. 

1/30/18--Class Info

*Quiz Section 2, chapters 1-3
*Journal #7
*read chapters 5-6
HW: 1. finish reading Section 2 chapters 5-6 2. Vocab 3 story due Friday. 3. AOW 3 annotations and blog due Friday. 

1/29/18--Class Info

*present Hate Week posters
*stamp Vocab 2 and AOW 2
*briefly discuss proles
*Vocab 3
*AOW 3
HW: 1. read through Section 2, chapter 4 by tomorrow. 2. Vocab 3 story due Friday. 3. AOW 3 blog and annotations due Friday. 

1/26/18--Class Info

**Sub Today**
 
*Vocab quiz 2
*Read Section 2, Chapters 2-4 for Monday
HW: finish read Section 2, chapters 2-4

1/25/18--Class Info

*Journal #6
*Hate Week Poster
HW: 1. Vocab story 2 due tomorrow. 2. AOW 2 annotations and blog due tomorrow. 3. Read Section 2, chapter 1.

1/24/18--Class Info

* Section 1 discussion 
HW: 1. Vocab story 2 due Friday. 2. AOW #2 annotations and blog due Friday.

1/23/18--Class Info

*Read Section 2, chapter 1 of 1984 OR work on AOW #2 annotations and blog post
(sub for period 6)
HW: 1. read section 2, chapter 1 for tomorrow 2. vocab 2 story due Friday. 3. AOW 2 annotations and blog posts due Friday 

1/19/18--Class Info

*Vocab Quiz 1
*Journal #5
*Discussion 
HW: 1. Blog response due today. 2. Read chapters 6-7 for Monday. 

1/18/18--Class Info

*Newspeak Appendix Close Read (packet pages 24-25, book pages 298-312)
HW: 1. Vocab story due tomorrow. 2. AOW #1 annotations due tomorrow. 3. AOW #1 post and responses due tomorrow on turnitin.com. 

1/17/18--Class Info

*Journal #4
*Read chapter 5
HW: 1. finish reading chapter 5. 2. annotate AOW #1 due Friday. 3. Turnitin.com Discussion due Friday. 4. Vocab story for Vocab list 1 due Friday. 

1/16/18--Class Info

*Vocab list #1--on page 33 of packet (story due Friday)
*verbal quiz and discussion for chapter 4 of 1984
*sign up for turnitin.com to access discussion for AOW #1
*"That's no phone. That's my tracker."--page 41 of packet--annotations and turnitin.com discussion due Friday
HW: 1. Post for AOW #1 due tomorrow night. 2. Responses to AOW #1 due Friday night. 3. Vocab 1 story due Friday. 4. AOW #1 annotations due Friday.