ENG 105 - Composition I Credits: 3 Lecture Hours: 3 Lab Hours: 0 Practicum Hours: 0 Work Experience: 0 Course Type: Core Composition I introduces students to the college-level writing process through the construction and revision of a series of expository and persuasive essays. Students may also produce other writing appropriate to the academic and working world. Through exposure to a variety of college-level readings, the students will build critical reading skills, and students will be expected to respond to assigned readings in a variety of ways. The course introduces library and computer-based research strategies. Students will write and revise at least 4 essays and produce a minimum of 20 pages. Prerequisite: Satisfactory writing skills Competencies
- Generate writing as an active process, using planning, drafting, revising, and editing
- Explore invention activities, such as brainstorming, listing, word-mapping, reading, freewriting, discussing, and journal writing
- Use planning and drafting techniques, such as outlining and freewriting
- Consider audience, purpose, and context
- Revise for clarity, coherence, and conciseness
- Use technology as appropriate given the task, assignment, and setting
- Evaluate strategies and approaches for organizing content
- Write well-structured introduction, body, and conclusion paragraphs
- Organize essays using thesis statements and topic sentences
- Use paragraphs as an organizational method
- Incorporate effective transitional devices
- Integrate relevant, credible supporting details and evidence from source materials
- Incorporate quotations from source material
- Examine college-level reading skills as an active part of the writing process
- Identify various genres of expository writing, including narrative, essay, and article
- Develop vocabulary, using relevant reference resources
- Examine various rhetorical and organizational methods
- Use effective reading techniques such as rereading, annotating, paraphrasing, and summarizing
- Analyze the content, expression, and context of verbal and/or visual texts
- Synthesize research resources appropriate to the task and context
- Develop researching skills to locate credible sources, which may include interviews, observations, surveys, DMACC library resources, library databases, and other web resources
- Distinguish between credible and unreliable print or electronic sources
- Integrate research into writing when appropriate
- Acknowledge ownership of ideas when using source information
- Integrate standard college-level documentation practices
- Understand definitions and consequences of plagiarism
- Identify reasons for documentation
- Distinguish between personal ideas and outside sources
- Develop summarizing, paraphrasing, and quoting skills using primary and secondary sources
- Integrate sources effectively within the given context
- Document sources in MLA or APA formatting style
- Adapt to the rules of Standard English grammar appropriate to context
- Use standard rules of grammar, punctuation, mechanics, and spelling
- Construct syntactically sound sentences using varied, appropriate vocabulary
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