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ENG 201: English Building on rhetorical skills developed in ENG 101, students will analyze, interpret, and <br />Composition and Reading synthesize diverse texts in order to construct well -supported academic arguments and <br />II literary analyses. Emphasizing critical thinking, this course uses literature to develop <br />reading and writing skills beyond the level achieved in ENG 101. This course presents <br />the principles of expository writing and rhetorical style through coordinated reading <br />and writing assignments. As such, students will practice how to synthesize multiple <br />texts from a variety of sources to present and support a written argument and/or <br />report. Various expository writing techniques, such as argumentation, description, and <br />narration are further discussed. Classroom instruction integrates one-on-one writing <br />conference between teacher and student for individualized attention, needs <br />assessment, and monitored progress. Topics include the skills and procedures for <br />conducting research and the writing of a well -organized and well -developed report. <br />Classroom instruction integrates one-on-one writing conference between teacher and <br />student for individualized attention, needs assessment, and monitored progress. <br />Topics include: <br />Evaluation of the validity of premises and conclusions; terms, structure, and <br />components of formal argument and reasoning (such as inductive/deductive) <br />Formal and informal fallacies of thought, identification of premises and the <br />conclusions drawn from these premises, identification of various types of <br />evidence, and the evaluation of the validity of the use of evidence in a piece <br />of writing or other persuasive rhetoric. <br />Basic concepts for and terminology of literary analysis and distinctive features <br />and differences between individual literary genres, which must include <br />1. Poetry <br />2. Prose fiction <br />3. Drama <br />Non-fiction prose (sophisticated texts, commonly associated with great <br />works of literature and/or great ideas and often included in many <br />literary anthologies) can also be included. <br />• How to employ patterns of thought that develop and substantiate an <br />argument about or an interpretation of literary works (e.g., use comparison/ <br />contrast to persuade, not simply to observe, inductive/deductive patterns of <br />reasoning in forming judgments) <br />• How to clearly define crucial terms in order to clarify the issues at stake in an <br />interpretation of or an argument about literary works; how to select, to <br />effectively integrate, and to cite textual evidence from literary and outside <br />sources to support premises <br />• How to discuss such evidence by providing a warrant for a premise—e.g., the <br />quotation alone does not constitute evidence; the reasoning that follows is <br />what makes it evidence; how to incorporate and to respond to arguments in <br />literary analysis and interpretation in presenting one's own interpretations <br />• How to test alternative hypotheses or explanations and to consider <br />alternative sources of evidence or points of view in presenting interpretations <br />of or arguments about literary works <br />• Writing Conferences: 18 hours of individualized writing assignments/practice <br />in the class with one-on-one conferences with the instructor. <br />Prerequisite: GE ENG 101 <br />50 Hours Lecture <br />5.0 Quarter Credits <br />Last Revision Date on April 4, 2023 <br />