Office Hours: MWF 9:00 10:00 a.m. and 2:00 3:00 p.m. T 2:30 4:00 p.m. Th 8:00 11:00 a.m. and 1:00 4:00 p.m.

Similar documents
GUIDELINES FOR APPLIED VOICE

Writing TCJ s writing contest is organized into three categories: 1.) Fiction; 2.) Nonfiction; 3.) Poetry

Trombone Study at the University of Florida

Constitution Essay Contest

Thesis and Dissertation Handbook

CEDAR CREST COLLEGE REL Spring 2010, Tuesdays/Thursdays, 2:30 3:45 p.m. Issues in Death and Dying 3 credits

Performance Dates on Jazz Band Website

Syllabus Woodwind Studios: MUAP 1202/2202 Spring 2018

University of Florida Jazz Band Syllabus and Student Handbook (MUN 1710, MUN 3713 and MUN 6715 ) Fall Website:

Syllabus Woodwind Studios: MUAP 1201/2201 Spring 2018

University of Pennsylvania Creative Writing: English Course Syllabus Spring Semester 2014 Classroom: Fisher-Bennett 25 Wednesday, 2-5 PM

02 MLA Manuscript Format: The Humanities Standard

C.B. Stewart, ENGL 132, Spring 2004, Introduction to Short Story and Novel

Introduction to Literature University of Northern Iowa Fall 2012 English 1120 Section 07

WHY YOU SHOULD ENCOURAGE YOUR STUDENTS TO PARTICIPATE & HOW YOU CAN HELP:

Syllabus for English 233H Literature as Satire

COLLEGE OF THE CANYONS SYLLABUS: 2014FA MUSIC POPULAR SONGWRITING

Guidelines for the 2014 SS-AAEA Undergraduate Paper Competition and the SS-AAEA Journal of Agricultural Economics

Submitting your Economics Senior Research to Special Collections

MUSIC COMPOSITION UCF

Seaver College Thesis Guidelines MFA in Screen and Television Writing

Thesis and Dissertation Handbook

MUSIC COMPOSITION. Composition VI Syllabus for Fall 2012

Lincoln-Way West High School Bands/Percussion. Syllabus, Classroom, and Ensemble Rules

OT 301 PENTATEUCH Fall 2016 Tuesday 7:00-9:40 p.m. Rev


Dissertation/Thesis Preparation Manual College of Graduate Studies Austin Peay State University

MUS : SURVEY OF MUSIC LITERATURE Cultural Arts Building, 1023 TTR 5:00-6:15 p.m.

AP English Literature and Composition Summer Reading 2017 It is a pleasure to welcome you to this intense yet rewarding experience.

MUS Chamber Choir (TR 2-250) Spring 2014 COURSE SYLLABUS

FIU School of Communication + Journalism DIG 4552 Advanced Multimedia Production Capstone (3 Credits) Tuesday/Thursday 4:15 6:15 p.m.

Tests will be open book and notes may be used except for the Italian musical terms, instrument abbreviations, and listening exam.

Spring 2017 Constitutional Symposium on Religious Liberty Essay Contest Entry forms are found on pages 2 & 3. The rubric is found on pages 4 & 5.

COMPARATIVE RELIGION Religion 131 Spring 2017

Functional Piano MUSI 1180 Monday, Wednesday Sessions FALL Course Number, Section Number, and Course Title: MUSI 1180 Functional Piano

Wind Ensemble.

GUIDELINES FOR MASTER S THESIS PREPARATION OFFICE OF GRADUATE STUDIES AND RESEARCH STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK COLLEGE AT BROCKPORT

JACKSON COMMUNITY COLLEGE Department of Music MUS 131 Understanding Music Syllabus Spring 2013

World Literature Senior Thesis Assignment The Essay

Poetry Writing Workshop: Spring Office: Armitage 421 Phone: Hours: TTh, by appt.

GMTA AUDITIONS INFORMATION & REQUIREMENTS Voice

SOUTHWESTERN MIDDLE SCHOOL

Syllabus Woodwind Studios: MUAP 3201/3202 Fall 2018

Text: Temple, Charles, et al. Children's Books in Children's Hands: An Introduction to Their Literature, 3rd ed. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 2005.

2. Spacing-. Click the Home tab and then click the little arrow in the Paragraph group.

HISTORY 3800 (The Historian s Craft), Spring :00 MWF, Haley 2196

2012 UIL Theatrical Design Contest

SYLLABUS FOR CHILDRENS LITERATURE

WOODWIND FACULTY CONTACT INFORMATION

Syllabus. MUS 101 History and Appreciation of Music

University of Central Florida MUE ~ Women s Chorus Dr. Kelly A. Miller, Instructor

Writing Portfolio. School for Advanced Studies English 10 Honors

Tests will be open book and notes may be used except for the Italian musical terms and instrument abbreviations and listening exams..

LAT 111, 112, and 251 or consent of instructor

Music 4 - Exploring Music Fall 2015

2013 Theatrical Design Contest

ASSIGNMENTS. Attendance: 5% Paper 1 25% Paper 2 35% Final Exam (TBD) 35%

Granger Middle School Chorus Handbook

Songwriting Workshop: Swedish Pop Music Spring 2018 Credits: 3 Location: Stockholm Major Discipline: Music Faculty Member: Maria Carlsson

Functional Piano MUSI 1181 Mondays & Wednesdays FALL 2018

English I Mythology Research Project

Arts and Letters Night Packet For Franklin West Students. Arts and Letters Night is Thursday, April 18th from 6:00 7:30 pm in the multipurpose room.

Syllabus Woodwind Studios: MUAP Fall 2018

WOODWIND AREA POLICY HANDBOOK DIVISION OF INSTRUMENTAL STUDIES COLLEGE OF MUSIC THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH TEXAS

San José State University School of Music and Dance MUSC 10B, Introduction to Music, Fall 2018

Southern Methodist University

ALL-STATE CHORUS HANDBOOK

Guide for Writing Theses and Dissertations. The Graduate School Miami University Oxford, OH

Southern Methodist University

Learning Outcomes After you have finished the course you should:

EH 231: American Literature I Spring 2015

Jazz Workshop MUT Fall 2016 T-Th. 9:00-10:15 PAC, Rm. M114

WILKES HONORS COLLEGE of FLORIDA ATLANTIC UNIVERSITY REQUIREMENTS AND GUIDELINES FOR HONORS THESES

Stow-Munroe Falls High School. Band Honors Guidlines

About This Handbook. Revised and edited by Joyce Wszalek. Graphic design by Leah Bailey. First published 1991 Revised 1993, 1995, 2000

APA Checklist for Co ege Papers

ROGER WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY LIBRARY. Requirements for Submission of Theses

Music and Creative Interaction for the Elementary Classroom Teacher SPRING 2014 COURSE SYLLABUS EDUC & FROSTBURG STATE UNIVERSITY

Date Credits 3 Course Title English Composition II Course Number ENC 1102 Pre-requisite (s) ENC 1101 Co-requisite (s) None Hours 45

ARTS FOR LIFE! Scholarship Application

Honors Music Theory South Carroll High School : Fall Semester

Stephen F. Austin State University School of Music

College of the Desert

GUIDELINES FOR PREPARATION OF ARTICLE STYLE THESIS AND DISSERTATION

Bartlett High School Orchestra Handbook

Music 4 - Exploring Music Fall 2016

Early American History. Date: Period: Ms. McFarland. Early American History - Research Paper

APPLIED VOICE MUS 153/353/357/457/553

Duke Ellington School of the Arts

THE GILDER LEHRMAN INSTITUTE 49 W. 45TH ST., 6TH FLOOR NEW YORK NY

Choir Handbook Jackson Memorial Middle School. Directors

Keller Hall Procedure Manual CONTENTS

Caine College of the Arts Department of Music Music 1310 INTRODUCTION TO MUSIC THERAPY Fall Semester, Credit Hours

WHOSE LIFE STORY INSPIRES YOU? WHY? HOW WILL YOU PUT THAT INSPIRATION TO WORK?

CATALOG DESCRIPTION Development of performance skills through the study of various etudes, solos and other literature.

University of Iowa All-University String Orchestra Guidelines 025:162, MUS: 3184

San José State University School of Music and Dance MUSC 147A, Beginning Conducting, Fall 2014

UNC JOURney (Journal of Undergraduate Research): 2017 Submission and Style Guide. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

DRAFT (July 2018) Government 744 Foundations of Security Studies. Fall 2017 Wednesdays 7:20-10:00 PM Founders Hall 475

Bert Lynn Music Corps Handbook and Contract Mrs. Katie Banim, Director September, 2015

Transcription:

Creative Writing I (EN 240) Course Syllabus Fall and Spring Semesters, 2017-2018 Instructor: Emma Richardson <erichardson@themsms.org> Classroom: Hooper 107 Office: Hooper 108 Phone: 662/329-7360, ext. 8507 (office) Office Hours: Tutorial: Office Hours: MWF 9:00 10:00 a.m. and 2:00 3:00 p.m. T 2:30 4:00 p.m. Th 8:00 11:00 a.m. and 1:00 4:00 p.m. Monday 7:00 8:30 p.m. Length of Course: One year. (The class meets 1½ hours a week on Tuesdays or Thursdays for ½ unit English elective credit.) Objective: The purpose of the course is to explore and practice composition techniques to produce a variety of forms, to establish and maintain a voice appropriate for those forms, and to edit works appropriately for print and electronic publication. Specifically, students will Write poetry in a variety of poetic forms: Lyric Narrative Visual/concrete Write creative non-fiction: Descriptive essays Narrative essays Memoir/ self writing Write short fiction Compile and produce a literary magazine for publication (print and electronic) Satisfy the protocols for manuscript submissions Participate in local, state, regional, and national writing competitions Chronology of Presentations Students will explore the concept of things and thoughts as a necessary component for all effective writing; explore the techniques and forms of poetic and prose writing by examining works by established poets, fiction writers, and essayists; practice the processes of composition; and participate in the class s writing community by offering responses to classmates writing and receiving comments to their own works. 1

First Quarter: Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4 Week 5 Week 6 Week 7 Week 8 Week 9 The student will explore the concept of "things" and "thoughts" as a necessary component for all effective writing; explore the techniques and forms of poetic and prose writing by examining works by established poets, fiction writers, and essayists; and practice the processes of composition. Lists; "found" poems; abstractions-rendered-concrete poems Creating specific images "Then" poems The sound of silence; sounds People More people; personae Personal descriptive and/or narrative essays: Determining subject matter Creating the effective "hook" Writing the personal descriptive or narrative essay Presenting the portfolio (must contain 3 revised and edited poems from Weeks 1-6; 2 additional poems [from student prompts]; and a reflection (Due October 3, 2017) Second Quarter: Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4 Week 5 The student will continue to practice techniques that make for effective poems and for non-fiction essays; explore modes for writing narrative poetry and concrete/visual poetry; understand methods of short fiction composition by examining the works of established writers; and practice writing the elements of short fiction. Telling a story in poetry Creating concrete/visual poems Exploring and practicing the elements of scene Continuing the practice of the elements of scene Creating character(s) and conflict(s) Practicing effective dialogue 2

Week 6 Week 7 Week 8 Week 9 Third Quarter: Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4 Week 5 Week 6 Week 7 Week 8 Week 9 Writing the short story (instructor prompt) Continuing the short story Continuing the short story Presenting the portfolio (must contain a revised and edited descriptive or narrative essay, a revised and edited short story, and a reflection ) (Due December 12, 2017) The student will continue to practice writing the elements of poetry, non-fiction, and short fiction; write short stories with increasing sophistication of technique; prepare manuscripts for submission to writing competitions; and begin the two-quarter process of producing a literary magazine for publication. Continuing the short story Continuing the short story Preparing manuscripts for submission Preparing manuscripts for submission Literary magazine: Conducting poetry/short story contests Preparing manuscripts for submission Literary magazine: Conducting art/photography contests Literary magazine: Discussing magazine design Literary magazine: Discussing magazine layout Literary magazine: Choosing manuscripts Literary magazine: Choosing manuscripts Fourth Quarter: Week 1 The student will develop a major project in creative writing and continue to assist in producing a literary magazine for publication. Choosing an independent project: 1. Collection of poetry (minimum of 15 "new" poems) 2. Collection of short stories (minimum of 3 "new" stories; minimum length: 15 pages) (cont. next page) 3

3. A novella (minimum length: 15 pages) 4. Collection of other creative prose (autobiography, satire, essays, "feature stories"; minimum length: 15 pages) 5. A combination of genres Week 2 Week 3 Week 4 Week 5 Week 6 Week 7 Week 8 Week 9 Literary magazine: Editing copy Literary magazine: Editing copy Literary magazine: Collecting contributors' notes Literary magazine: Proofreading Literary magazine: Proofreading Literary magazine: Proofreading Due May 8, 2018: Presenting the independent project Assessment Each assignment is graded on a 100-point scale. The portfolio presented at the end of the first two quarters counts 25% of the quarter grade for each of those quarters. 100% of the third quarter grade is from weekly writing assignments.the independent project for the fourth quarter counts 100% of that quarter s grade. The semester grade will be determined by averaging the two quarter grades for that semester. The yearly grade will be determined by averaging the two semester grades. Portfolios and independent projects are presented in lieu of semester exams. Due Dates and Late Work Assignments are due at the beginning of the class period on the day they are due. Students should have work printed before the beginning of the class period. Being late to class in order to finish printing an assignment will result in a tardy to class. Late work except for an excused absence is accepted at the discretion of the instructor; the maximum credit for late work is usually 50%. Students who have excused absences from class should follow the guidelines for submitting makeup work as prescribed in the 4

2017-2018 MSMS Student Handbook. Specifically for this class, if students know ahead of time that they will miss class, they should complete the weekly writing assignment and turn it in to the instructor before the missed class day or send it to class by another student. EDITORIAL POSITIONS Editors and assistant editors will be needed for the print publication of Southern Voices (2018) and are designated by the instructor in late September. Students who wish to be considered for editorial positions should email Mrs. Richardson by September 19, 2017, stating the position they are interested in and giving a brief description of suitability for that leadership role. WRITING COMPETITIONS Students will submit poetry, fiction, and non-fiction essay manuscripts to a number of competitions, which usually include (but are not limited to) the following: Deadlines October: December: The Eudora Welty Ephemera Prize for High School Creative Writing (Founded in 2014 by the English Department of Mississippi University for Women, the prize is named in honor of MUW alumna Eudora Welty and gives cash awards to four or five students; recipients are invited to the Eudora Welty Writers Symposium and give a brief reading from their works to the Symposium audience of writers and scholars.) The Scholastic Art & Writing Awards (Founded in 1923, The Scholastic Art & Writing Awards competition is the oldest and most prestigious national writing competition for high school students in the United States. The competition has given early recognition to writers and artists who include Truman Capote, Joyce Carol Oates, Bernard Malamud, and Richard Avedon.) Students entering this competition must register online with The Alliance for Young Artists and Writers after October 1 st but before November 5 th. Follow guidelines for applying/registering are given on the website listed below: http://www.artandwriting.org/ February Southern Voices (Our in-house MSMS literary competition garners manuscripts for May publication in Southern Voices; place-winning entries are automatically published in SV.) 5

April: The Eudora Welty Awards in Creative Writing (Co-sponsored by the English Department and the Center for the Study of Southern Culture at the University of Mississippi, the competition allows just one entry per category per school; awardees are recognized at the opening session of the annual Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha Conference at Ole Miss.) SPECIAL MSMS AWARDS FOR CREATIVE WRITING * The Chris Read Award for Fiction is given to the student whose short story is awarded First Place in the in-house Southern Voices writing contest. The recipient receives a certificate at the Honors Convocation/Awards Day held in May and has his/her name engraved on a permanent plaque (kept in the trophy case in Hooper lobby). If the recipient is a senior, he/she is also recognized at the Senior Celebration Dinner the evening before graduation. In addition, the award-winning story is recognized in Southern Voices as receiving the Chris Read Award for Fiction. (The award was instituted in 1994 by classmates of Chris Read, a member of the MSMS Class of 1991, whose fiction writing showed exceptional promise; Chris Read was killed in a car accident in 1993.) * The Abernethy Award for Excellence in Creative Writing, first awarded in 1998, is given to the senior Creative Writing student whose portfolio of selected works is selected by a writing judge not associated with MSMS. Students who wish to compete for this award must present a portfolio of writing to the Creative Writing teacher to give to the judge by an announced date in late spring. The recipient receives a cash award, has his/her name engraved on a permanent plaque (kept in the trophy case in the lobby of Hooper), receives a personal plaque, and is recognized at the Honors Convocation in May and the Senior Celebration Dinner the evening before graduation. 6

Academic Honesty Students are expected to be academically honest. That means the work you do should be your own work. By all means study together, discuss reading assignments together, and even discuss strategies for approaching written assignments together if you need to. But when it comes time to committing something to paper, do not consult another student s work. Do not allow another student to read any of your written assignments before you hand them in. If another student s paper reflects your own work, your own work will be called into question. Academic dishonesty will not be tolerated. True confession: I have a near-photographic memory for words on the page. I ll explain this in class. Read the section on Academic Honesty in the MSMS 2017-2018 Student Handbook. Also, read Section R-4, Integrating Sources, Avoiding Plagiarism, on pages 97-108 of The Little Seagull Handbook (2 nd ed.). If you have any questions regarding plagiarism or academic honesty, you need to ask them by the end of the first week of class. Consequences for academic dishonesty at MSMS are prescribed in the Discipline Section of the MSMS 2017-2018 Student Handbook. My high school English teacher used to say that using as many as three words in the same order from another person s work without sufficient attribution and documentation constitutes plagiarism. That is a good thing to keep in mind. Additionally, you must provide a reference for any idea you borrow from a source. If you consult any reference help in order to write papers (from The Internet or other sources), you need to acknowledge that reference as you would in a research paper. This includes among others Cliff s Notes, Spark Notes, and Wikipedia (N.B. these sources are not considered valid references by many academic institutions. Consult The Little Seagull Handbook for appropriate MLA documentation style.) A word to the wise: The technology that makes it easy for dishonest students to find papers/information in cyberspace that they pass off as their own work also makes it easy for someone grading papers to locate the sources. (Syllabus distributed to students on 15 August 2017.) 7

Protocols for Handing in Work 1. Use an MLA heading; the font size should be 12 pt. and the font Times New Roman. The document must be printed in Microsoft Word. Sample MLA heading: (top, left margin; double-spaced) Sally Johnson Mrs. E. Richardson Creative Writing I 22 August 2017 (For the date, always use the class date that the piece of writing is due, not the date on which you might have written the piece.) 2. Follow the MLA requirements for pagination. Place your last name, a space, and the page numeral in the upper right-hand corner. 3. Double space lines of poetry if the poem is short. For longer poems, single space the lines. If the poem is divided into stanzas, single space to separate lines, and double space to separate into stanzas. Center the poem in the middle of the paper (but do not center individual lines; rather, justify lines on the left margin). 4. Double space all prose works. 5. Always spell check. 8