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                <title><hi rendition="#times #plain">EN 110: Good Books</hi></title>
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                    <name xml:id="whalen">Robert Whalen</name>
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            <ab rendition="#times #plain #center"><name corresp="#whalen">Dr. Robert Whalen</name>
                <lb/><ref rendition="#plain #times" target="mailto:rwhalen@nmu.edu"
                    >rwhalen@nmu.edu</ref>
                <lb/><ref rendition="#plain #times" target="http://myweb.nmu.edu/~rwhalen/home.html"
                    >Homepage</ref><lb/>Office Hours: MW 8:10am-9:50, 3248 JXJ or <ref
                    rendition="#plain #times" target="https://nmu.zoom.us/j/5643601890"
                >Zoom</ref></ab>
            <lb/>

            <div rendition="#times #plain" n="1">
                <head rendition="#sc #times #plain">Introduction: <hi rendition="#strike">Good</hi>
                    Great Books</head>
                <p rendition="#times #plain">This course introduces students to works from several
                    historical periods and in several genres: short story, novel, frame narrative,
                    tragedy, comedy, and lyric. The course’s primary objective is to develop
                    students’ latent critical skills through communal engagement with writing that
                    itself engages critically with the world.</p>
            </div>

            <div rendition="#times #plain" n="2">
                <head rendition="#sc #times #plain">Bulletin Description</head>
                <p rendition="#times #plain">&#8220;An exploration of a variety of books from the
                    past and present for the general reader. Reading and discussing ideas from books
                    with insights into human experiences are emphasized.&#8221;</p>
            </div>

            <div rendition="#times #plain" n="3" type="courseInfo" subtype="objectives">
                <head rendition="#sc #times #plain">Objectives </head>
                <p rendition="#times #plain">Students (1) will learn to think and write cogently
                    about a variety of human issues and problems as embodied by a modest selection
                    of literary works; and (2) be able to distinguish among the generic features,
                    themes, characters, titles, and authors of six major works of literature. The
                    primary objective, however, is (3) to spend as much time as possible in the
                    company of great writers.</p>
                <p rendition="#times #plain">Evaluation of progress toward fulfillment of objectives
                    one and three, as well as partial fulfillment of objective two, is based on
                    extensive and sustained participation in discussion forums, across six phases,
                    as follows: <list type="bulleted">
                        <item><hi rendition="#bold">Phase one</hi>: responding to three discussion
                            prompts, which address a variety of human issues and questions about
                            central characters in three Alice Munro stories, students will
                            demonstrate their engagement with the same by writing a minimum of 600
                            words (200 per prompt). In addition, students will demonstrate their
                            ability to process and constructively comment on other students’ views
                            by responding to at least two students per prompt (100 words per student
                            for an additional 600 words).</item>
                        <item><hi rendition="#bold">Phase two</hi>: responding to a lecture and four
                            discussion prompts, which address a variety of human issues and
                            questions about central characters in <hi rendition="#italic"
                                >Beloved</hi>, a novel by Toni Morrison, students will demonstrate
                            their engagement with the same by writing a minimum of 800 words (200
                            per prompt). In addition, students will demonstrate their ability to
                            process and constructively comment on other students’ views by
                            responding to at least two students per prompt (100 words per student
                            for an additional 800 words).</item>
                        <item><hi rendition="#bold">Phase three</hi>: responding to a lecture and
                            four discussion prompts, which address a variety of human issues as well
                            as questions about narrative reliability and conflicting perspectives in
                            two of Geoffrey Chaucer’s <hi rendition="#italic">Canterbury Tales</hi>,
                            students will demonstrate their engagement with the same by writing a
                            minimum of 800 words (200 per prompt). In addition, students will
                            demonstrate their ability to process and constructively comment on other
                            students’ views by responding to at least two students per prompt (100
                            words per student for an additional 800 words).</item>
                        <item><hi rendition="#bold">Phase four</hi>: responding to a lecture and
                            four discussion prompts, which address a variety of human issues as
                            presented in Shakespeare’s greatest tragedy, <hi rendition="#italic"
                                >King Lear</hi>&#x2014;including but not limited to the meaning and
                            value of suffering and the role of patriarchy in familial and political
                            institutions&#x2014;students will demonstrate their engagement with the
                            same by writing a minimum of 800 words (200 per prompt). In addition,
                            students will demonstrate their ability to process and constructively
                            comment on other students’ views by responding to at least two students
                            per prompt (100 words per student for an additional 800 words).</item>
                        <item><hi rendition="#bold">Phase five</hi>: responding to a lecture and
                            four discussion prompts, which address a variety of human issues as
                            presented in Aphra Behn’s entertaining and disturbing “problem-comedy,”
                                <hi rendition="#italic">The Rover</hi>&#x2014;focusing especially on
                            the intersection of marriage, money, sex, and patriarchy, but also the
                            conventions and limitations of romantic comedy&#x2014;students will
                            demonstrate their engagement with the same by writing a minimum of 800
                            words (200 per prompt). In addition, students will demonstrate their
                            ability to process and constructively comment on other students’ views
                            by responding to at least two students per prompt (100 words per student
                            for an additional 800 words).</item>
                        <item><hi rendition="#bold">Phase six</hi>: responding to a lecture and
                            three discussion prompts, students will engage in detail with poetry and
                            poetics (imagery, metaphor, forms of repetition and other sound
                            effects), as well as the human experiences and physical descriptions as
                            imagined by one of our greatest living poets, Alice Oswald. Students
                            will write a minimum of 600 words (200 per prompt). In addition,
                            students will demonstrate their ability to process and constructively
                            comment on other students’ views by responding to at least two students
                            per prompt (100 words per student for an additional 600 words).</item>
                    </list></p>
                <p rendition="#times">Evaluation of progress toward additional fulfillment of
                    objective two is based on a final exam (see below). Progress toward fulfillment
                    of objective three is measured by participation frequency: failure to
                    participate in a discussion forum will result in a grade of zero for that
                    forum.</p>
            </div>

            <div rendition="#times #plain" n="4" type="courseInfo" subtype="participation">
                <head rendition="#sc #times #plain">Class Participation</head>

                <p rendition="#times">This is an asynchronous web class, meaning that the class does
                    not meet at some scheduled time. However, there are deadlines (every Tuesday and
                    Thursday), and regular and fully engaged participation is required. But you may
                    submit your work at any time prior to the deadline.</p>

                <p rendition="#times">Each of the 22 discussion forums, spread over fourteen weeks,
                    is worth 3% of the final grade, for a total of 66%.</p>

                <p rendition="#times">See <ref rendition="#plain #times"
                        target="Discussions/0.forumGuidelines.html">Discussion Forum
                        Guidelines</ref> for a detailed scheme and the course <ref
                        rendition="#plain #times" target="110schedule.html">Schedule</ref> for
                    deadlines.</p>
            </div>

            <div rendition="#times #plain" n="5" type="courseInfo" subtype="essays">
                <head rendition="#sc #times #plain">Final Exam</head>
                <p rendition="#times #plain">The final exam, worth 34% of the final grade, consists
                    of two parts: <list type="ordered">
                        <item rendition="#times #plain">a multiple choice and true/false quiz,
                            testing students’ ability to distinguish among the titles, authors,
                            characters, themes, and generic features of the various works
                            (16%)</item>
                        <item rendition="#times #plain">a brief essay response to one of several
                            options, testing each student’s ability to think and write about a human
                            concern or issue, related to the course material, that they find most
                            salient or compelling (18%)</item>
                    </list></p>
            </div>

            <div rendition="#times #plain" n="5" type="courseInfo" subtype="courseText">
                <head rendition="#sc #times #plain">Required Texts </head>
                <p rendition="#times #plain">Students <hi rendition="#italic">must</hi> acquire
                    these texts. <hi rendition="#italic">No exceptions.</hi> This will ensure that
                    reference to the readings is consistent and understood by all. All titles,
                    excepting Chaucer, are available through the <ref rendition="#times #plain"
                        target="https://nmu.bncollege.com/course-material-listing-page?bypassCustomerAdoptions=true"
                        >NMU Bookstore</ref>.</p>
                <list type="bulleted">
                    <item rendition="#times #plain"> Munro, Alice. <hi rendition="#italic">Friend of
                            My Youth</hi>. Vintage/Random House, 1991. (ISBN 13:
                        9780679729570)</item>
                    <item rendition="#times #plain">Morrison, Toni. <hi rendition="#italic"
                            >Beloved</hi>. New York: Vintage, 2004. (ISBN 13: 9781400033416)</item>
                    <item rendition="#times #plain">Chaucer, Geoffrey. <hi rendition="#italic">The
                            Canterbury Tales</hi> (available for free <ref rendition="#plain #times"
                            target="https://chaucer.fas.harvard.edu/pages/text-and-translations"
                            >here</ref>).</item>
                    <item rendition="#times">Shakespeare, William. <hi rendition="#italic">King
                            Lear</hi>. Ed. Grace Ioppola. New York: Norton, 2025. (ISBN 13:
                        9780393926644)</item>
                    <item rendition="#times">Behn, Aphra. <hi rendition="#italic">The Rover</hi>.
                        2nd ed. Ed. Anne Russell. Peterborough, ON: Broadview P, 1999. (ISBN 13:
                        9781551112145)</item>
                    <item rendition="#times">Oswald, Alice. <hi rendition="#italic">Falling
                            Awake</hi>. New York: Norton, 2016. (ISBN 13: 9780393355451)</item>
                </list>
            </div>

            <div rendition="#times #plain" n="6" type="courseInfo" subtype="gradeScheme">
                <head rendition="#sc #times #plain">Grading Scheme </head>
                <p rendition="#times #plain">The total course grade consists of participation in
                    discussion forums as specified in the <ref rendition="#plain #times"
                        target="Discussions/0.forumGuidelines.html">Guidelines</ref>, and the final
                    exam as described above:</p>
                <table rendition="#plain #times" rows="5" cols="2">
                    <row>
                        <cell>&#8195;&#8226; Discussion Forums&#8195;</cell>
                        <cell>66%</cell>
                    </row>
                    <row>
                        <cell>&#8195;&#8226; Final Exam &#8195;</cell>
                        <cell>34%</cell>
                    </row>
                </table>

                <lb/>
                <p rendition="#times #plain">In evaluating student work, I will use the following
                    system:</p>

                <table rendition="#plain #times" rows="6" cols="4">
                    <row>
                        <cell>90-100%&#8195;</cell>
                        <cell>A</cell>
                        <cell>&#8195;&#8195;</cell>
                        <cell>64-67%&#8195;</cell>
                        <cell>C</cell>
                    </row>
                    <row>
                        <cell>84-89%&#8195;</cell>
                        <cell>A-</cell>
                        <cell>&#8195;&#8195;</cell>
                        <cell>60-63%&#8195;</cell>
                        <cell>C-</cell>
                    </row>
                    <row>
                        <cell>80-83%&#8195;</cell>
                        <cell>B+</cell>
                        <cell>&#8195;&#8195;</cell>
                        <cell>58-59%&#8195;</cell>
                        <cell>D+</cell>
                    </row>
                    <row>
                        <cell>74-79%&#8195;</cell>
                        <cell>B</cell>
                        <cell>&#8195;&#8195;</cell>
                        <cell>54-57%&#8195;</cell>
                        <cell>D</cell>
                    </row>
                    <row>
                        <cell>70-73%&#8195;</cell>
                        <cell>B-</cell>
                        <cell>&#8195;&#8195;</cell>
                        <cell>50-53%&#8195;</cell>
                        <cell>D-</cell>
                    </row>
                    <row>
                        <cell>68-69%&#8195;</cell>
                        <cell>C+</cell>
                        <cell>&#8195;&#8195;</cell>
                        <cell>0-50%&#8195;</cell>
                        <cell>F</cell>
                    </row>
                </table>
            </div>

            <div rendition="#times #plain" n="7" type="courseInfo" subtype="plagiarism">
                <head rendition="#sc #times #plain">Plagiarism</head>
                <p rendition="#times #plain">2.2.3: Academic Dishonesty (penalty: not less than
                    disciplinary probation; not more than expulsion). This regulation does not
                    preclude an academic penalty imposed by an instructor as provided for in Student
                    Rights and Responsibilities, Section 1.2.3.</p>
                <p rendition="#times #plain">.02: No students shall submit as their own to an
                    instructor any work which contains ideas or materials taken from another without
                    full acknowledgement of the author and the source.</p>
                <p rendition="#times #plain">.03: No students shall submit as their own any work or
                    assignment which contains content falsified by the student or content the
                    student knows to be false.</p>
                <p rendition="#times #plain">.06: No students shall knowingly participate in, or
                    otherwise facilitate, the academic dishonesty, as described above, of another
                    student.</p>
            </div>


            <div rendition="#times #plain" n="8" type="courseInfo" subtype="ADA">
                <head rendition="#sc #times #plain">Americans with Disabilities (ADA) </head>
                <p rendition="#times #plain">If you have a need for disability-related
                    accommodations or services, please inform the Coordinator of Disability Services
                    in the Disability Services office by: coming into the office at 2001 C.B.
                    Hedgecock; calling 227-1700, or emailing <ref rendition="#plain #times"
                        target="mailto:disserv@nmu.edu">disserv@nmu.edu</ref>. Reasonable and
                    effective accommodations and services will be provided to students if requests
                    are made in a timely manner, with appropriate documentation, in accordance with
                    federal, state and University guidelines.</p>
            </div>
            <closer rendition="#times">©Robert Whalen, 2025</closer>
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