Matthew James Vechinski  | University of Washington | Graduate Student ; Instructor
Matthew James Vechinski  | University of Washington | Graduate Student ; Instructor
Matthew James Vechinski  | University of Washington | Graduate Student ; Instructor
 
 

Tuesday 12:30-2:20 - Mary Gates Hall 074
Thursday 12:30-2:20 - Mary Gates Hall 076

Instructor: Matthew James Vechinski
Email:
Office: B5G Padelford (B-Wing, Plaza Level)
Spring 2006 office hours: Tuesdays 10:00-noon

Syllabus and Course Calendar
Blogs
Links

In English 121, you will write non-fiction argumentative essays. You will learn about certain conventions, practices, and strategies you can use when composing and revising your essay assignments. However, there is no one formula for writing an essay. Writing is situational, and you will need to approach each writing task differently. This course will expose you to various writing situations, and I intend to help you to become aware of the particulars of each situation so that you will be able to write appropriately for the task at hand. Rather than thinking of the course as adapting to a new style of writing, think of the course as an exploration of how writing is situational because you will need to reconsider what you write as well as how you write.

In this course, we will focus on writers and readers (those involved in the act of communication through writing) and justified arguments (the message of the writing). Though writing and reading resembles an exchange involving give and take between writers and readers, it is not like a conversation. Writing and reading are not face-to-face interactions in real time; there is a distance involved.

How do we communicate our ideas effectively despite this distance between writers and readers? In the setting of this class, your principal responsibility as a reader or writer is justifying yourself. As a writer, you will learn how to address your readers, and this involves more than making your writing clear and understandable. You will need to explain yourself fully in your argumentative essays, providing the necessary evidence for your ideas and relying on logic and organizational strategies to fulfill your readers’ expectations and predispositions. In addition, your writing must convey a sense of purpose that seems significant for your readers.

This is a service learning course, which means that during the quarter you will perform 20-40 hours of community service at one local organization that you choose from the possible organizations the Carlson Center has matched with the course. This course involves a serious time commitment because you will need to perform a total of 20-40 hours of service during the 10 weeks of the quarter in addition to the roughly 4 hours of class each week and the normal workload of a five-credit course.

Since this is a composition course, you will write about your service experience, but keep in mind that such writing will be only one “text” you will use. You will learn how to analyze various texts and how to engage with them when writing your own original arguments. You must pair ideas from challenging literary and theoretical texts with your experience to help you reflect critically on your experience. Therefore the essays you write for this course will be less about reporting what you did for your organization and more about explaining how your experience relates to the concepts we've discussed in class.

As part of the English Department’s Computer Integrated Classroom (CIC) program, we will have access to technologies not available in the traditional classroom. Half of our classes together will be held in the local area network (LAN) in Mary Gates Hall where each student will have access to a computer. We will use the technologies as resources for discussion, composition, and revision in service of the course goals (the technologies are not the focus of the class itself). With these opportunities come a few additional requirements and responsibilities. You will need to provide some of your written work in electronic form, which requires managing the files you have created and modified in the classroom, in other labs, or on your personal computer. You will also need to familiarize yourself with several basic computer operations during the first two weeks of the term.

The theme for this course will be “Self and Other.” We'll explore the social issue of identity through theoretical and literary texts that touch on how we form a sense of self for ourselves and recognize others’ selves through a dialectical interaction. This shows us two things: without contrasting ourselves with others, we cannot know ourselves; and both our self-concepts and our concepts of others are continually shifting rather than static. If we say others are “just like us,” we obviously overlook our differences, which are an important part of who we are. If we say others are completely unlike us, we fail to see that our identity exists only in relation to theirs.

Obviously we can't talk about every sort of identity, so we'll focus on a few (namely sexual orientation, age, and gender) as a means of exploring the dialectical construction of identity in general as well as multiculturalism and identity politics in the U.S. today. The two major papers will deal with recognition and service. An other often wants be recognized as other and not as the same. Others often seek acceptance, or positive recognition, from the society as a whole. But in certain ways they are unwilling to give up their differences in order to be recognized. Second, you will focus on your own sense of identity when providing a service to an other. One might argue that someone who helps another reinforces difference because the one receiving the help is always at a disadvantage in comparison to the helper. Service is also said to put us in touch with the fundamental similarities among people. With either subject, it is not a matter of emphasizing similarities or overcoming differences. Instead, I will ask you to explore the interplay of similarities and differences in your respective situations (your community placement as well as your personal histories and sense of self).

The Carlson Center is still in the process of making arrangements with organizations, so I cannot say exactly which ones you will choose from. For a list of the of organizations paired with the section of 121 I'm currently teaching, visit the Carlson Center's web site. I expect students taking my section in the spring will be able to choose their service site among these organizations or else similar organizations. Your service placements are intended to inspire you to think about how you define the people you’re serving and how you define yourself in relation to them. It will not be enough to enumerate the similarities and differences between yourself and the people you’re serving; I will encourage you to consider why certain definitions of self and other exist and persist and the consequences of these definitions, especially the consequences for their service learning experience. In order to focus on definitions, you will serve organizations that target a specific population, such as those of a specific ethnicity, socio-economic standing, age, ability, or sexual orientation. Service organizations limit their scope and activities for practical reasons, and you will explore this situated context and the definitions of self and other that surround it and come out of it.

This theme is designed to structure the readings for the course and provide a common means of analyzing the different service placements students will have. English 121 is first and foremost a composition course, not a content-specific course. You will write about your service experience, of course, but keep in mind that such writing will be only one "text" you will use. In the course, we'll be reading challenging literary and theoretical texts that you must pair with your experience to help you reflect critically on your experience. Therefore the essays you write for this course will be less about reporting "what you did" for your organization and more about explaining how your experience relates to the concepts we've discussed in class.

REQUIRED


Taylor, Charles. Multiculturalism.

Princeton University Press, 1994.
ISBN 0691037795


Gullette, Margaret Morganroth. Aged by Culture.
University of Chicago Press, 2004.
ISBN 0226310620


Minow, Martha.
Not Only For Myself: Identity, Politics, and the Law.
New Press, 1997.
ISBN 1565845137

Course reader
Available at Ave Copy Center (4141 University Way NE)
(Copies probably will not be available for purchase until after March 20)

CIC Student Guide
Available online--click link to access

Carlson Center Service Learning Student Guide
Available online--click link to access guide, you do not need a hard copy but they can be obtained from the Carlson Center

A means of backing up your computer files

An active email account and access to the World Wide Web

A simple pocket folder

A simple report cover

RECOMMENDED


The Concise Wadsworth Handbook
.
By Laurie Kirszner and Stephen Mandell.
Heinle (1st edition, 2004).
ISBN 141301030X
I've reviewed many writing handbooks, and this one is both comprehensive and inexpensive (list price is $25.95.) If you don't purchase this handbook, you should consider buying some other handbook that includes a MLA style guide.

Access to a computer with MS Word

A college-level dictionary

An expanding file folder, binder, or similar means of organizing your work

NOTE

The three required texts and one optional text are available at the University Bookstore. You may purchase these books elsewhere, but please be certain that you buy the proper edition (check the ISBN). Used copies of all texts can usually be ordered from online booksellers.

Syllabus [PDF file; 99.9 KB]

Tentative Course Schedule & Due Dates [PDF file; 63.9 KB]

Upon request these files will be made available in large print and in other formats.

All students of English 121 A will have their own public blog where they write about their service experience, complete short homework assignments, and discuss course content. The course instructor uses his blog to recap what was covered in class, post homework descriptions, and clarify and further develop course content.

To view or post to these blogs, visit:
http://courses.washington.edu/eng121a/
(Main blog page will open in a new browser window.)

Visit my Online Resources for UW Students page.

Carlson Leadership and Public Service Center

UW Expository Writing Program

Resources for Students in CIC English Courses

CIC LAN Policies and Public Hours

Catalyst Tools

English Department Writing Center

Odegaard Writing and Research Center

UW Writing Centers and Resources

Email Matthew about any technical problems with this web page.

 
students.washington.edu/mjvechin
mjvechin@u.washington.edu

© 2005 Matthew James Vechinski
Seattle, Washington, USA
University of Washington
Last updated: April 27, 2006 9:28 AM

 
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