| English 546: Postcolonial Shakespeares > | |
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Consider everything below, together with the document I distributed in class, as the full, unexpurgated, encyclopedic version of the syllabus. Some of the following information I’m required by the University (whose obedient servant I am) to include. Some, I provide out of more than a mere sense of obligation; I actually believe in it. Much else originates purely with me rather than my employer, and I’m fairly fervent about it. (Come talk to me during office hours and I’ll tell you which is which, if you can’t tell already.) In any event, you’re responsible for familiarizing yourself with all of it. Scheduled course meeting time and place (Fall 2014) HSU Catalog description Course mode and format English Department Learning Outcomes Stay tuned. This course is also meant to contribute to your acquisition of skills and knowledge relevant to several of HSU’s 7 overall Learning Outcomes, according to which HSU graduates will be able to demonstrate:
Hours outside of class required for course preparation Campus resources that may increase your academic success:
Sexual harassment Accommodations for students with disabilities or special needs Disruptive Behavior "Tardiness" and Other Quaint Ideas: I know that other instructors' classes sometimes go long, and that sometimes you have to hump it all the way across campus in an impossibly short stretch of time. But unless you have a compelling reason, please get to class on time (and don’t leave make a habit of leaving early). And bear in mind that it’s especially bad form to arrive late on a day when work is due. I'm also aware that social conventions, including ideas about manners and etiquette, change with time and context. But (here comes a "You kids get off of my lawn!" rant): where I come from, routinely wandering in and out of class is considered impolite. Same goes for other old standbys like staring out the window, attending to personal grooming, and reading the newspaper. Under the broader category of discourteous behavior, I would add contemporary forms of electronic rudeness like e-mailing, texting, tweeting, web-surfing, checking Facebook or Instagram, etc., etc. If you're using a smartphone, pad, netbook or laptop to take notes, do class-related research, Google some unfamiliar term or concept, or even read an assigned text (on a smartphone? really?), that's cool. Otherwise, it's not. Save all that for your own time, not class time. And if you know you're a screen addict who can't go five minutes without messaging your BFF (or worse, your mom), just turn it off. Add/Drop policy Emergency evacuation Plagiarism / Academic Dishonesty: I take it for granted that as members of an academic community, we support intellectual inquiry and freedom through rigorous personal standards of honesty and integrity. And I think it should go without saying that plagiarism and other forms of academic dishonesty undermine the very purpose of the university and diminish the value of an education. The Oxford English Dictionary defines “plagiarize” as “to take and use as one’s own the thoughts, writings, or ideas of another,” to represent someone else’s words or ideas as your own. The general rule is that if you incorporate any information (e.g., analysis, opinions, interpretations, or facts that are not common knowledge), into a papers, exam, discussion forum post, presentation, and so on, then you must honestly and accurately credit and document the sources of those words and ideas. Even a close paraphrase of someone else’s words—borrowing the sentence or paragraph structure while making small changes in wording or phrasing—can be construed as plagiarism, especially if you have not properly attributed the source. Sources include not only books, journal articles, and other printed materials, but also formal lectures and interviews, as well as information of any kind posted on the Internet—regardless of whether that information is attributed to a specific author or authors. Submitting any part of a borrowed, stolen, or purchased paper to fulfill all or part of an assignment also constitutes plagiarism—never mind that it’s a pathetic and desperate act. It may interest you to know that professors have a finely tuned "ear" for prose that their students probably aren’t capable of producing. And while the web has made it much easier to buy or steal work produced by someone else (never mind that the web rarely observes the same standards of punctiliousness that the academy does), it has also made such fraud much easier to spot, thanks to plagiarism-detection websites and ever-improving search engines. At the end of the day, though (and this may be contrary to popular belief), HSU doesn't require a professor to have a "smoking gun" to nail someone for plagiarism; the standard of proof is a "preponderance of evidence." The university definition of and policies regarding plagiarism and other types of academic dishonesty can be found online and in the HSU catalog; it's your responsibility to know these policies and to ask questions if you don't understand them. If you are unsure about what counts as plagiarism, then play it safe and consult with me (preferably before turning in an assignment!), as ignorance of the policy is not an acceptable excuse for failure to comply. If you plagiarize in my course, you will automatically fail the assignment and, in most cases, the course. Additionally, I will notify the Office of the Vice President for Student Affairs. Consequently, you may be subject to further University disciplinary action, such as special counseling, dismissal from certain programs and organizations, and academic probation, suspension, or even expulsion. If you are having difficulty completing an assignment on time and through honest means, then please come talk to me before resorting to plagiarism. For a free on-line tutorial about what plagiarism is and how to avoid it, consult one or all of the following resources:
Finally: In the end, I'm only asking you to be reasonably disciplined and reasonably responsible in your approach to this course. For my part, I'll try to be reasonably flexible, but I can't have an individually tailored set of policies for each student—and it's a sad fact that certain missteps simply lead to failure and can't be retraced. So please consider any and all obligations you have in addition to this class. I strongly advise you not to commit to more than you can realistically accomplish in the next fifteen weeks (you're working 30 hours a week? and you're on the volleyball team? and you're the choreographer for an upcoming production of The Sound of Music? and you're raising a kid? and you're carrying 16 graduate units?--what are you, crazy?), but if you do, please recognize that you set your own priorities. Medical or other unforeseen emergencies that turn ugly and/or lengthy are a different kettle of fish. In some such instances, I may be open to making special accommodations; in others, you may have to consider withdrawing from school; in all cases, I can help you sort out the most realistic options. For now, let's just hope such situations don't arise for anyone in our midst! |