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John

Tiedemann writ 1633


Email: John.Tiedemann@du.edu TR 12:001:50
Office hours: T: 1012; R: 46 Margery Reed Hall 214
Office: Lets meet at Jazzmans on Blog: : http://1633humanswrite-rights.blogspot.com/
Driscoll
Book an appointment:
https://appoint.ly/s/tdmnnj/officehour
s

writ 1633: Human Rights / Humans Write...


THE CLASS
Historian Lynn Hunt argues that that the practice of literacy i.e., of composing and interpreting
written, visual, or aural texts is not only uniquely human; it is how we learn to be human. In this class,
we will examine literacy from a variety of angles as expressed in art, as a local social practice, and
as a global political phenomenon both to consider how reading, writing, and viewing define our
common humanity and to become more accomplished readers, writers, and researchers ourselves.

Much of our time will be spent discussing readings and viewings together as a class, but the majority
of our time will be devoted to four writing projects:

Essay 1: Writing Humanity: For this project, youll test Lynn Hunts thesis that literacy teaches us how
to be human by interpreting a cultural artifact.
Essay 2: Writing into History: This project asks you to explore the significance of an episode from
your own life or the life of someone close to you by placing it in historical context.
Essay 3: Writing the City: For this project, youll write an ethnographic study of an urban space.
Essay 4: Reflections on Writing: This project asks you to consolidate what you have learned this
term about writing, reading, and research by reflecting upon your own work.

TEXTS
Copies of (or links to) all other readings and viewings will be posted on Blackboard or on our course
blog: http://1633humanswrite.blogspot.com/.

Your own texts are also a central element of this class so please bring your laptop to every class
meeting.
GOALS AND FORMAT
Goals
In WRIT 1633, students practice academic research of various kinds; rhetorical strategies for different
academic and civic audiences and purposes; and critical reading and analytic skills. By the end,
students are expected to demonstrate, through their writing, a practical knowledge of multiple
academic research traditions, the rhetorical/conventional differences among them, and the
rhetorical differences between writing for academic audiences and writing for popular audiences.
Students are also expected to demonstrate proficiency in finding, evaluating, synthesizing, critiquing,
and documenting published sources in ways appropriate to given rhetorical situations. Students will
receive sustained practice in writing, with systematic instructor feedback, resulting in at least 20
pages of revised and polished writing, in multiple assignments, as well as numerous additional
exercises, in projects requiring library-based research as well as other types.
Class-time and homework
Some of our time will be spent discussing assigned readings and viewings, but most of our time will be
spent drafting and revising various pieces of writing, as well as providing feedback to each other.
You can also expect to spend approximately four hours each week working at home, perhaps more.
Finally, because a quality piece of writing results from many revisions, you will write each of your
papers in stages and revise, with guidance from me and your classmates.
Conferences
Each of you will meet with me individually for two required conferences, where well discuss strategies
for revising your work. Ill send around a sign-up sheet the week before the conferences take place.
These conferences are required and youll receive a grade for the preparation you do beforehand.
Each conference is worth 25 points toward your final grade.
Apart from the required conferences, Im also available to meet by appointment between 10:00
a.m. and 12:00 p.m. on Tuesdays and between 4 and 6 p.m. on Thursdays. (I can usually find time to
meet on Fridays, too.) The best way to make an appointment to meet with me on a Tuesday or
Thursday is to schedule it online. Please go to https://appoint.ly/s/tdmnnj/officehours and follow the
instructions. If Tuesday and Thursday dont work and youd like to meet on a Friday, then please send
me an email (John.Tiedemann@du.edu) letting me know all the times youre free that day.
POLICIES
Participation
For each class meeting, you will receive up to five points toward your final grade: up to 2 for the
writing assignment you complete at home up to three for your participation in class discussion. All
Homework: All writing assignments are to be posted on Google Drive and shared with me by the
start of class on the day they are due. A student will receive 2 points for posting a complete and
manifestly thoughtful draft of their response to the assignment. (By manifestly thoughtful I mean
clear, coherent, and on topic.) S/he will receive 1 point for posting a draft that is either
incomplete and/or sloppily composed. A student will receive no points should s/he fail to post
and share his or her assignment when it is due.
Class discussion: A student will receive 3 points for the day when s/he makes more than one
meaningful contribution to that days discussion. (By a meaningful contribution I mean a
contribution thats thoughtful and fully elaborated, thus moving the conversation forward and
contributing to our collective understanding of the topic under discussion). S/he will receive 2
points when s/he contributes only once or when his/her contributions arent fully formed. S/he will
receive one point if she attends class without speaking up. A student will receive no points if s/he
fails to attend class, if s/he distracts his or her classmates, or if s/he wastes valuable class time by
checking email, facebook, etc., or otherwise disengaging from class.
Attendance
As the above indicates, there are no excused absences from class. If you miss class, you will not
receive credit for class discussion for that day (though you can still receive credit for the days
homework by posting it on time).
Late Work
Assignments are due when they are due. Assignments that come in late, that arent shared correctly,
or that are incorrectly labeled will not receive credit or feedback from me. To receive feedback on a
late draft, you will need to make an appointment to see me during office hours.
Civility and Tolerance
The Writing Program affirms DUs Code of Student Conduct (http://www.du.edu/ccs/code.html),
which in part expects students to recognize the strength of personal differences while respecting
institutional values. Because writing courses rely heavily on interactions between all members of the
class, students and faculty must act in a manner respectful of different positions and perspectives. A
student who behaves in an uncivil or intolerant manner will be asked to stop and/or formally repri-
manded and/or subject to action by the Office of Citizenship and Community Standards.
Becoming educated requires encountering new ideas and information, some of which may conflict
with an individuals existing knowledge or perspectives. I expect students to engage such materials
thoughtfully, in ways that reflect the values and mission of the University of Denver.
Plagiarism
The Writing Program follows the Council of Writing Program Administrators policy Defining and Avoid-
ing Plagiarism, which states, In an instructional setting, plagiarism occurs when a writer deliberately
uses someone elses language, ideas, or other original (not common-knowledge) material without
acknowledging its source (http://wpacouncil.org/node/9). DUs Honor Code also maintains that all
members of the University must responsibly use the work of others. Students who have plagiarized a
project will receive an F on that project, and the professor will inform the Director of Writing and the
Office of Community and Citizenship Standards, which may take further action. Any documented
acts of plagiarism after the first may be subject to more severe actions.
Accommodations for Students with Disabilities
The Writing Program will provide reasonable accommodations to every student who has a disability
that has been documented by The University of Denver Disability Services Program
(http://www.du.edu/studentlife/disability/ or 303.871.2455).
Email
I usually respond to email within a day or two during the week, less often on weekends.
GRADES
Ill give you suggestions for revision and a provisional grade on each fully drafted essay. Those grades
will rise, fall, or stay the same depending upon how effectively you revise it. All final drafts of all six
revised exercises are due to me via Google Docs by noon on Tuesday, March 14.

In addition to the grades you receive for your essays, you will also receive a grade for your final
reflective essay, for class participation, for the work you do to prepare for required conferences with
me, and for your responses to classmates work. Heres the breakdown:

Essay 1: 200 points


Essay 2: 200 points
Essay 3: 200 points
Reflective essay: 200 points
Class participation: 5 points per class x 20 = 100 points
Conference prep: 20 points per conference x 2 = 40 points
Peer responses; 20 points per response x 3 = 60 points
TOTAL 1000 points
Heres the scale Ill use to calculate your final grade for the course:
A 930-1000
A- 900-929
B+ 870-899
B 830-869
B- 800-829
C+ 770-799
C 730-769
C- 700-729
D+ 670-699
D 630-669
D- 600-629
F 0599
CALENDAR
T March 28 Introduction
R March 30 Applying a concept and generating a thesis: Lynn Hunt, Inventing Human Rights.
T April 4 Supporting and developing a thesis through analysis. (Hunt, contd.)
R April 6 Making an argument flow. (Hunt, contd.)
T April 11 Telling a true story: Taylor Branch, At Canaans Edge, Memphis.
Full draft of Essay 1 due on Google Drive.
R April 13 Putting a story in context: Selected student writing.
T April 18 Unfolding a storys theme: selected student writing.
R April 20 Workshop.
Full draft of Essay 2 due on Google Drive.
T April 25 Class canceled for conferences.
R April 27 Class canceled for conferences.
T May 2 Creating a conversation: Lewis Mumford, What Is a City?
R May 4 Creating a conversation: Sharon Zukin, Whose Culture? Whose City?
T May 9 Proposal due / Writing field notes.
R May 11 Class cancelled for observation-participation.
T May 16 Draft of descriptive section due.
R May 18 Draft of intro to interpretive section due.
T May 23 Class canceled for conferences.
Full draft of Essay 3 due on Google Drive.
R May 25 Class canceled for conferences.
T May 30 Reflections and revisions.
R June 1 Reflections and revisions.

FINAL DRAFTS OF ALL WORK DUE ON GOOGLE DOCS BY NOON ON FRIDAY, JUNE 9.

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