Speed Reading RDG163, Section B, CRN 21195
Course Syllabus Spring 2010
Tu-Th
12:50 – 2:15
Building 6, Room 12
Instructor: Sue Wickham
Monday 12:00
– 4:00
Wednesday 12:00
– 3:00
Tuesday -Thursday 8:00 – 10:00;
11:00-12:00
Friday
12:00 – 1:00
Office Hours (Building 6, Room 25 B)
Monday – Wednesday – Friday 8:00 – 9:00
Tuesday
2:30 – 3:30
Please feel free to come in during my AAC hours or office hours for a
conference or for extra help.
Phone:
E-mail: smwickham@dmacc.edu
Web Site: http://www.dmacc.edu/instructors/smwickham/welcome.htm
Texts:
Any good collegiate dictionary, such as the American
Heritage Dictionary
A novel or light nonfiction book of your choice.
Course Purposes:
Speed
1. Improving speed
and flexibility
2. Improving literal
comprehension by
3. Improving
critical comprehension through
Class Activities and Assignments:
Class activities
will include individual and group work, class discussion and lectures. There
will be regular in-class timed readings and group exercises for which no
make-up is possible. Assignments will require an average of two hours out of
class per hour in class.
Grades:
In-class work and homework assignments--approximately 100
points
Major Assignments--approximately 350 points
These assignments
are semester-long projects which allow you to tailor reading activities to your
interests and needs. Each assignment will be explained fully during the first
week of class.
1. Vocabulary lists - 120 points
2. Controlled reading exercises
- 70 points
3. Ten-minute
readings and dialogues-approximately 60 points
4. Book review - 100 points
Tests--500 points
There will be four
tests including a comprehensive final, which counts as two test grades. If you
must miss a test, contact me on or before the date of the test so that we
can reschedule it. If you do not meet
this requirement, a make-up test will be given only at my discretion.
(Translation: have an airtight excuse, with written proof!)
Grading Policy:
|
93%-100% = A |
83%-86.9% = B |
73%-76.9% = C |
63%-66.9% = D |
|
90%-92.9% = A- |
80%-82.9% = B- |
70%-72.9% = C- |
60%-62.9% = D- |
|
87%-89.9% = B+ |
77%-79.9% = C+ |
67%-69.9% = D+ |
0% - 59.9% = F |
Attendance and Late Work:
Because your work
will often require the use of materials available only in class, because much
of your daily work will be done in class, and because you and your classmates
learn best from one another, it is essential that you attend class regularly
and arrive on time.
Accommodations:
It is the policy of
DMACC to accommodate students with disabilities. Any student with a documented
disability who requires reasonable accommodation should contact the special
needs coordinator at
Class Policies:
Respect for the
learning process and for the people engaged in teaching and learning is central
to this class.
1. Please be considerate of
both your instructor and your classmates. Arrive early and have reading
materials ready when class begins. If you must walk in late, do so quietly.
Your classmates will appreciate not being disturbed when doing timed readings.
2. Turn off cell phones,
pagers, I-Pods, etc., before entering the classroom and put them away.
3. During class activities,
avoid side conversations and other distracting behaviors.
Academic honesty is
a fundamental value of this class.
Cheating of any kind, whether it involves using crib notes on a test,
plagiarizing from a published source, submitting someone else’s work as your
own, or allowing someone else to copy yours, will not be tolerated. Academic
sanctions will include, but are not limited to, a 0 on the assignment in
question. A record of your violation will be placed on file with the Judicial Affairs
officer.
Incomplete and Course Withdrawal Policy
I want to help you
succeed in this class. If you have a legitimate reason to be absent for an
extended time, such as illness requiring hospitalization or a family emergency,
please contact me in order to arrange to make up missed work. I’ll be happy to
assign an "Incomplete" grade if
you request it and if, in my opinion, there is a reasonable probability that
you will complete the missing assignments.
If you choose to
drop the class, you must withdraw by
using DMACC’s Web Info System or by completing an official drop slip and
returning it to Student Records in Building 1. Without this drop slip, you will
receive an F for the course. The last day to drop a class this semester is March 30, 2010.
TENTATIVE COURSE SCHEDULE
|
January 12 |
Stanford Reading Test; discuss syllabus. |
|
January 14 |
Due: "Literal
Comprehension Inventory"; read
pp. vii-viii, 1-4 in your text. |
|
January 19 |
Due: Self-evaluation; bring book for 10-minute
reads; text, pp. 5-13. |
|
January 21 |
Due: Word List 1. Chapter 1, "Developing Vocabulary Skills," context and word parts, pp. 14-19, 24-25. Demonstration of Quantum reading exercises. |
|
January 26 |
Due: pp. 19-21, 26-27, 50-54. Word parts, pp. 29-32. Quiz. |
|
January 28 |
Due: pp. 42-50; Word List 2. Quiz. Dictionary skills review, pp. 34-41; types of dictionaries. |
|
February 2 |
Due: library exercise. Figurative language, pp. 297-300 and hand-outs. Review for Test 1. |
|
February 4 |
Due: Word List 3. TEST 1 |
|
February 9 |
Due: Logs and Quantum readings1-3; pp. 59-67. Chapter 2, "Developing Literal Recall." Main ideas and supporting details, pp. 68-79. |
|
February 11 |
Due: pp. 79-81, 81-87; Word List 4. Paragraph patterns, pp. 87-91. |
|
February 16 |
Due: pp. 91-95. Quiz. Finding the thesis, pp. 95-100. |
|
February 18 |
Due: Word List 5. Writing a summary, pp. 100-102. In-class summary. |
|
February 23 |
Due: Article summary. In-class summary, pp. 106-7. Review for Test 2. |
|
February 25 |
Due: Word List 6; Logs and Quantum readings 4-6. TEST 2 |
|
March 2 |
Due: pp. 355-359; Study reading, 360-362. |
|
March 4 |
Due: Word List 7. Annotating, pp. 362-369, 379-80. |
|
March 9 |
Due: Note-taking assignment, including text marking and separate notes. Scanning, pp. 386-394. Skimming. |
|
March 11 |
Due: Word List 8. Bring a magazine to use in class. Skim a magazine exercise. |
|
March 23 |
Due: pp. 102-106. Rapid reading, pp. 54-58, 110-112. |
|
March 25 |
Due: Word List 9. In class: Timed reading, pp.
134-138. Progress Check. Review for
Test 3. |
|
March 30 |
Due: Completed Progress Check. TEST 3 |
|
April 1 |
Due: Word List 10; Critical Comprehension Introduction, pp. 141-146; logs and Quantum readings 7-10. Questions for critical analysis. Fact and opinion, pp. 147-149. |
|
April 6 |
Due: pp. 150-154, 154-157. Kinds of evidence. |
|
April 8 |
Due: pp. 159-165; Word List 11. Quiz, pp. 165-167. |
|
April 13 |
Propaganda, pp.
167-171. |
|
April 15 |
Due: pp. 172-178, including example of propaganda;
Word List 12. Intent, attitude, and tone, pp. 190-191. |
|
April 20 |
Intent, attitude, and tone, pp. 191-196. Humor, sarcasm, and irony. |
|
April 22 |
Due: Rough draft of book review. In-class group work: Inference, pp. 234-248. |
|
April 27 |
Due: Quantum readings 11-12, book review, logs. Underlying social values,
induction and deduction; fallacies, pp. 248-258. |
|
April 29 |
Review for final
exam. |
|
May 4 |
FINAL EXAM 11:30 AM – 1:45 PM |