powered by
Center for Curriculum and Transfer Articulation
First-Year Composition for ESL
Course: ENG107

First Term: 2020 Fall
Lecture   3.0 Credit(s)   3.0 Period(s)   3.0 Load  
Subject Type: Academic
Load Formula: S - Standard Load


Description: Equivalent of ENG101 for students of English as a Second Language (ESL). Emphasis on rhetoric and composition with a focus on expository writing and understanding writing as a process. Establishing effective college-level writing strategies through four or more writing projects comprising at least 3,000 words in total.



MCCCD Official Course Competencies
1. Analyze specific rhetorical contexts, including circumstance, purpose, topic, audience, and writer, as well as the writing`s ethical, political and cultural implications. (I, III)
2. Organize writing to support a central idea through unity, coherence, and logical development appropriate to a specific writing context. (II, IV)
3. Use appropriate conventions in writing, including consistent voice, tone, diction, grammar, and mechanics. (I, IV)
4. Summarize, paraphrase and quote from sources to maintain academic integrity and to develop and support one`s own ideas. (III, IV)
5. Use feedback obtained from peer review, instructor comments and/or other resources to revise writing. (II)
6. Assess one`s own writing strengths and identify strategies for improvement through instructor conference, portfolio review, written evaluation, and/or other methods. (II, III)
7. Generate, format, and edit writing using appropriate technologies. (II, IV)
MCCCD Official Course Competencies must be coordinated with the content outline so that each major point in the outline serves one or more competencies. MCCCD faculty retains authority in determining the pedagogical approach, methodology, content sequencing, and assessment metrics for student work. Please see individual course syllabi for additional information, including specific course requirements.
 
MCCCD Official Course Outline
I. Understanding Rhetorical Contexts
   A. Circumstance
   B. Purpose
   C. Topic
   D. Audience
   E. Writer
II. Defining Effective Processes
   A. Invention
   B. Drafting
   C. Feedback
   D. Revision
   E. Presentation
III. Thinking, Reading and Writing Critically
   A. Reading to discover
   B. Reading to analyze rhetorically
   C. Writing to discover
   D. Writing to communicate
   E. Writing to reflect
IV. Knowing Conventions
   A. Format
   B. Structure
   C. Documentation of sources
   D. Mechanics
 
MCCCD Governing Board Approval Date: May 26, 2020

All information published is subject to change without notice. Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of information presented, but based on the dynamic nature of the curricular process, course and program information is subject to change in order to reflect the most current information available.