EN 102 - English Composition II Description EN 102 emphasizes critical reading and analysis to hone the writing and thinking skills begun in EN 101 . Students engage with the ideas of others, using research as a process of discovery to deepen and refine their own thinking. Producing a variety of texts, students learn to communicate with precise and intentional language. Coursework includes writing-based projects that incorporate rhetorical analyses, information literacy, ambitious research, and metacognition. The course empowers students to enter existing conversations in ways that are meaningful, ethical, and informed. Credit Hours: 3 Contact Hours: 3 Prerequisites/Other Requirements: EN 101 (C or Higer) English Prerequisite(s): None Math Prerequisite(s): None Course Corequisite(s): None Academic Program Prerequisite: NONE Consent to Enroll in Course: No Department Consent Required Dual Enrollment Allowed?: Yes Number of Times Course can be taken for credit: 1 General Education Requirement: English Composition General Education Learner Outcomes (GELO): 2. Communication: Demonstrate effective communication through listening, speaking, reading, or writing using relevant sources and research strategies, 3. Critical Thinking: Gather and synthesize relevant information, evaluate alternative perspectives, or understand inquiry as a means of creating knowledge Course Learning Outcomes:
- Use recursive and reflective reading and writing processes to refine ideas and improve writing.
- Choose effective organizational and stylistic moves for writing across a variety of rhetorical situations (GELO2).
- Evaluate information to identify patterns, limitations, and biases (GELO3).
- Integrate appropriate and relevant sources to enhance writing.
- Synthesize the writing, research, and ideas of others.
Course Outline: I. Rhetorical Analysis & Application
Opportunities for reading, rhetorical analysis, synthesis, and discussion will be built into the curriculum. Instructors will provide practice and instruction in making organizational and stylistic choices based on audience and purpose, providing opportunities for students to hone their rhetorical knowledge and apply it to their work.
II. Working with Sources
Instructors will focus teaching on higher-level concepts including but not limited to the following: evaluating sources for particular audiences; synthesizing source ideas in summary and paraphrase; integrating outside source ideas into text-based projects; using sources to deepen and refine students’ thinking and writing; citing/documenting sources (MLA & APA required); using sources to identify discourse communities and join conversations in those communities.
III. Writing Processes
Instructors should think of the processes in which writers engage as diverse, recursive, dependent upon the situation, and even messy. There is no definitive list of required writing steps to complete in any specific order. Instructors will, therefore, encourage flexible writing processes which may include some combination of the following (formally or informally): inquiry research, outline, draft, peer review, proofread, edit, revise, reflect.
IV. Information Literacy
Instructors will introduce all EN 102 students to the concept of the information cycle and other information literacy skills that build on those taught in EN 101.
V. Reflection
Instructors will embed opportunities for reflection throughout the course so that students can identify their own writing choices and growth in areas that could include but are not limited to the following: effective writing processes; organization and style; revision; impact and transfer of thinking, writing, and research skills; information literacy; inquiry as a means of knowledge creation. Approved for Online and Hybrid Delivery?: Yes Instructional Strategies: Instructor-Mediated Lecture & Modeling: 5-25%
Facilitated Discussion: 5-30%
Writing, Application, & Reflection: 10-30%
Peer or Group Work (Thinking, Writing, Reviewing): 10-30%
Technology-Mediated Writing & Research: 10-30% Mandatory Course Components:
- Three scaffolded writing projects culminating in a final writing-based piece taken through multiple drafts
- Outside sources used in each of the three writing projects
- MLA required (minimum one project)
- APA required (minimum one project)
- A minimum of two unique scaffolded assignments per project
- An annotated bibliography or a literature review using a minimum of 10 sources
- Teach & practice the concept of the information cycle and other information literacy skills that extend those taught in EN 101.
- The department-wide common assignment project: An academic essay of at least 8 pages in length that uses sources; the essay represents at least 20% of each student’s overall course grade (includes rubric).
Equivalent Courses: None Accepted GRCC Advanced Placement (AP) Exam Credit: English Language & Composition AP Min. Score: 3 Name of Industry Recognize Credentials: None
Course prepares students to seek the following external certification: No Course-Specific Placement Test: None Course Aligned with ARW/IRW Pairing: NA Mandatory Department Assessment Measures: None Course Type: General Education- Offering designed to meet the specific criteria for a GRCC Distribution Requirement. The course should be designated by the requirement it fulfills. Course Format: Lecture - 1:1 Total Lecture Hours Per Week: 3 People Soft Course ID Number: 100664 Course CIP Code: 23.01 Maximum Course Enrollment: 25 General Room Request: None High School Articulation Agreements exist?: No If yes, with which high schools?: NA Non-Credit GRCC Articulation Agreement With What Area: No Identify the Non Credit Programs this Course is Accepted: NA
School: School of Liberal Arts Department: English Discipline: EN Faculty Credential Requirements: 18 graduate credit hours in discipline being taught (HLC Requirement), Master’s Degree (GRCC general requirement), Other (list below) Faculty Credential Requirement Details: EN 102 instructors should have an advanced degree in English composition, literature, or a comparable degree. Some special graduate course work, or training in the teaching of writing or English, should also be necessary. Major Course Revisions: General Education Review Last Revision Date Effective: 20220216T10:50:18 Course Review & Revision Year: 2026-2027
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