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Putting Your Mind to
English
Quiz
ENGLISH 1301 FINAL EXAM TOPIC PROMPTS & WRITING
STRATEGIES
The Write Way (most
recent edition in Cougar News)
A Student's Guide to Academic Etiquette ©
Statement on Scholastic
Responsibility Applicable to My Courses
(Additional
definitions and policies that I adhere to fully, including assigning zero grades for paper purchases or
collusion.)
Please click HERE for English Department's Policy
on Plagiarism,
HERE for
plagiarism through collusion,
and HERE for the English Department Grading Criteria.
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You can find additional
information about my course objectives and grading philosophy HERE. |
Below as well as on the Home Page you will find links to class
syllabi and class material as well as links to Internet sites aimed at
enriching classroom instruction.
Reminder: I have a for plagiarized papers. Please note that
I am familiar with the primary web site sellers of papers (like 123helpme.com).
Moreover, I reserve all rights to submit papers to Turnitin.com for
verification of original work.
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Composition & Vocabulary
A Condensed Guide to Writing an Essay A Visual Guide to Organizing an Essay Common Mistakes and Tricky Choices Common Errors in English Usage Standard American English Conventions Guide to Grammar, Writing, and Quizzes Style: Subordination and Coordination Grading
Standards: ENGL 1301, 1302 Grammars, Resources, Et Cetera Glossary of Grammatical Terms The Finished Paper (Mechanics) Step-by-Step Essay
Instructions Only a mediocre writer is always at his best. |
Literary Resources
The Ancient and Classical World American
Comparative Literature Assn. World Literature, Alphabetized Questions/Answers over the Classics Classical to Contemporary Drama Classics: Online Literature Library Dante, Lorca, Petrarch, & Others Time Line of Significant Events Norton's World Literature Resources |
Miscellaneous
A Celebration of Women Writers Index/Sources of Common Expressions Bartlett's Familiar Quotations Find a Quotation or Famous Expression The Virtual Reference Desk (Purdue) MIT Virtual Reference Collection Richard Lederer's Language Links Nobel Prize Winners in Literature Revision Symbols for Literary Papers Write with nouns and verbs, not with adjectives and adverbs. Words are like money; there is nothing so |
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English
1301 Menu Step-by-Step
Instructions |
English
2332 Menu
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English
2342 Menu Maymester Syllabus Summer Semester Syllabus |
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Words
for Your
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Wintermester World Lit
II:
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English
2343 Menu Maymester Syllabus Weekly Syllabus |
I am always grateful for any notification of an outdated or missing link. Please e-mail me: jmiller@ccccd.edu
Copyright ©Collin College.
All rights reserved. Last update:
4/21/09.
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Please click HERE for the
English Department Grading Criteria. Based on
my experience along with my objective professional judgment, I shall assign
grades that mirror Only by acquiring a framework of basic knowledge and by
viewing language as a vital, systematic universe can you produce successful
papers ranging from informative essays to book reviews to critical literary
analyses. In this course (and in all my courses, for that matter), the notion
of separating content and form to inflate an essay's grade based on content
only is an insupportable and therefore fallacious concept. Sadly, unless
teaching professionals come to grips with the damage resulting from the
practice, the "separation" concept will continue to rob an
unacceptable number of students from acquiring knowledge vital to the worthy
art of producing authentic and readable prose. |
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Hurt No Living Thing (by Christina G. Rossetti)
Hurt no living thing;
Ladybird, nor butterfly,
Nor moth with dusty wing,
Nor cricket chirping cheerily,
Nor grasshopper so light of leap,
Nor dancing gnat, nor beetle flat,
Nor harmless worms that creep.