Salem Community College



Similar documents
BUS 204 BUSINESS COMMUNICATIONS

Prerequisite: Test placement in ENG101 or successful completion of ENG98 if required.

Lassen Community College Course Outline

The Business Writer s Handbook, eleventh edition, Alred et al. A Peacock in the Land of Penguins, Hateley, BJ and Warren Schmidt

Hagerstown Community College OFFICIAL COURSE SYLLABUS DOCUMENT

COMMUNICATION & JOURNALISM PUBLIC SPEAKING SECTION 021 COURSE SYLLABUS

English 1302 Writing Across the Curriculum Spring 2016

Please see current textbook prices at

English 273 XXX Technical and Scientific Writing SAMPLE SYLLABUS Department of English, SFASU

Salem Community College Course Syllabus. Section I. Course Title: Principles of Emergency Management. Course Code: EME101.

ASU College of Education Department of Curriculum and Instruction EDG 6331 Role of the School Counselor Fall A 2015 Course Syllabus

Salem Community College Course Syllabus. Section I. Course Title: Principles Of Marketing. Course Code: BUS212

PELLISSIPPI STATE COMMUNITY COLLEGE MASTER SYLLABUS LEGAL WRITING & ANALYSIS LAW 1050

English 1302 Writing Across the Curriculum Fall 2015

ASU College of Education Department of Curriculum and Instruction EDG 6324 Career and Occupational Counseling Course Syllabus

MILWAUKEE AREA TECHNICAL COLLEGE Course Syllabus Fall 2005

This course is required for the AS/AAS Business Administration program majors and the Administrative Assistant certificate program majors.

HUS 614: Communication Skills for Human Service Practitioners

Salem Community College Course Syllabus. Section I. Course Title: Principles Of Accounting I. Course Code: ACC121

COM207: CREATIVE WRITING: FICTION SYLLABUS LECTURE HOURS/CREDITS: 3/3

COURSE OUTLINE. 3 3 Lecture Hours Hours: lecture/laboratory/other (specify)

POFT 2312 BUSINESS CORRESPONDENCE & COMMUNICATION

COURSE OUTLINE. New York City College of Technology City University of New York Humanities Department

School of Management MGMT315 Management Communications 3 Credit Hours 8 weeks Prerequisite(s): None

COMM 286S: Business & Professional Communication

ENGL 1302 ONLINE English Composition II Course Syllabus: Spring 2015

No Evidence. 8.9 f X

Sections: Enc :35 3:50 p.m. - AC-221 (82172) / Enc :05 5:20 p.m. AC-220 (84866)

University of North Texas at Dallas Fall 2015 SYLLABUS TECM Technical Writing (3 hrs)

English 310: Technical Writing Online. (preferred contact) (emergency contact only)

Syllabus ENC 3249 Professional and Technical Writing for Computing

BUSSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL COMMUNICATION COMM GRADING USING THE FOLLOWING VALUES Attendance Classroom & Discussion board participation

Please see current textbook prices at

BA Criminal Justice ( )

Agriculture Industry AGRI Course Syllabus. Chad Henry-Instructor

ADMS 3015 Winter 2012 Professional Communication in a Canadian Context

PROJECT MANAGEMENT COURSE SYLLABUS

To talk by phone or leave a voice mail, call: (generally not available on weekends)

Research Methods in Advertising and Public Relations COMM 420 Spring Earth & Eng. Sci. W/F 12:20 PM to 2:15 PM

$ Communications$in$the$Professional$7orld$ (Course #13230, J. Foresta, Tuesday / Thursday, Room: ET-201, 7:00 8:50 P.M.)

PSYCHOLOGY : INDUSTRIAL/ORGANIZATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY STEPHEN F. AUSTIN STATE UNIVERITY COURSE SYLLABUS & CALENDAR FALL 2011

Communications 1115: Interpersonal Communications

In this memorandum, I discuss proper writing for your memo-format assignments. Specifically, I

ENL1813S. munications I. (PLAR) Prior Learning Assessment & Recognition Student Resource Guide.

ENG 032. Developmental English

Angelo State University Department of Psychology, Sociology, and Social Work SWK 4373: Social Work Practice III

Educational Psychology and Assessment

COURSE SYLLABUS. Instructor Background: M.S. Computer Information Systems, Nova Southeastern University

LTEC 4510 Business Communication

BCM 247 BUSINESS COMMUNICATION Course Syllabus Fall 2012

Lincoln University COURSE SYLLABUS

South Texas College Division of Nursing/Allied Health Occupational Therapy Assistant Program Master Syllabus Fall 2006

How To Write A Business Writing Course

Social Psychology PSY Syllabus Fall

Syllabus Government 2306: Texas State and Local Government: 3 Credit Hours / 0 Lab Hours

English Instructor Information Deidra Dallas ext. 5015

BBA 305W Business Communication Class Syllabus for the Spring 2014

University of Texas at San Antonio English 2413: Technical Writing Fall 2011

Prerequisite: CGA 101, or written permission of instructor.

New York City College of Technology ENG : English Composition I Telling Brooklyn Stories Fall 2012 M/W 1:00-2:15PM Namm 420B

Salem Community College Course Syllabus. Course Title: Physics I. Course Code: PHY 101. Lecture Hours: 2 Laboratory Hours: 4 Credits: 4

BUSI Business Principles

ASU College of Education Department of Curriculum and Instruction EDG 6361 American Higher Education Course Syllabus

AGRI 2030 Technical Communications COURSE OUTLINE January - April 2013

Goetsch, D. L. (2010). Construction safety and the OSHA standards. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.

PREP-009 COURSE SYLLABUS FOR WRITTEN COMMUNICATIONS

The guidelines for Major Projects in the College of Liberal Arts are brief:

Syllabus for MGT 341 Business Communications 3 Credit Hours Spring 2012

BUSINESS COMMUNICATIONS Curriculum Content Frameworks

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI COLLEGE OF SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY Industrial Engineering Technology

Required Textbook: Sciarra, Dorothy June, Dorsey, Anne G., Developing and Administering a Child Care and Education Program, 7th Edition.

COMM 286: Business & Professional Communication

WRITING SKILLS Course Syllabus

SAMPLE SYLLABUS NEW YORK CITY COLLEGE OF TECHNOLOGY: HUMANITIES DEPARTMENT COURSE TITLE: PUBLIC SPEAKING CODE: COM 1330

INSTRUCTIONAL GOALS AND PURPOSES

SYLLABUS PUR 4410 (5137) PRINCIPLES OF FUND RAISING

Psychology 314L (52510): Research Methods

English 102 ONLINE: Reason and Research Winter, 2015

MTH 110: Elementary Statistics (Online Course) Course Syllabus Fall 2012 Chatham University

Communication COMMUNICATION Sacramento City College Catalog. Degrees: A.A. Communication AA-T Communication Studies for Transfer

etroy Course Syllabus BUS 3382 XTIA Business Communication Term 1, 2015 August 10 October 11, 2015

BUSINESS COMMUNICATION

ENC2210 Technical writing for health science majors. Course Description:

Television Production 2

Student Union B, Room 100 (501) Professional and

PH 7019 Public Health Research Methods (CRN: 87556)

Transcription:

Salem Community College Course Title: Business and Occupational Writing Course Code: ENG122 Lecture Hours: 3 Lab Hours: 0 Credits: 3 Course Description: ENG 122 is designed to help students improve their written and oral technical and business-related communications. Instruction is provided in the techniques of efficiently and effectively composing letters, memos, proposals, reports, summaries, abstracts, descriptions, specifications, resumes, as well as delivering oral presentations. Place in College Curriculum: Business and Occupational Writing may be taken as an English or humanities elective by any student. It is especially recommended for students planning careers in business-related positions in which communication skills are necessary for success. Also, this course may be substituted for ENG 102 by students who do not wish to pursue a four-year degree. Students should consult a counselor or the instructor to be sure that this course will satisfy the English requirement in their major. Prerequisite: ENG 101 Credits: Three (3) College-level credits

Course Performance Objective #1 Students will create written communication that is appropriate for the workplace audience. 1. Students will assess and respond to their audience s information needs. 2. Students will produce written communication that is user centered. 3. Students will create written communication that is clear and concise. 4. Students will produce a variety of written communication documents, such as memos, letters, brochures and pamphlets, instructional materials, reports, and proposals. 5. Students will create documents that are written for people of varying audience types. 6. Students will recognize primary and secondary audiences for their correspondence 7. Students will recognize and employ various strategies for connecting with an audience. 8. Students will cite common communication constraints and explain how to address those constraints. Course Performance Objective #2 Students will recognize and avoid unethical written and oral communication in their assignments. 1. Students will name common causes and types of unethical communication. 2. Students will cite examples of unethical communication. 3. Students will explain how critical thinking can promote ethical decisions and ethical communications. 4. Students will define plagiarism and its penalties and will avoid plagiarism in their assignments. 5. Students will practice paraphrasing, summarizing, and appropriate citation of sources. Course Performance Objective #3 Students will edit documents for appropriate style. 1. Students will define, recognize and eliminate ambiguity. 2. Students will apply standard English rules of mechanics and usage. 3. Students will avoid awkward use of passive voice, wordiness and redundancy, vague and ambiguous diction, and confusing pronoun references. 4. Students will compose communications which employ appropriate sentence structures and which adhere to the principles of logical coordination, subordination, parallelism, and discourse. 5. Students will recognize and employ tone appropriate to the intended audience.

Course Performance Objective #4 Students will define and practice creative thinking. 1. Students will develop and engage in brainstorming activities prior to composing their correspondence. 2. Students will develop and practice mind-mapping activities. 3. Students will define and practice storyboarding. Course Performance Objective #5 Students will engage in collaborative classroom activities. 1. Students will define the characteristics of successful collaboration. 2. Students will explain the function of the members of a group. 3. Students will describe the role of the project manager. 4. Students will establish guideline for managing a collaborative project. 5. Students will describe and practice methods to resolve conflicts in group activities. Course Performance Objective #6 Students will engage in the research activities. (IL) 1. Students will select an instructor-approved research topic. 2. Students will locate electronic and print resources from reliable sites and sources. 3. Students will evaluate their sources for timeliness, accuracy, balance and bias. 4. Students will use both primary and secondary sources. 5. Students will practice incorporating their research into their documents. 6. Students will practice correctly citing their research sources using MLA, APA, or other approved method. Course Performance Objective #7 Students will compose and edit a variety of documents using the appropriate form. 1. Students will distinguish an author s main points from supporting material when composing summaries. 2. Students will distinguish between and recognize the elements of various types of abstracts and summaries: closing summaries, informative abstracts, descriptive abstracts or executive abstracts. 3. Students will compose a variety of letter types, including letters of application, complaint, and inquiry.

4. Students will compose a variety of reports including proposals and progress reports. 5. Students will compose a description of a process, or a description of a physical entity, which emphasizes logical order, perspective, and the use of transitional language. Course Performance Objective #8 Students will create visuals to enhance their documents. 1. Students will explain when visuals are appropriate. 2. Students will identify common types of visuals. 3. Students will describe the strengths and weaknesses of various types of visuals. 4. Students will determine which types of visuals are appropriate to various correspondence. 5. Students will include appropriate visual supplements, including computer generated visuals, in their correspondence. Course Performance Objective #9 Students will create attractive, usable page design. 1. Students will explain the importance of page design. 2. Students will demonstrate the effective use of white space. 3. Students will select appropriate fonts and size. Course Performance Objective #10 Students will compose their resume. 1. Students will describe the purpose of a resume. 2. Students will examine various approved resume formats and select one for use. 3. Students will prepare an inventory of their own employment and educational experience. 4. Students will compose their own resume. 5. Students will compose their own cover letter employing the strategies discussed in class. Course Performance Objective #11 Students will simulate job-search and interview techniques, and create a resume.

1. Students will search hard-copy and on-line sources for jobs in their major. 2. Students will search hard-copy and on-line sources to determine the salary range for a job of interest to them. 3. Students will search current on-line sources to determine questions frequently asked by employers. 4. Students will discuss and evaluate potential responses to common interview questions. 5. Students will engage in mock interview sessions. Course Performance Objective #12 Students will give a 10-minute extemporaneous presentation to their classmates. 1. Students will research an instructor-approved topic from current, reliable on-line and hard-copy sources. 2. Students will document their sources and create a Works-Cited page (MLA documentation form). 3. Students will explain the differences between an impromptu, memorized, scripted, and extemporaneous speech delivery. 4. Students will deliver their extemporaneous speech using only notes and are encouraged to use visual aids. 5. Students will deliver their presentations at a conversational pace while employing effective volume and inflection, and appropriate use of gesture and body language.

General Education Requirements: The general education goals addressed in ENG 122 include written and oral communication, critical thinking and problem solving. Additionally, the course emphasizes teamwork and ethical behavior. Course Activities: The students will participate in lecture, group activities, written and oral communication assignments both in and outside of class, critical thinking and problem solving exercises, and research projects. (IL) Attendance Policy: Students are expected to attend all classes and labs. Instructors will announce their own attendance policies which will appear on the course guides presented to the students. Academic Honesty Policy: Students found to have committed an act of academic dishonesty are subject to failure in the course, academic probation, and/or suspension from the College. See the Student Handbook for additional details. ADA Statement: If you have a 504 Accommodation Plan, please discuss it with your instructor. If you have any disability but have not documented it with the Disability Support coordinator at Salem Community college, you must do so to be eligible for accommodations. To contact the Disability Support Coordinator, call 856-351-2773, or email disabilitysupport@salemcc.edu to set up an appointment. To find out more information about disability support services at Salem Community College, visit www.salemcc.edu/students/student-success-programs/disability-support. Means of Evaluation: Please refer to the instructor s syllabus addendum (to be distributed in class) for specific information regarding the course requirements and means of evaluation. Required Text: For textbook information, please see the Salem Community College Bookstore Website