Austin Community College
Department of Composition and Literary Studies
English 1302: Composition II
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This document applies only to the specific course section(s) indicated below. It supplements the Departmental Syllabus, which applies to all sections of this course at ACC, and which covers information including the course catalog description, learning goals, and department-wide policies. All Departmental Syllabi can be viewed on the Composition and Literary Studies Department website.
SECTION INFORMATION
Section Number: 065; Synonym: 16529
Section Number: 220; Synonym: 16621
Modality/Section Type: Online/Asynchronous (Service Learning)
INSTRUCTOR INFORMATION
Associate Adjunct Professor Becky Villarreal
Office Hours: Tuesdays, 7-9 p.m. (Zoom 7-8; Email: 8-9 p.m.)
ACC Email: bvillarr@austincc.edu (preferred contact)
The Departmental Syllabus is linked above and supplements this Section Syllabus by explaining learning objectives, requirements, and policies that apply to all sections of across Austin Community College.
REQUIRED TEXTS & MATERIALS
This is a ZTC (Zero Textbook Costs) section. In place of required textbooks, all textbook materials needed for the class will be available online to students via Blackboard free of charge. Students may print copies of the resources but will be responsible for printing costs.
INSTRUCTIONAL METHODOLOGY
Students will write four essays and three journals over the course of the semester, for a total minimum of 4000 words (including revisions). Students will also participate in a service-learning activity; complete quizzes and tutorials; submit outlines; peer edit and analyze works in the discussion board; participate in Zoom meetings; and read lectures, short stories, and poetry from online texts.
DISTANCE EDUCATION INFORMATION
This is an asynchronous course and all materials are housed in Blackboard. Although this course is asynchronous, I hold office hours weekly via Zoom.
The Zoom office-hour meetings in this course are held Tuesdays at 7 p.m. Please note that it is highly recommended that you attend Zoom meetings, so that you can learn pertinent information about the assignments, terminology, and lectures, and take the opportunity to ask questions. If you don't attend, you need to watch the recorded session(s) for that week. Information about the Zoom meetings (codes and links) and the recorded sessions are located in the Zoom folder in the course menu in Blackboard.
During our Zoom sessions, I encourage all students to unmute and engage with me and the other students, reveal your faces (or upload a profile image that captures your essence), and provide your gender pronoun preferences if you wish-- all this will help me and the other students get to know you. If I provide an opportunity to review one of your papers during a Zoom session, by all means, take advantage.
If there is time before or after our meeting, I can Zoom with students privately by appointment. You must request such a meeting beforehand (via email), not during the Zoom class session.
If you have any problems with Blackboard, Zoom, or ACC email, call the Help Desk at: 512-223-4636.
ASSIGNMENT INFORMATION
Readings and Lectures: Each student will be required to read the lectures, six required short stories, and two required poems on the reading list. The quizzes, Zoom discussions, journals, terminology, and papers are all focused on these readings and lectures.
Quizzes and Tutorials: The quizzes will review content and assess what you have learned (lectures, the readings, terms, grammar, punctuation, MLA). The tutorials are required, and the results will need to be attached to your submitted outlines.
Outlines: Before beginning each paper, you will need to complete an outline that will be graded. Once I have provided feedback for you outline, you can begin drafting your paper.
Discussion Board: All discussion board assignments involve either a discussion of the readings or peer editing and will be graded. Do not begin peer editing a paper until I have approved your outline. Once the hard due date has passed, you cannot receive credit for a discussion board.
Essays and Journals: There are four major papers (3500+ words) and three journals (1000+ words) assigned for this class, totaling 4500+ words.
Attendance: Zoom meetings are required for the online class, whether asynchronous or synchronous. If you cannot attend the weekly meeting(s), you must watch the recorded session(s) in the Zoom folder in Blackboard.
Participation: All students who are unable to attend and turn on their cameras during one of the first four Zooms (I will take attendance in the last ten min. of class) must meet with the professor in a 5-minute conference before the hard due date noted in the schedule (or complete the alternative participation activity linked in the course menu). All students who are unable to attend and turn on their cameras during one of the first four Zooms (I will take attendance in the last ten min. of class) must complete the alternative participation activity, which will be available after Week Four and linked in the course menu.
Service Learning: Service Learning is required in this course, and there are a few virtual, asynchronous options. Students must complete service-learning orientation via Journal One, and then complete two hours or more of an approved Service Learning Activity as a requirement of the third paper. Students with a B plus average or higher who complete six hours or more of service learning will be exempt from Journal Three. In addition, if you have a B plus average, complete six hours or more of service learning, AND present at the service learning showcase, you will be exempt from Journal Three and Paper Four (when it's available). However, if your outline for the showcase is not completed by the deadline in the schedule and peer editing is not finished a week before the showcase, you will be asked to complete Journal 3 and Paper 4. There is a written component for those who participate in the showcase that aligns with the 4000 word-count provision for the course.
Grades and Feedback: It's important to keep up with your Grades and read the detailed feedback for Journals, Quizzes, Outlines, and Papers by clicking the Gradebook in the top Blackboard menu and then viewing the Results (to see the graded rubric and my detailed feedback for outlines, papers, and journals). For most written assignments, you are allowed to make corrections and receive extra points.
The course is divided into several learning units:
Orientation and Introduction to Service-Learning and Review of College-Level Writing
Biographical Research Analysis (Paper One)
Protest Poetry (Paper Two)
Social Awareness/Service-Learning Research (Paper Three)
Creative/Analysis Paper or Showcase Presentation (Paper Four)
Reflection
GRADING SYSTEM
The percentages below are based on a 1000-point system:
Four Papers-- 40% (100 points max each)--400
Four Outlines --12% (30 points max each)--120
Seven Discussion Boards-- 21% (30 points max each)--210
Four Quizzes-- 8% (20 points each)--80
Three Journals -- 15% (50 points max each)--150
Participation--4% (40 points max)-- 40
Grading Scale
A-- 90-100%
B-- 80-89%
C-- 70-79%
D-- 60-69%
F- 59% or Below
CLICK HERE TO ACCESS THE COURSE SCHEDULE
ATTENDANCE / PARTICIPATION
For online classes, you must complete the orientation quiz and the intro thread by the deadline in the course schedule in order to be counted present that first week.
Attendance is mandatory. In my online courses, you are required to either attend or watch the recordings of all Zoom meetings.
WITHDRAWALS
If you do not attend or participate in the first week of class (or the first few days in short semesters), you will be withdrawn for non-attendance.
Please do not withdraw from the course without first talking to me. We can discuss a plan of action to ensure your success in the class. If you are thinking about withdrawing, I will insist that you first visit with an academic advisor, the financial aid office, and/or an academic coach to discuss your options.
If you are failing the course and there is no pathway to success, I reserve the right to withdraw you from the class. If you do not want to be withdrawn for whatever reason (such as financial aid, veterans benefits, or graduation), it is your responsibility to let me know early in the semester. Check the Academic Calendar to view the final withdrawal date for this course.
MISSED EXAMS & LATE WORK
Refer to the soft due dates in the schedule to stay on track. In this class, I generally give students a one-week minimum grace period to complete all assignments, except for the first and last week of class.
Papers, Journals, and Outlines: After the hard due date has passed (one week after the soft due date), you will lose ten points for each day after that date, not to exceed more than a 40 percent deduction of the total points possible. However, if the assignment is not completed until the last week of class, you cannot earn more than 50 percent of its original value. You must post your outline BEFORE posting your paper to the discussion board or for a grade and give me time to give feedback.
Discussion Boards: After the hard due date (one week after the soft due date), you are ineligible to receive credit (because you were not part of the discussion)--no exceptions.
Quizzes: I will record a zero after the grace period is up, and then update once the assignment is completed by manually entering the grade, as long as the past due assignment is not submitted during the final week of the course.
Participation: I will record a zero after the hard due date is up, and then update once the conference or alternative activity is completed (with a 50 percent penalty) by manually entering the grade. Students who do not comply with my participation requirement will be subject to withdrawal.
All work must be completed by the last day of the course-- no exceptions!
INCOMPLETES
Except in very rare situations, I do not give incompletes. You must be passing the class at the time of your request. I will review each case to determine whether I feel an incomplete is warranted or not. In general, however, barring extraordinary circumstances, and unless you have completed 75% of the coursework on time (and the drop date has passed), I will not grant you an incomplete. Refer to the soft due dates in the syllabus to stay on track.
ACADEMIC MISCONDUCT & PLAGIARISM
All acts of plagiarism and scholastic dishonesty, including having someone complete assignments for you and using AI tools improperly, are violations of academic integrity subjected to disciplinary action.
Plagiarism is intentionally or knowingly representing the words or ideas of another as one's own.
Self-Plagiarism, which is submitting a paper you completed in another class (K-12 or college), is also forbidden.
If you plagiarize and it is unintentional, you will be given a warning. If you are asked to choose another topic or rewrite the paper, the professor is obligated to report your misconduct to the chair, dean, and Student Affairs. After the second incident, you will face disciplinary action. However, if you commit an act of plagiarism or scholastic dishonesty and it is intentional, you could receive an F in the course and face serious disciplinary action.
The professor reserves the right to subject students to a one-on-one Zoom conference in the event of suspected academic dishonesty, plagiarism, or improper AI usage. The professor reserves the right to subject students to a face-to-face conference in the event of suspected academic dishonesty, plagiarism, or improper AI usage. You must have an updated ACC ID card (with your photo) or visit the nearest ACC campus to update your Student ID card with your photo prior to scheduling the conference.
Use of Artificial Intelligence
I see AI as a tool, not a replacement for your own thinking. When used thoughtfully, it can assist you, but your personal voice is the most important part of this course. If you use AI, I expect you to document your use of these tools clearly and appropriately.
Instructional AI refers to the use of AI tools as a learning aid, such as the basic version of Grammarly*, Quillbot, or some parts of Google NotebookLM. This type of use is often encouraged to help you understand a topic better, but it should not be used to do the work for you. While Grammarly was originally an instructional tool to help students edit their work, it has become a generative AI tool that can revise and rewrite student writing. Using it in this way overrides your authority as an author, so use it primarily for grammar and spelling assistance.
Generative AI refers to computer programs that can create new text, images, or other content in response to your prompts. Popular examples include ChatGPT, Google's Gemini, Microsoft's Copilot, DALL-E, and Adobe Firefly.
When to Use AI
You may use AI tools in certain stages of the writing process, such as to brainstorm ideas or to assist with editing.
How I Will Determine and Assess AI Use
Noting Discrepancies in Writing Style: A sudden and significant change in tone, vocabulary, sentence structure, or the presence of grammatically proficient yet generic prose may be a flag for AI use.
Using AI Detection Tools: Rather than police your writing, the primary goal of this course is to help you develop the critical thinking and communication skills that are essential for success in college and beyond. With that said, AI detection tools will be used.
Consequences of Misusing AI
If your work shows signs that you have used AI improperly, be prepared to explain your writing process in detail. Penalties may be assessed, such as earning a zero without the opportunity to resubmit. Persistent and/or egregious misuse of AI will be considered a violation of ACC’s Academic Honesty Policies and may result in your failing the course.
Your Digital Privacy
As you use AI tools, keep in mind that many of them collect information from your interactions and use that information to train the programs. Avoid including identifying or personal information in your prompts. You may also consider creating a separate Gmail address to use specifically with GAI tools. Google Gemini is available from the list of Google Apps for your ACC account, and this version of the app will not collect or use your interactions to train Gemini.
Please see the Department Syllabus for English 1302 for more information.
Disclaimer: In this course, we will be dealing with controversial and sensitive subject matter, so that all students exit the course with the ability to communicate effectively and use reliable sources to evolve and think critically. With that said, the topics in the assignments and papers, as well as the banter in discussion boards and Zoom meetings, are not an endorsement of the professor's viewpoints.
Updated: Spring 2025