Learning Goals

Our Learning Goals:

In this class, all of our assignments, readings, and discussions are tailored to meet the learning outcomes below. Every week, on Canvas I will provide an overview video and description of our learning tasks and each learning task will give you an opportunity to progress towards one or more of the learning outcomes below.

Upon completing this course successfully, you should be able to:

  1. Describe how disciplinary values influence how a writer approaches topics, identifies audiences, develops a persona, and articulates a purpose for writing.


  1. Compare the ways texts are written, researched, organized, and disseminated in multiple disciplines.


  1. Analyze credible and relevant evidence and/or sources to support ideas for specific rhetorical purposes appropriate to a variety of disciplines.


  1. Survey the rhetorical practices from a variety of disciplines to recognize organization, content, presentation, and style.


  1. Compose texts in a variety of discipline-specific genres and media that communicate a controlling idea with clarity and fluency.


  1. Demonstrate consistent control of written language in response to disciplinary expectations.



As you can see, below I have outlined ALL the assignments, readings, and discussions you will participate in and each activity, assignment, or discussion allows you to work towards achieving the above learning goals. Please take the time to read through the purpose of each assignment to better understand the learning objective.

Assignment Descriptions:

The Google Sites E-Portfolio:

All major projects in this class will be assembled into a course E-portfolio showcasing the students’ writing process and revised products. For instance, the Google Sites Eportfolio will include workshop drafts which you will submit for peer review. After you have revised your written work based on peer review, you will turn in that developing piece to your teacher, who will provide you with extra feedback on your composing process. All revised and processed work will be curated into your course Google Sites E-portfolio. Therefore, we will spend the entire semester composing and curating the Google Sites E- portfolio. You will complete ALL major writing projects and other critical literacy tasks using google docs- all google docs must be shared as 'anyone with link' to ensure your professor and classmates have access to your writing. All writing projects will be curated into your Google Sites Eportfolio and students will post URL links into Canvas. Attached to each major unit writing project will be a self-assessment cover letter reflection that describes your reading, thinking, writing, and researching processes.

Major Writing Projects and Reflective Self-Assessment Cover Letters:

For each units’ major writing project, the student will attach a self-assessment cover letter reflection -self-assessing their reading, writing and research processes. The cover letters are crucial to the student’s self-assessment and evaluation to monitor their progress in understanding their own writing purpose and processes. Each project will vary on the topic but is assigned to provide the student with optimal opportunities for meeting the course learning outcomes. You will include your cover letters in your Google Sites Eportfolio to situate your reader on your composing process and discuss your developmental processes as a reader, thinker, writer, and communicative researcher.

Letter to My Teacher- Writing Diagnostic

The purpose of this assignment is to prompt the student to introduce themselves formally to their instructor and to provide the instructor with insight as to what the student values about language, culture, and communication. In addition, this letter will allow the student to express how they see themselves as readers, thinkers, and writers; thus, my hope is for the student to express their current attitudes about their literacy practices, strengths, and weaknesses.

Major Project 1 Academic or Professional Discourse Community Analysis

The purpose of this assignment is to research and analyze the writing and communications produced within a specific academic or professional discipline. Depending on the students' declared major or future professional interests, students will research and present how writing and effective communication is practiced within a specific academic or professional discipline. Students have the multimodal freedom to choose how they present their findings via an academic essay, PowerPoint Presentation, Padlet, or Screen Cast Recording. Students are free to pitch their ideas to their instructor regarding how they choose to present their findings so long as it adheres to the grading rubric guidelines.

Major Project 2 Writing about Research- Annotated Bibliography

The purpose of this assignment is to prompt the student to practice evaluating, synthesizing, recording, and organizing reputable sources for the social issue topic they will be researching. This assignment will help you develop critical and ethical research strategies and processes. You will gain multiple perspectives on your social issue by completing the annotated bib to incorporate and adapt this knowledge into a Podcast Script & Audio for our Mass Communications Unit with the intention to educate an intended audience.

Major Project 3 Podcast Script & Audio

A podcast typically coincides with or replaces short essays, personal experiences, or research papers. A good podcast communicates a message effectively and creatively. Before the student begins to record their podcast, they must write a script to follow. This script should be 2–3 pages (200–700 words) of typed, double-spaced writing. Because the student will be reporting to their audience on a social issue, they will need to supply context for their listeners. The student should set the tone, scene and reveal the purpose of their podcast by using effective audio rhetorical devices. In addition, the research and analysis they conduct for their annotated bib will allow them to provide their listeners with reputable information that they will adapt and publish for a specific audience. The students podcast should deliver their message as a call to action. That is, offer their listeners how they may help prevent or offer solutions to the social issue problem using the research and sources they found in their Annotated Bib as reference guides for their listeners.

Final Course Reflection- The Theory of Writing and Communication and the Google Sites E-portfolio are students' final course assignments which serve as a formal summative assessment for students' self-assessment and the teacher's formal assessment of her students. These two final course assignments allow the students to personally reflect on how they achieved or worked towards the course's learning goals and outcomes. Students provide their teacher with concrete evidence and personal reflections as to how they managed to work towards their learning goals and outcomes and showcase their hard work in their Google Sites E-portfolio.

'A' Labor-Based Assignment Criteria

Critical Discourse Analysis

The purpose of the following assignments will allow you to develop critical discourse analysis practices to build on your cultural and historical competence. This means discussing elements of texts beyond structure and rhetorical appeal. To increase your consciousness of how language is used to dominate or reinforce social inequalities, such as those between people of different ethnic, economic, social, or intellectual groups, and to analyze changes taking place in social organizations, these critical reading tasks are crucial to your development as a global citizen, critical thinker, reader, and writer and you will be required to incorporate two of the critical discourse analysis tasks into your Google Sites E-portfolio. To get an ‘A’ you will be required to complete 1 of the following:

1. Music Video Discourse Analysis

The student will be asked to analyze social, cultural, and historical rhetorical strategies used in a music video that is communicating a social issue. Further, the student will analyze their choice of linguistic utterances (words, phrases, lyrics) and unpack their meanings with relevance to social, cultural, and political histories. In addition, they will analyze the visuals and art of the music video by discussing the symbolism and power relations the authors speak to in relations to society and history.

2. Genre & Discourse Analysis

The student will be asked to analyze two genres that are communicating similar aspects of a social and historical issue. One genre will be a government document and the other document is a form of poetry. The student will discuss how the two forms of writing are structured, examine their intended purposes, and analyze both texts’ power and social relations that speak to issues of government policy, human rights, and historical and contemporary representations of The First Indigenous Peoples of America.

Participate in 2 Collaborative Discussions Topics

T get an 'A' you will be required to listen to and respond to two special social and historical issue topics in a discussion post and comment on at least two of your classmates’ thoughts. Two of your formal responses will be incorporated into your Google Sites Eportfolio to show your ability to analyze how culture and communities shape language and communication. Further instructions will be supplied online via Canvas. Critical topic discussion details will be posted on Canvas and the topic will be in relation to a prevalent, social issue currently happening in society.

Assigned Readings Rationale

The readings and listening activities I have assigned reflect how powerful institutions, culture, and the politics of language have affected people and communities. I share these authors and their messages to communicate how language has evolved over time, and how it has affected our social, educational, and professional communities. The readings are assigned to enrich your learning about language and literacy practices and will help provide you with supporting evidence for your major project assignments. *Assigned readings are subject to change. Other readings may be assigned throughout the course to stimulate discussion and to help facilitate further understandings on certain topics.

Post-Reading Reflection Discussions

To meet 'B' labor work critiera, you will be required to particpate in our academic literacy modules, where you will become aware of the kind of reader and writer you are to help you develop an awareness of your strengths and limitations in reading and writing. In addition, during the course, I will ask you to reflect on some of the content discussed in certain readings to promote thinking and peer collaborative engagement with the texts’ positioning. It is important to be aware of how our minds respond to certain texts and why- that is, it is important to engage with a texts’ complexities to better understand an authors’ positioning and our own positioning, too.

Free writes:

Consider free writing to be an opportunity to write about what you are thinking -do it freely without self-judgment. This will allow you to take part in the composing process. During the course, I will ask you to think and write about topics that relate to an upcoming assignment, a current socio-political event or simply to get you thinking about how and why language is used to communicate ideas.

Teaching Framework References

Beaufort, A. (2007). College Writing and Beyond: A New Framework for University Writing

Instruction. Utah State University Press. Logan, UT.


Dunlap, L. (2007). Undoing the Silence: Six Tools for Social Change Writing. New Village

Press. Oakland, California


Kessler, R. E. (2006) Diverse Issues, Diverse Answers: Reading, Writing and Thinking About

Social Issues. Longman.


Fairclough, N. (1989). Language and Power. Longman Group, UK Limited.

Martin, M. R. (2018). Writing Wrongs: Common Errors in English. Broadview Press. Canada.

Silverman, J. & Rader, D. (2018). The World Is A Text: Writing About Visual and Popular

Culture. Broadview Press. Canada.