Courses:

Writing about Nature and Environmental Issues >> Content Detail



Syllabus



Syllabus

The course calendar is available below.



Course Goals


This course is designed to be an introduction to the related traditions of American nature writing and the environmental essay. By the end of the course your will have grasped the structure, function, and basic rules of these genres, and produced two advanced drafts suitable for submission to print or online periodicals. You will have learned professional processes of drafting, peer review, and manuscript submission . You will also have produced a blog as raw material for later writing.



Course Philosophy


The work of this course is collaborative. In the real world of writing and publishing, no one works in a vacuum. Therefore, the class is structured as a laboratory for reading, analysis, and writing in collaboration with one another. As such, the work of our class cannot be "made up" by getting someone else's notes. It requires our full participation every day. This is the reason for the strict attendance policy (see Attendance Policy).



Required Work


  • 3 essays, one of 1500 words and two of 3,000 words or more
  • Blog of no fewer than 2,500 words
  • The rough drafts of each essay
  • In-class peer review
  • Class discussion
  • Assigned reading and viewing
  • Short oral exercises, including an oral presentation
  • Short in-class writing exercises


Communication Policy


I am happy to speak with you in person, over the phone, and over email. Office hours are held for your assistance, so drop-in visits and appointments are both welcome. In general, you will only be able to reach me by phone on Tuesdays and Thursdays, or by appointment. Assume 24 hours are necessary for reply to email messages, or 48 hours over a weekend.



Grading Policy


Grades will be assigned to the final drafts of the essays and to the blog as a whole. The final grade for the class will be based on an average of these four grades. However, penalties will be exacted if the non-graded work remains unfinished at the end of the semester. Penalties will be determined on a case by case basis, and will affect the final grade for the class by as much as a full grade level (A to B, B to C, etc.). It is impossible to pass the class without passing all of the graded assignments. A missing final draft will automatically be assigned the grade of F, and therefore result in a grade of F for the class.

Rough drafts are an essential part of the work of the class. An essay that does not go through the full drafting process will have 1/2 a grade deducted from the final draft grade (A to B+, B+ to B, etc.).

Peer review is an essential part of the work of the class. Writers who do not participate in peer review for a given essay, or who do not complete peer review to my satisfaction, will have 1/2 a grade deducted from their own final draft of that essay.



Attendance Policy


The Writing Program's attendance policy allows for no more than 5 absences per semester. (See Course Philosophy.) The risk of failure automatically exists after the fifth absence. This includes absences for interviews and other professional activities.

By the same token, writers who are actually sick should miss class in order to recover. If you are sick, please contact me immediately and we can discuss a proper course of action.

A lateness occurs when you arrive after I take attendance, which is often the first thing I do. Two latenesses count as one full absence. Lateness is extremely irksome to writers in a collaborative classroom (see Course Philosophy).

Persistent lateness based on schedule conflict with another class is not permitted. Early departure from class is not permitted.



Plagiarism


Plagiarism is a violation of the academic code of MIT, and may be prosecuted as such. Plagiarism occurs when the writing of others is incorporated into your own writing without sufficient attribution.



Calendar



SES #TOPICSKEY DATES
1IntroductionBlog 1 assigned
2

Nature's Economy: A History of Ecological Ideas

Film: Grizzly Man

Blog 1 due

Essay 1 assigned

3Film: Grizzly Man (cont.)
4

Nature's Economy: A History of Ecological Ideas (cont.)

Discuss ideas of nature in Grizzly Man

 

5Discuss Nature's Economy and Grizzly Man
6Peer reviewRough draft of Essay 1 due
7Discussion of drafts

 

8Caught Inside: A Surfer's Year on the California Coast

Blog 2 assigned

Essay 1 due

9Caught Inside: A Surfer's Year on the California Coast (cont.)

Essay 2 assigned

10Caught Inside: A Surfer's Year on the California Coast (cont.)Blog 2 due
11

Peer review

Rough draft of Essay 2 due
12Discussion of drafts
13Rats: Observations on the History and Habitat of the City's Most Unwanted Inhabitants

Blog 3 assigned

14Rats: Observations on the History and Habitat of the City's Most Unwanted Inhabitants (cont.)
15The Biophilia Hypothesis

Essay 2 due

16The Biophilia Hypothesis (cont.)

Blog 3 due

Essay 3 assigned

17

Field Notes from a Catastrophe: Man, Nature, and Climate Change

18Filed Notes from a Catastrophe: Man, Nature, and Climate Change (cont.)
19

Film: Nausicaä

Rough draft of Essay 3 due
20Discussion of drafts
21Discussion of NausicaäBlog 4 assigned
22

The Book of Revelation

Discussion of environmental apocalypse

Blog 4 due

Blog 5 assigned

23Discussion of environmental apocalypse (cont.)
24Oral presentationsEssay 3 due
25Oral presentations (cont.)Blog 5 due
26Oral presentations (cont.)Final folder due


 








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