Composition 3160—Advanced Writing for Students in the Social Sciences

Prof. John D. Schwetman

Spring 2000 jschwetm@d.umn.edu/Tel. 726-6198
Humanities 480 Bohannon Hall 303
MWF 2-2:50pm Office Hours: Tuesday 3-4pm
href="http://www.d.umn.edu/~jschwetm/w2000/comp3160/ Wednesday 4-5pm

Course Overview

The goal of this course is to prepare you for a career in one of the numerous areas involving the social sciences. While you have presumably had an opportunity to study various research methods in the social sciences, this course gives you a final opportunity to hone the writing skills that will be necessary for your work and for your life outside of work.

In this class, you will complete four primary written assignments as well as preliminary drafts of these assignments that you will review with your classmates. Almost any writing that people do goes through a revision process involving feedback from other readers. Revising is a skill like any other. It requires learning and practice if you are to become proficient.

In addition to learning about writing and practicing revising skills, this class will offer you an opportunity to develop arguments concerning the strengths and weaknesses of the social sciences, the credibility of various articles and reports by other writers, and political issues in the local and wider communities. To facilitate this, I recommend that you either read the local newspaper, a newsmagazine or a news-oriented web site in order to keep yourself up-to-date about matters we will discuss in the class.

Required Texts

Kristine Hansen, A Rhetoric for the Social Science
Mary Laine Yarber and Robert E. Yarber, Reviewing Basic Grammar (RBG)

Course Requirements

Opinion Piece 20%
Interview and Report 30%
Letter of Application and Resumé 15%
Comparative Analysis 20%
Final Exam 5%
Class Participation 5%
Peer Review 5%

Notes


John D. Schwetman, Composition 3160, January 19, 2000