Science
Fiction and Science Fact: The
Writings of Isaac Asimov
Writing 100H Dr. Carl Salter
Fall 2006 Collier 228
Zinzendorf room 100 2nd
Period MWF Hours: T
email:
csalter at chem . moravian .
edu
This is the college’s required freshman course on writing. Our focus will be on the development of "writerly" attitudes for summaries, essays, and academic writing. I hope you will learn to approach writing like writers, not like students. To help you focus on the development of your writing and the development of your writing process, this course will emphasize portfolios as semester-long projects and contract grading (see below).
We will read samples of writing by Isaac Asimov, including two of his “robot” novels. We will also read several of his essays on science. The content of your own writing in this course should focus on science fiction and science fact—by seeing how a “master” did it, I hope you will be able to improve your own writing about science.
You will develop, in multiple-draft style, four
major writing projects. These
writing projects will be developed both
through your individual work in and out of class and through small
group
workshops in class. In workshops, you
will be both giver and receiver of advice about writing.
Through these workshops, you should learn
greater awareness and control over your own writing, greater
sensitivity to
writing problems and their solutions, and a heightened sense of the
power of
the writing process.
For each project you will create a folder. The folder will contain prewriting, research
notes, and multiple
drafts of the
writing assignment. It will also include a reflection on the writing assignment
that you write after the project is finished in which you describe how
you feel about the paper and what you learned about writing through the
project.
Each draft should must have a typed
date on the first page and must contain a word count of the document.
Each page of a draft must have a
header containing the page number, your name, and the title of
the project. Drafts must be stapled when they are turned
in. Clean-for-editing drafts and final drafts must be
printed out by an electronic word-processing program on a laser printer. All documents must follow the MLA convention
for documenting sources. See the examples on pages 500 and 609 of
the Bedford Handbook.
You will also compile a portfolio of your writing projects. Due in final form during final exam week, your portfolio will be a semester-long project. Of the four projects that you will complete at various times in the semester, you should select two for further revision and inclusion in your final portfolio.
In all your formal writing—essays and final
portfolio—the
most important qualities you are to learn and demonstrate are completeness,
commitment to your writing, and attention to the writing
process.
This section of Writing 100 will use contract grading, whereby
much of
the suspense and anxiety students commonly feel about grades will be
reduced, if
not eliminated. By meeting certain
requirements and consistently exhibiting certain behaviors, you will
earn a B
for the semester. Lower grades will
result from marked deficiencies in either of those areas or in
attendance. Higher grades will result from
special
excellence in attention to the writing process, excellent quality of
final
written products and special attention to the revisions that your two
selected essays receive in the final
portfolio. The terms of the grade contract for a B for
the semester are listed below:
Ø some prewriting committed to paper
Ø a first or rough draft of the project
Ø at least two significantly and substantively (or deeply or globally) revised drafts, one of which is to be prepared “clean” for editing
Ø a neat and correctly formatted final draft
Ø a piece of reflective writing
The preliminary drafts in each project will normally be accompanied by notes and reviewers’ comments. All components of each project must be ready at the beginning of class as assigned. *
For the workshops to
benefit you,
your regular and prompt attendance is crucial. Please be in your seat
with your
day's work in front of you ready to start at
Classes on Fridays are particularly important, because your groups will meet for revision sessions. In addition, Friday will be “vocabulary day and grammar day”. On Friday every student will present a vocabulary word to the class. Two students will present advice from at least four style books on a point of English word usage.
The Four Projects
Opinion/Argument: Develop an opinion piece based on the essays Pure and Impure: The Interplay of Science and Technology and Facing the Giant. 1500 words. What are Asimov’s main ideas (theses) in these two essays? What do the essays say about Asimov’s view of science? Are the two essays consistent, or are they contradictory? Do their ideas overlap at all? Develop evidence from the two essays to support your claim. Do you agree with Asimov’s view of science? Have these two essays changed your view of science and scientists? If so, how?
Research Paper: Develop an idea about science or science fiction based on ideas in Asimov’s writing. 2500 words. You can develop your idea from either one of the two novels, or World of Carbon, or an essay by Asimov other than The Relativity of Wrong and Pure and Impure: The Interplay of Science and Technology. In addition to the reference to Asimov, your paper should have at least six sources: at least one book, at least two web sites, and at least three articles from peer-reviewed journals; that is, a primary source.
Literary Criticism:
Develop a literary critique of some aspect of
Asimov’s fiction, based on either a chapter from Caves of
Steel or a story from I,
Robot. 1500
words. Form your own intrepretation of an aspect of
Asimov's fiction and defend it in your essay. See the advice in
section 59 of Bedford.
Creative Writing:
Develop a piece of fiction. 1500 words. This
is your chance to try your hand at
writing a science fiction story (or part of one)! You
can also choose to write a poem or a description of something that
doesn’t
exist, like a new type of robot.
Textbook
Hacker, Diana. The
(
The Caves of Steel, Isaac Asimov
I, Robot, Isaac Asimov
The World of Carbon, Isaac Asimov, chapters 1 and 2
Essays
Pure and Impure: The
Interplay of Science and Technology
Facing the Giant
You should have a notebook dedicated solely
to Writing
100 work. It can be spiral-bound or ring
binder, as you wish. Do your
assignments from
At the same time, I strongly encourage you to do
all your
written work on a computer; the campuswide network has word processing
applications
that you may access from various sites on campus, and anyone who wishes
a short
demonstration session may arrange one with me. If you do work in the
electronic
environment, of course, store your work on a diskette or thumb drive or
in your
own folder on the X drive on the campus network.
A copy of World of Carbon is
on reserve in our library. In addition, a series of essays about
science and science fiction from The
Tryrannosaurus Prescription is also on reserve. You may
use any of Asimov's writing, either from our library or any other
library, as a source to inspire your projects.
Other web pages
that you will need:
How to hold group discussion of writing assignments
http://www.cs.moravian.edu/~csalter/group_discussion_guide.htm
Worsheets for group discussions
http://www.cs.moravian.edu/~csalter/diss_worksheet.htm
Instructions for Vocabulary
assigments
http://www.cs.moravian.edu/~csalter/Instructions%20for%20Vocabulary.htm
Instructions for Grammar Assigments
http://www.cs.moravian.edu/~csalter/Instructions%20for%20Usage%20Notes.htm
Week 1 Course introduction: essay projects, rules of writing, handbooks.
M 8/28 – F 9/1
Tutorials 1, 2, 4 & 5 (pp. xxxi-xxxiv)
Discuss
Asimov’s science essays
Week 2 First draft of opinion essay 9/8
M 9/4 – F 9/8
Week 3
Library research tutorial, Monday (9/11) and
Friday (9/13)
M 9/11 – F 9/15
Week 4
FIRST ESSAY Opinion PROJECT FOLDER DUE 9/22
M 9/18 – F 9/22
Bibliography for research paper 9/22
Week 5
First draft research paper 9/29
M 9/25 – F 9/29
Week 6 Second draft of research paper 10/6
M 10/2 – F 10/6
Fall break
M 10/9 and T 10/10
Week 7 SECOND ESSAY Research paper PROJECT FOLDER DUE 10/13
W 10/11 – F 10/13
Week 8
First
draft of literary criticism 10/20
M 10/16 – F 10/20
Week 9 Prewriting for creative writing assignment 10/27
M 10/23 – F 10/27
Week 10
Second draft of literary criticism 11/3
M 10/30 – F 11/3
Week 11 First draft of creative writing 11/10
M 11/6 – F 11/10
Week 12 THIRD ESSAY Literary Crit PROJECT FOLDER DUE 11/17
M 11/13 – F 11/17
Sign-up for portfolio conferences
Week 13
Second draft of creative writing
M 11/20
Bedford
Section 19 sentence
fragments
W 11/22 -F 11/24 Thanksgiving Break
Week 14 FOURTH ESSAY Creative Writing PROJECT FOLDER DUE 12/1
M 11/27– F 12/1 Conferences
Course evaluation
Week 15
Portfolios due
M 12/4 – F 12/8
(final exam week)
* Each writing project will be evaluated quantitatively in terms of the following point system:
"Practices": 5 points each Workshop participation: 10 points each
Prewriting
(outlines, clusters, Absence from any workshop: -5 points each
freewriting, Lateness with any assigned
"zero" drafts, etc.): 10 points each writing prior to final
First draft: 10 points drafts: -2 points/day
Revised draft: 10 points for first, Lateness with any final draft: -3 points/day
5 points for each successive
Clean-for-editing draft: 10 points each copy
Final draft:
10 points
*
Half the class
will have their essays read by a tutor in the