UT Dallas Syllabus for crwt3351.001.11f taught by Susan Briante (scb062000)

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    Course Syllabus/Policy Statement

    CRWT 3351 - 001 CREATING POETRY Class Number: 80313Fall 2011 MW 8:30 AM - 9:45 AM, JO 4.708 Professor Contact Information

    Dr. Susan Briante Phone: x-6781E-mail: [email protected] Office: JO 5.112Office hours: Wednesday 10-12 or by appointment

    Course Pre-requisites, Co-requisites, and/or Other Restrictions Upper Division Standing

    Course Description Traditional creative writing workshops focus their attention on revising poems. But how do we learn toenrich and improve our writing practice? This course will shift emphasis away from product toward

    process, away from polishing drafts and toward the cultivation of ones attention to the world and toexperience. We will explore notebook strategies and learn to practice making quick sketches of ourinternal states and external observations as well as to respond to assigned readings. We will review themost important characteristics of poetry (rhyme, rhythm, repetition, image, music, etc.) Then we willwork through the various stages of inspiration, creation and revision of our own poems. To aide us in thisprocess we will read from the notebooks, diaries, and poetry collections of renowned poets such as Basho,Gerard Manley Hopkins, James Schuyler and Alice Notley. This class will combine exercises in close-reading, techniques of observation as well as the study of poetic tools and strategies for revisions.

    Student Learning Objectives/Outcomes To identify the major elements of poetry: rhyme, rhythm, meter, diction, line breaks, stanza

    breaks, syntax, etc.To practice journal writing for poetic inspiration.To identify and analyze the aesthetic strategies of poets.

    To understand the characteristics of strong descriptive writingTo become better editors of your own work, as well as that of your classmates.

    Required Textbooks and Materials The Essential Haiku (ed. Robert Hass) ISBN-10: 0880013516Hopkins, Gerard Manley Poems and Prose ISBN-10: 0140420150Koch, Kenneth Making Your Own Days ISBN-10: 0-684-82438-8Notley, Alice Mysteries of Small Houses ISBN-10 0140588965Schuyler, James Selected Poems ISBN-10: 0374530890

    Selected readings provided in class or on Electronic Reserves (ER).Our Electronic Reserves password is: _______________________.

    Additional Requirements Access to a computer and a printer An e-mail account A journal: one notebook that you will consistently use for sketches and poetic journal. Folders for class handouts, daily pages, and final portfolios.

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    Assignments & Academic Calendar

    Some of your reading assignments will come from the anthology, Making Your Own Days . Theseassignments will be indicated by the abbreviation (Koch). Additional readings may be posted on theElectronic Reserves page (ER) or distributed in class. When we read a complete book of poems, please beready to talk about the books general themes and strategies as well as offer a detailed reading andanalysis of specific poems in the book. Pay special attention to those poems that seem representative aswell as those poems you simply enjoy or dislike the most.

    You can anticipate weekly writing assignments that do not appear on this syllabus.

    Once during the semester, you will be expected to attend a reading. You will have three opportunities tofulfill this requirement (two on Thursday nights, one on Wednesday night). This is mandatory unless youcan prove you have a class, childcare or employment conflict.

    Aug 24 Discuss: Expectations, course goals, assignments, and policies

    What is poetry? (Part 1)In-class reading: Lorraine Niedecker.

    Aug 29-31What is poetry? (Part 2)Making Music: Line, Meter, Rhythm, and Stanza . Reading: A Brief Preface, Chapter 1 Two Languages, Chapter 2 Music (13 -49) (Koch), How toRead a Poem (class) and Poetic Journals: A Thumbnail History (13 -17) (ER).

    Sept 5 NO CLASS LABOR DAY HOLIDAY

    Sept 7Making Music: Learning from the MastersAssignment: Also read the poems by Petrarch (158-159), Shakespeare (173), Hopkins (212), Rilke (220-221), Whitman (204- 205) and OHara (29 5). All readings in Koch.

    Sept 12-14Writing with the SensesWhat is essential to learn from haiku?Concrete vs Abstract Language (No ideas but in things!)Writing, Crafting and Revision : Modeling workshop, the importance of revisionAssignment: All readings from Hass . Please read the Introduction by Robert Hass (ix -xvi). I encourageyou to read the introduction to each writer as well as a hearty selection of their haiku. In addition, please

    pay special attention to: Bashos Saga Diary (59 -70) and Learn from the Pine (233 -250), Busons

    Spring Wind and New Flower Picking (131 -141), as well as Issa From Journal of My Fathersand A Year in My Life (197 -217).

    Sept 19-21Hopkins Poems and Prose Workshop Begins: Group 1Assignment: Hopkins Poems and Prose Group 1: Posts poems . Class: reads and responds to poems from Group 1

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    Sept 26-28Hopkins Poems and Prose Workshop: Group 2Craft Analysis AssignmentAssignment: Hopkins Poems and Prose Group 2: Posts poems . Class: reads and responds to poems from Group 2 and works on craft analysis.

    Oct 3-5Schuyler: List poems and the New York SchoolWorkshop: Group 3 Assignment: Schuyler, Selected Poems Group 3: Posts poems.Class: reads and responds to poems from Group 3.

    Oct 10-12Workshop: Group 1 Schuyler: Long poems and the New York SchoolOct 12 CRAFT ANALYSIS DUE Assignment: Schuyler, Selected Poems Group 1: Posts poems.Class: reads and responds to poems from Group 4

    Oct 17Workshop: Group 2Assignment: Group 2: Posts group of poems.Class: reads and responds to poems from Group 2.

    Oct 19 CLASS CANCELLED

    Oct 21 MID TERM GRADES AVAILABLE

    Oct 24-26Workshop: Group 3 Notley: AutobiographyAssignment: Notleys Mysteries of Small Houses Group 3: Posts group of poems.Class: reads and responds to poems from Group 3.

    Oct 27: Novelist Ann Weisgarber reads at 7:30 in Jonsson Performance Hall

    Oct 31-Nov 2Workshop: Group 1Notley: AutobiographyAssignment: Notleys Mysteries of Small Houses Group 1: Posts group of poems.Class: reads and responds to poems from Group 1.

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    Nov 7-9Workshop: Group 2Digital Poetries: the Blog as DaybookAssignment: Readings from a selection of blogsGroup 2: Posts group of poems.Class: reads and responds to poems from Group 2.

    Nov 14-16Workshop: Group 3Getting Your Work into Print (Some tips on Publishing)Assignment: Group 3: Posts group of poems.Class: reads and responds to poems from Group 4.

    Nov 16: Fiction writer Kim Stanley Robinson lectures at 7:30 Jonsson Performance Hall

    Nov 21Getting Your Work into Print (Some tips on Publishing)FIRST DRAFT OF PORTFOLIO DUEAssignment: First draft of portfolio

    NOVEMBER 23: CLASS CANCELLED

    Nov 28-30Nov 28: Peer Review Conferences/ PEER ANALYSIS OF CLASSMATES PORTFOLIO DUE(BRING TWO COPIES)RevisionAssignment: Peer Analysis of Classmates Portfolio

    Dec 1: Poet reads off campus (details to follow)

    Dec 5: FINAL PORTFOLIOS DUE

    Assignments and Grading Policy Exercises, quizzes, workshop poems and feedback on classmates work (20%). Three

    times over the course of the semester, you will be expected to post 5-7 pages of poems(unless your poems are less than 14 lines a piece, no more than one poem a page) to beshared and discussed with the entire class. You will be asked to save these pages as PDFs andsend these pages to class via the eLearning mail function the Thursday before your group isdue for workshop. (You will also send a copy to me via the standard UTD email.)

    One 3-4 page craft analysis essay of a series of poems by a single author read in thisclass (30%).

    One 4- 5 page peer analysis of another students final portfolio of poems (20%) .

    Final Portfolio of 7-10 pages of revised poems (30%).

    To pass the course, you must turn in on time the first draft of each group of poems or out-of-classassignment. The completion of these drafts is a course requirement, and your peers and I will look at your drafts. To complete each final draft of the poems for your portfolio, you need to act upon

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    the comments you received on your first drafts.

    Your final semester grade will be calculated according to the above percentages. Do not discard anydrafts, notes, papers or research materials you produce during the semester until you receive a final grade

    COURSE POLICIES

    AttendanceYou are expected to be punctual, to attend class daily, and to participate in all in-class editing,revising, and discussion sessions. Excessive absenteeism (6 absences) will result in failing thecourse. There is no difference between excused or unexcused absences. Save any absences touse when you are sick or when you have an emergency. If you find that an unavoidable problemprevents you from attending class, please discuss the problem with me before you have reachedyour absence limit.

    Late Assignments and DraftsPoems, papers, and other out-of-class assignments will be turned in at the time they are due. If you cannot attend class on the date an assignment is due, arrange to have a classmate or frienddrop it off during scheduled class time. There is no makeup of in-class work. I do not accept latedrafts or late papers. I do not accept poems or papers via e-mail.

    Student Conduct & Discipline The University of Texas System and The University of Texas at Dallas have rules and regulationsfor the orderly and efficient conduct of their business. It is the responsibility of each student andeach student organization to be knowledgeable about the rules and regulations that govern studentconduct and activities. General information on student conduct and discipline is contained in theUTD publication, A to Z Guide , which is provided to all registered students each academic year.

    The University of Texas at Dallas administers student discipline within the procedures of

    recognized and established due process. Procedures are defined and described in the Rules and Regulations, Board of Regents, The University of Texas System, Part 1, Chapter VI, Section 3 ,and in Title V, Rules on Student Services and Activities of the universitys Handbook of Operating Procedures . Copies of these rules and regulations are available to students in theOffice of the Dean of Students, where staff members are available to assist students ininterpreting the rules and regulations (SU 1.602, 972/883-6391).

    A student at the university neither loses the rights nor escapes the responsibilities of citizenship.He or she is expected to obey federal, state, and local laws as well as the Regents Rules,university regulations, and administrative rules. Students are subject to discipline for violatingthe standards of conduct whether such conduct takes place on or off campus, or whether civil orcriminal penalties are also imposed for such conduct.

    Academic Integrity The faculty expects from its students a high level of responsibility and academic honesty.Because the value of an academic degree depends upon the absolute integrity of the work done bythe student for that degree, it is imperative that a student demonstrate a high standard of individual honor in his or her scholastic work.

    Scholastic dishonesty includes, but is not limited to, statements, acts or omissions related toapplications for enrollment or the award of a degree, and/or the submission as ones own work or material that is not ones own. As a general rule, scholastic d ishonesty involves one of the

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    following acts: cheating, plagiarism, collusion and/or falsifying academic records. Studentssuspected of academic dishonesty are subject to disciplinary proceedings.

    Plagiarism, especially from the web, from portions of papers for other classes, and from any othersource is unacceptable and will be dealt with under the universitys policy on plagiarism (seegeneral catalog for details). This course will use the resources of turnitin.com, which searches theweb for possible plagiarism and is over 90% effective.

    Email Use The University of Texas at Dallas recognizes the value and efficiency of communication betweenfaculty/staff and students through electronic mail. At the same time, email raises some issuesconcerning security and the identity of each individual in an email exchange. The universityencourages all official student email correspondence be sent only to a students U.T. Dallas emailaddress and that faculty and staff consider email from students official only if it originates from aUTD student account. This allows the university to maintain a high degree of confidence in theidentity of all individual corresponding and the security of the transmitted information. UTDfurnishes each student with a free email account that is to be used in all communication withuniversity personnel. The Department of Information Resources at U.T. Dallas provides a methodfor students to have their U.T. Dallas mail forwarded to other accounts.

    Withdrawal from ClassThe administration of this institution has set deadlines for withdrawal of any college-levelcourses. These dates and times are published in that semester's course catalog. Administrationprocedures must be followed. It is the student's responsibility to handle withdrawal requirementsfrom any class. In other words, I cannot drop or withdraw any student. You must do the properpaperwork to ensure that you will not receive a final grade of "F" in a course if you choose not toattend the class once you are enrolled.

    Student Grievance Procedures Procedures for student grievances are found in Title V, Rules on Student Services and Activities,

    of the universitys Handbook of Operating Procedures .

    In attempting to resolve any student grievance regarding grades, evaluations, or other fulfillmentsof academic responsibility, it is the obligation of the student first to make a serious effort toresolve the matter with the instructor, supervisor, administrator, or committee with whom thegrievance originates (hereafter called the respondent). Individual faculty members retainprimary responsibility for assigning grades and evaluations. If the matter cannot be resolved atthat level, the grievance must be submitted in writing to the respondent with a copy of therespondents Sch ool Dean. If the matter is not resolved by the written response provided by therespondent, the student may submit a written appeal to the School Dean. If the grievance is notresolved by the School Deans decision, the student may make a written appeal to the Dean of Graduate or Undergraduate Education, and the deal will appoint and convene an Academic

    Appeals Panel. The decision of the Academic Appeals Panel is final. The results of the academicappeals process will be distributed to all involved parties.

    Copies of these rules and regulations are available to students in the Office of the Dean of Students, where staff members are available to assist students in interpreting the rules andregulations.

    Incomplete Grade Policy As per university policy, incomplete grades will be granted only for work unavoidably missed atthe semesters end and only if 70% of the course work has been completed. An incomplete grade

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    must be resolved within eight (8) weeks from the first day of the subsequent long semester. If therequired work to complete the course and to remove the incomplete grade is not submitted by thespecified deadline, the incomplete grade is changed automatically to a grade of F .

    Student AccessAbilityThe Office of Student AccessAbility is committed to ensuring that qualified students withdocumented disabilities are provided with an equal opportunity to participate in the variety of educational, recreational and social opportunities at UT Dallas. Student AccessAbility is locatedin Student Services Building 3.200.

    The contact information is:UT Dallas Student AccessAbility800 W. Campbell Rd., SSB32Richardson, TX 75083(972) 883-2098 (voice or TTY)

    Essentially, the law requires that colleges and universities make those reasonable adjustmentsnecessary to eliminate discrimination on the basis of disability. For example, it may be necessaryto remove classroom prohibitions against tape recorders or animals (in the case of dog guides) forstudents who are blind. Occasionally an assignment requirement may be substituted (forexample, a research paper versus an oral presentation for a student who is hearing impaired).Classes enrolled students with mobility impairments may have to be rescheduled in accessiblefacilities. The college or university may need to provide special services such as registration,note-taking, or mobility assistance.

    It is the students responsibility to notify his or her professors of the need for such anaccommodation. Student AccessAbility provides students with letters to present to facultymembers to verify that the student has a disability and needs accommodations. Individualsrequiring special accommodation should contact the professor after class or during office hours.

    Religious Holy DaysThe University of Texas at Dallas will excuse a student from class or other required activities forthe travel to and observance of a religious holy day for a religion whose places of worship areexempt from property tax under Section 11.20, Tax Code, Texas Code Annotated.The student is encouraged to notify the instructor or activity sponsor as soon as possibleregarding the absence, preferably in advance of the assignment. The student, so excused, will beallowed to take the exam or complete the assignment within a reasonable time after the absence: aperiod equal to the length of the absence, up to a maximum of one week. A student who notifiesthe instructor and completes any missed exam or assignment may not be penalized for theabsence. A student who fails to complete the exam or assignment within the prescribed periodmay receive a failing grade for that exam or assignment.

    If a student or an instructor disagrees about the nature of the absence [i.e., for the purpose of observing a religious holy day] or if there is similar disagreement about whether the student hasbeen given a reasonable time to complete any missed assignments or examinations, either thestudent or the instructor may request a ruling from the chief executive officer of the institution, orhis or her designee. The chief executive officer or designee must take into account the legislativeintent of TEC 51.911(b), and the student and instructor will abide by the decision of the chief executive officer or designee.

    Off-Campus Instruction and Course ActivitiesOff-campus, out-of-state, and foreign instruction and activities are subject to state law and

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    University policies and procedures regarding travel and risk-related activities. Informationregarding these rules and regulations may be found at the website address given below.Additional information is available from the office of the school dean.(http://www.utdallas.edu/Business Affairs/Travel_Risk_Activities.htm)

    These descriptions and timelines are subject to change at the discretion of the Professor.