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Section
0101
Heavilon 227
T/Th 10:30-11:45
Dr. David Blakesley
Office Hrs: T/Th 1-3
Office: Heavilon 302c
Ph: 765.494.3772
Fax: 765.494.3780
blakesle@purdue.edu
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This
course is designed for undergraduates and graduates interested in professional
writing and electronic publication. Students in the course will collaborate
on the production of two professional journals: a new networked journal
and digital community, The
Writing Instructor, which debuts at Purdue in March 2001; and
WPA: Writing Program Administration, the production of which also
takes place at Purdue.
Students
will learn to produce documents and coordinate assorted publishing projects,
study and apply principles of document design and electronic publication
using assorted application software, and work as teams in a computer-networked
environment. Students will also complete research on topics relevant to
print-based and electronic publication, such as website design, copyright
law, intellectual property, and the editorial process. There will also
be some opportunities for participating in important academic conferences,
such as the Conference on College Composition and Communication and Computers
and Writing 2001. Students may also be identified as editorial assistants
on one of the two publications.

Lunenfeld,
Peter. Snap to Grid: A User's Guide to Digital Arts, Media, and Cultures.
MIT Press, 2000. (ISBN: 026212226X)
Lynch,
Patrick J., and Sarah Horton. Web Style Guide : Basic Design Principles
for Creating Web Sites. Yale UP, 1999. (ISBN: 0300076754)

Gibaldi, Joseph.
MLA Style Manual and Guide to Scholarly Publishing, 2nd ed. MLA,
1998.
- Understand the
techniques, technologies, culture, and problems of print and electronic
publication in the digital age.
- Use, adapt, and
evaluate various writing technologies put to use for specific rhetorical
purposes in precise contexts.
- Learn to evaluate
and apply effective principles of document design in print and digitally.
- Develop multiple
and flexible online work strategies to manage documents and research
projects.
- Learn and apply
strategies for collaborating successfully and equitably with peers on
various activities and major projects using a variety of communication
technologies.
- Develop strategies
for planning, researching, and developing documents which effectively
respond to specific professional situations, problems, or research issues.

1A.
Collaborative Review and Usability Study of a Networked Journal/Website.
- Using the Web
Style Guide as a resource, this project will involve summarizing,
testing, and critiquing one of the networked journals identified on
the TWI Technologies page. This project requires an oral presentation/overview
of the subject site and a five-page written report. See the Review and
Usability Study Guidelines for further details. (3 groups; 20% of course
grade.)
1B. Collaborative
Review and Readability Study of a Print-Based Journal.
- Using the MLA
Style Manual as a resource, this project will involve summarizing,
evaluating, and critiquing the contents and design of one of the following
journals: College English, College Composition and Communication,
Written Communication, Technical Communication Quarterly,
Rhetoric Review, or the Journal of Advanced Composition.
See the Review and Usability Study Guidelines for further details. An
oral presentation and five-page written report is required. (2 groups;
20% of course grade.)
2.
Techniques of Copyediting
- Using the MLA
Style Manual as the final arbiter on issues of mechanics and documentation
style, this unit of the course will involve learning proofreader's marks
and applying them to an existing article targeted for publication in
WPA: Writing Program Administration or The Writing Instructor.
(Individual; 10% of course grade.)
3. Class Project:
Guide to Electronic Publication
- Working collaboratively,
students will develop content for a "Guide to Electronic Publication"
that will be used at the Computers and Writing 2001 Conference in May
2001 and as a resource on The Writing Instructor website. Relevant
topics will include the value of electronic publication, copyright and
intellectual property, communication technologies, design principles,
technical issues, etc. (20% of course grade.)
4.
Production of Print or Electronic Publication and In-Class Projects
- Students will work
collaboratively and/or individually on various aspects of the production
and publication of The Writing Instructor and WPA: Writing
Program Administration, applying the principles of document and
web-page design learned in Project 1. Some of this work will be completed
during class time. Each student will also spend more time on a project
that contributes directly to production of one of the journals, such
as archiving a past article using a scanner and OCR software, or designing
the layout for an article using Pagemaker. (30% of course grade; several
short assignments, one more involved project.)
- 5. Electronic
Response Journal/Online Discussion of Snap to Grid: A
User's Guide to Digital Arts, Media, and Cultures
- Beginning the
fourth week, I would like each student to read and respond to each
section of Snap to Grid I assign with 250+ word private, informal
commentary. I will ask to see these responses in Weeks 6, 10, and
15. In addition, the class will have regular, ongoing discussion of
the text on WWWThreads, the web-based threaded discussion list, starting
Week4. To earn full credit, each student will need to keep up-to-date
with individual responses and to participate regularly and actively
on the threaded discussion list. It is not possible to make up for
missed responses later. (20% of course grade) * Note: Starting
date rolled back to fourth week on 1/28/2001.
6.
* Archival Project Proposal and Recommendation Report (Large Group Collaborative
Project)
- Graduate students
in the course will help organize a project that needs to be completed
by mid-semester and that consists of a proposal to be considered by
the WPA Executive Board for archiving past articles from the WPA journal
on the WWW at the TWI site. The completed project will include
a one-page proposal in the form of a resolution, accompanied by supporting
documentation that addresses concerns and questions, an examination
of precedents (e.g., Journal of Advanced Composition), a feasibility
study, a discussion of the consequences for the print journal, and a
working prototype of one article, showing the Executive Board what such
an article would look like on the WWW. Each student in the class will
be involved in the project. Graduate students will plan, organize and
provide leadership and will meet with me initially to map the project.
(This project counts for 10% of the course grade for graduate students,
who are working on a 110% scale; for undergraduates, the work on this
project will count toward Activity #4, Production)

| Collaborative
Review |
20%
|
| Copyediting |
10%
|
| Guide to Electronic
Publishing |
20%
|
| Production/In-Class
Projects |
30%
|
| Response Journal/E-Discussion |
20%
|
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Total
|
100%
|
In-class projects
and production activities earn anywhere from 1 to 15 points each, up
to 30 total, depending upon the length of the assignment. Graduate students
earn 10% credit for their work on the Archival Project, with each of
the percentages in the table adjusted to a 110% scale.
All major assignments
will be graded on the standard letter-grade scale: A=100-90 B=89-80
C=79-70 D=69-60 F=59 or below.
In order to
participate fully in the course, you should already be able to use the
technology platform and applications listed below.
Mac OS System
Microsoft Office (Word
and PowerPoint)
Netscape Communicator
and Internet Explorer
ProNoun MOO client
Email program (including
attachments)
Because the
exchange of information and materials in this class will be almost entirely
electronic, familiarity with certain technologies is crucial for participation
and success in the course. If you need any assistance now or at any point
during the semester, please do not hesitate to ask. Very early in the
semester, you will be asked to demonstrate that you have can meet these
responsibilities:
Have access to your
Career Account.
Set up your @purdue.edu
email address and regularly check your email.
Become proficient
sending and receiving email attachments, resolving file compatibility
issues, and following email decorum.
Check the course calendar
before the beginning of each class.
Become proficient
participating in the class MOO space, ProNoun.
Become more proficient
with unfamiliar computer technologies and applications, such as html editors
and web-page design, desktop publishing applications, and graphics editors.
Maintain back-up copies
of all assignments via your home directory, disks, and/or email attachments
to yourself.

In addition to using
the communication technologies listed below, students will have access
to the WPA/TWI production office (Heavilon 204-E), which houses a Gateway
PC that runs desktop publishing software, Dreamweaver, Photoshop, and
Omnipage OCR software. The key to that office will be available for check-out
from Julie Canaan in Heavilon 302 (the Professional Writing office) during
normal business hours. The office and computer can only be used to complete
work directly related to course assignments involving production of either
journal.
Discussion List
engl5150101002-class@relay.cc.purdue.edu
ProNoun MOO client
http://linnell.english.purdue.edu:7000
Active Integration
E-mail (Zaplets)
http://www.zaplets.com
Asynchronous Communication
(MOO Client)
http://linnell.english.purdue.edu:7000/
Ultimate Bulletin
Board
http://linnell.english.purdue.edu/cgi-bin/ubb/Ultimate.cgi
(Purdue)
http://www.infopop.com/
(Mfg.)
Ceilidh (Threaded,
Web-Based Discussion)
http://www.lilikoi.com/index_main.html
Collaborative
work is a required component of the course. You and your project team
members are responsible for updating one another and me about assignment
development and progress. In addition, you also are responsible for negotiating
together all aspects of your work, including planning, drafting, revising,
file managing, and scheduling of assignments. When I assign a collaborative
project, I will provide you with explicit guidelines for successful collaboration.
I will also ask individual group members to complete Collaborative
Evaluation Forms. The principles of collaboration I encourage students
to follow are contained in the brochure, Group Work and Collaborative
Writing <http://www-honors.ucdavis.edu/vohs/index.html>.

Attendance is
required at all scheduled electronic and face-to-face (F2F) meetings.
Since you will be working in project teams much of the semester, you also
will be required to attend any scheduled out-of-class meetings with your
team to complete course assignments. Three absences may result in your
final grade being lowered by as much as a letter grade. More than three
absences can result in a failing grade for the course. Excused absences
may be granted for religious holidays or university-sponsored events,
provided you make a written request to me no less than two weeks in advance
and that you complete any required work before the due date. Being excessively
or regularly late for class or team meetings, both electronic and F2F,
can also be counted as an absence.

The majority
of missed class assignments cannot be "made up." If a serious and unavoidable
problem arises, however, you should contact me in writing prior to the
deadline to determine whether or not an extension for the work will or
will not be granted.
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