CCOG for ENG 106 archive revision 201403
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- Effective Term:
- Summer 2014 through Winter 2016
- Course Number:
- ENG 106
- Course Title:
- Introduction to Literature (Poetry)
- Credit Hours:
- 4
- Lecture Hours:
- 40
- Lecture/Lab Hours:
- 0
- Lab Hours:
- 0
Course Description
Intended Outcomes for the course
Upon successful completion students should be able to:
1. Engage, through poetic texts, diverse points of view and diverse historical, cultural, and literary contexts.
2. Analyze a variety of poetic forms, from sonnets to haiku to free verse, and identify and effectively employ poetic terms, including diction, sound, rhyme, rhythm, meter, imagery, symbolism, persona, etc.
3. Explicate poems in writing and speech and provide adequate support/evidence for such explications.
4. Recognize the multiple possibilities of interpretations of poems and the validity thereof.
5. Articulate ways in which the text contributes to self-understanding.
6. Conduct research to find materials to use for literary analysis, using MLA conventions to document primary and secondary sources in written response to a literary text.
Integrative Learning
Students completing an associate degree at Portland Community College will be able to reflect on one’s work or competencies to make connections between course content and lived experience.
Outcome Assessment Strategies
Assessment tools may include informal responses to study questions; evaluation of small- and full-group discussions; in-class and out-of-class writing; formal essays and other types of informal writing; individual and group presentations; essay exams; close reading exercises using support/evidence; writing exercises which include evaluation of various interpretations of a text and their relative validity. Both instructor and peer evaluation may be incorporated in the assessment process.
Course Content (Themes, Concepts, Issues and Skills)
concrete imagery
allusions
tension
enjambment
diction
imagination
explication
symbol
cultural applications
metrics
interpretation
iambic
narrative poetry
trochaic
epic poetry
dactyllic
folk ballads
anapestic
literary ballads
feet
sonnets
monometer
villanelles
dimeter
haiku
trimeter
rhyme
tetrameter
alliteration
pentameter
assonance
line
consonance
stanza
free verse
couplet
tone
tercet
allusion
quatrain
figurative language
sestet
caesuras
octave
Competencies and Skills
analysis
synthesis
close readings
understanding poetry through historical, political, artististic, and
critical contexts as well as employing the language of poetic
convention
writing about poetry
critical reading using reviews and critical essays
speaking and listening in a large group
speaking and listening relectively
small group collaboration
recognizing the difference between poetry and prose