English 2500 objectives
Prereq: Credit for or exemption from ENGL 1500 AND credit or concurrent enrollment in LIB 1600
Prereq (International non-English speaking students): [(Overall EPT Score 2+ OR Passing ESL Course Grade) AND (Membership in EPT Advisory Group) AND (credit for or enrollment in LIB 1600) AND (credit for or exemption from ENGL 1500)] OR [(Credit for or exemption from ENGL 1500) AND (Credit for or enrollment in LIB 1600)]
The goals of English 2500 are for students to develop skills in written, oral, visual, and electronic communication. As a result, students should become not only a more perceptive consumer of information, but also a communicator better able to make effective decisions in their own academic life and work. A central concept in this course is that “arguments are all around us, in every medium, in every genre, in everything we do….An argument can be any text–written, spoken, aural, or visual–that expresses a point of view” (Everything’s an Argument 5). In this course, students will summarize, analyze, and evaluate various types of communication and then use those skills in four kinds of assignments: summaries, rhetorical analyses (both textual and visual), persuasive arguments, and research arguments.
Written
- Summarize accurately and responsibly the main ideas of others, especially published sources.
- Analyze professional writing to assess its purpose, audience, and rhetorical strategies.
- Explore and develop arguments that integrate ethical, logical, and emotional appeals (i.e., ethos, logos, pathos).
- Continue to integrate appropriate source material, providing accurate and consistent documentation.
- Continue to demonstrate an ability to conform to usage conventions and to adapt expression to purpose and audience.
- Continue to reflect systematically upon all of your communication processes, strengths, goals, and growth (e.g., an ISUComm Portfolio).
Oral
- Give an oral presentation, either individually or as part of a team, using effective invention, organization, language, and delivery strategies.
- Continue to improve as an effective team member in small groups as contributor, listener, collaborator, and presenter.
Visual
- Apply the visual communication principles related to pattern, contrast, direction, chunking, and color.
- Compose or analyze the rhetoric of visual communication (e.g., advertisement, documentary film, political cartoon, public service announcement).
- Create a visual argument (e.g., advertisement, poster, slide).
Electronic
- Apply the electronic communication principles related to content, layout, graphics, color, and interactivity.
- Analyze electronic communication (e.g., TV commercials, videos, websites) and compose a communication portfolio.
- Deliver a piece of communication to its intended audience, using one or more suitable media.
WOVE
- Ensure that all modes contribute to the primary message, purpose, and targeted audience.
- Develop clear, purposeful relationships between the modes.
- Exhibit a sensitivity to differences in modes and their cultural implications.
- Create a rich, interactive experience for the audience.
- Develop confidence in ability to adapt skills and knowledge used here to future situations.
Types of assignments in English 2500
Below are a few of the typical assignments included in English 2500. Learning communities often modify assignments to their specific field.
Rhetorical Analysis |
Compose a rhetorical analysis of a communication artifact (see assignment description for options). |
Research Project |
Research and compose an essay comparing and contrasting different viewpoints on a topic of your choice. |
Multimodal Design |
Create your own multimodal design. |
Multimodal Design Presentation |
Create a presentation that explains your design choices. |
ISUComm Portfolio |
Review and reflect on the communication skills that you developed through each of our major assignments. |