4 classes matched your search criteria.
WRIT 1401 is also offered in Spring 2025
WRIT 1401 is also offered in Fall 2024
WRIT 1401 is also offered in Spring 2024
WRIT 1401 is also offered in Fall 2023
Spring 2024 | WRIT 1401 Section 001: University Writing - Community Engaged Learning (65927)
- Instructor(s)
- Class Component:
- Lecture
- Instructor Consent:
- No Special Consent Required
- Instruction Mode:
- Partially Online
- Class Attributes:
- Community Engaged LearningDelivery ModeFreshman Full Year Registration
- Enrollment Requirements:
- non-PSEO students
- Times and Locations:
- Regular Academic Session01/16/2024 - 04/29/2024Tue 11:15AM - 01:10PMUMTC, East BankScience Teaching Student Svcs 14401/16/2024 - 04/29/2024UMTC, East BankUMN ONLINE-HYB
- Enrollment Status:
- Open (16 of 18 seats filled)
- Also Offered:
- Course Catalog Description:
- Students in WRIT 1401 work with a local community organization as they explore writing processes and practices and rhetorical principles that provide a framework for successful written communication in college and beyond. Students analyze how writing works in varying contexts/genres and how it presents complex arguments with an emphasis on exploring ways that writing works to support change in communities and to promote social justice. Students use and expand their writing process and revision to develop writing form/style and rhetorical content that contributes to conversations and provides new insight. Students develop information literacy and hone the ability to locate, evaluate, and effectively and ethically incorporate information into their own texts. The blended course modality combines two credit hours/week of small face-to-face class with two credit hours of online instruction in Canvas, in addition to weekly homework assignments. An additional 2 lab hours/week provide a common time and place reserved for work on and with our community partners. These are considered homework hours. WRIT 1401 fulfills the first-year writing requirement.
- Class Notes:
- Blended sections of WRIT 1401 require weekly in-person attendance as well as weekly asynchronous work in Canvas. Students in this section of WRIT 1401 will partner with Upstream Arts, a non-profit organization in Minneapolis that "uses the power of creative arts to activate and amplify the voice and choice of individuals with disabilities". The writing projects that students work on as part of this partnership may include research, inventory, curation, and multimodal creation. The work will support the student learning goals of the first-year writing course and the mission and work of Upstream Arts to be a powerful advocate, provider, educator and resource for disability justice work.
- Class Description:
- WRIT 1401 fulfills the first-year writing requirement. It challenges students to think strategically about developing and communicating ideas within different contexts. Students examine increasingly challenging texts as they apply their writing processes, with feedback from the instructor and peers, in order to craft thesis-driven academic analyses and arguments. Students master the concepts of audience, purpose, and context to demonstrate effective communication both for and beyond an academic audience. Classroom activities include discussion of readings, peer review, informal writing assignments. Students craft focused thesis statements that articulate a clearly reasoned position and use credible evidence to support a sustained argument. Through guided practice, students refine their control over focus, organization, style, diction, and grammar, and use the revision process to achieve their writing goals. Students use University libraries to locate, evaluate, and apply scholarly sources. Some sections may focus on writing with and for new media. Some sections may include a service-learning component.
- Grading:
- 80% Reports/Papers
20% Class Participation Other Grading Information: Percentages may vary slightly by section. Class participation includes required in-class writing - Class Format:
- 10% Lecture
35% Discussion Instructor-directed work on writing assignments, including one-to-one conferences. - Workload:
- 50-60 Pages Reading Per Week
25-30 Pages Writing Per Term Other Workload: (polished), 3-4 shorter papers, one longer researched paper - Textbooks:
- https://bookstores.umn.edu/course-lookup/65927/1243
- Instructor Supplied Information Last Updated:
- 31 October 2007
Spring 2024 | WRIT 1401 Section 002: University Writing - Community Engaged Learning (65928)
- Instructor(s)
- Class Component:
- Discussion
- Class Attributes:
- Community Engaged LearningFreshman Full Year Registration
- Times and Locations:
- Regular Academic Session01/16/2024 - 04/29/2024Thu 11:15AM - 01:10PMUMTC, East BankScience Teaching Student Svcs 14401/16/2024 - 04/29/2024UMTC, East BankUMN ONLINE-HYB
- Auto Enrolls With:
- Section 001
- Enrollment Status:
- Open (16 of 18 seats filled)
- Course Catalog Description:
- Students in WRIT 1401 work with a local community organization as they explore writing processes and practices and rhetorical principles that provide a framework for successful written communication in college and beyond. Students analyze how writing works in varying contexts/genres and how it presents complex arguments with an emphasis on exploring ways that writing works to support change in communities and to promote social justice. Students use and expand their writing process and revision to develop writing form/style and rhetorical content that contributes to conversations and provides new insight. Students develop information literacy and hone the ability to locate, evaluate, and effectively and ethically incorporate information into their own texts. The blended course modality combines two credit hours/week of small face-to-face class with two credit hours of online instruction in Canvas, in addition to weekly homework assignments. An additional 2 lab hours/week provide a common time and place reserved for work on and with our community partners. These are considered homework hours. WRIT 1401 fulfills the first-year writing requirement.
- Class Description:
- WRIT 1401 fulfills the first-year writing requirement. It challenges students to think strategically about developing and communicating ideas within different contexts. Students examine increasingly challenging texts as they apply their writing processes, with feedback from the instructor and peers, in order to craft thesis-driven academic analyses and arguments. Students master the concepts of audience, purpose, and context to demonstrate effective communication both for and beyond an academic audience. Classroom activities include discussion of readings, peer review, informal writing assignments. Students craft focused thesis statements that articulate a clearly reasoned position and use credible evidence to support a sustained argument. Through guided practice, students refine their control over focus, organization, style, diction, and grammar, and use the revision process to achieve their writing goals. Students use University libraries to locate, evaluate, and apply scholarly sources. Some sections may focus on writing with and for new media. Some sections may include a service-learning component.
- Grading:
- 80% Reports/Papers
20% Class Participation Other Grading Information: Percentages may vary slightly by section. Class participation includes required in-class writing - Class Format:
- 10% Lecture
35% Discussion Instructor-directed work on writing assignments, including one-to-one conferences. - Workload:
- 50-60 Pages Reading Per Week
25-30 Pages Writing Per Term Other Workload: (polished), 3-4 shorter papers, one longer researched paper - Textbooks:
- https://bookstores.umn.edu/course-lookup/65928/1243
- Instructor Supplied Information Last Updated:
- 31 October 2007
Spring 2024 | WRIT 1401 Section 003: University Writing - Community Engaged Learning (65929)
- Instructor(s)
- Class Component:
- Lecture
- Instructor Consent:
- No Special Consent Required
- Instruction Mode:
- Partially Online
- Class Attributes:
- Community Engaged LearningDelivery ModeFreshman Full Year Registration
- Enrollment Requirements:
- non-PSEO students
- Times and Locations:
- Regular Academic Session01/16/2024 - 04/29/2024Mon 09:05AM - 11:00AMUMTC, East BankNicholson Hall 35501/16/2024 - 04/29/2024UMTC, East BankUMN ONLINE-HYB
- Enrollment Status:
- Open (7 of 18 seats filled)
- Also Offered:
- Course Catalog Description:
- Students in WRIT 1401 work with a local community organization as they explore writing processes and practices and rhetorical principles that provide a framework for successful written communication in college and beyond. Students analyze how writing works in varying contexts/genres and how it presents complex arguments with an emphasis on exploring ways that writing works to support change in communities and to promote social justice. Students use and expand their writing process and revision to develop writing form/style and rhetorical content that contributes to conversations and provides new insight. Students develop information literacy and hone the ability to locate, evaluate, and effectively and ethically incorporate information into their own texts. The blended course modality combines two credit hours/week of small face-to-face class with two credit hours of online instruction in Canvas, in addition to weekly homework assignments. An additional 2 lab hours/week provide a common time and place reserved for work on and with our community partners. These are considered homework hours. WRIT 1401 fulfills the first-year writing requirement.
- Class Notes:
- Blended sections of WRIT 1401 require weekly in-person attendance as well as weekly asynchronous work in Canvas. In this community engaged learning section of WRIT 1401, students will develop multimodal participatory counternarratives about community spaces in the Twin Cities. This section offers students a field study model of community engaged learning in which students practice skills, conduct research and explore writing processes and strategies connected to an off-campus site.
- Class Description:
- WRIT 1401 fulfills the first-year writing requirement. It challenges students to think strategically about developing and communicating ideas within different contexts. Students examine increasingly challenging texts as they apply their writing processes, with feedback from the instructor and peers, in order to craft thesis-driven academic analyses and arguments. Students master the concepts of audience, purpose, and context to demonstrate effective communication both for and beyond an academic audience. Classroom activities include discussion of readings, peer review, informal writing assignments. Students craft focused thesis statements that articulate a clearly reasoned position and use credible evidence to support a sustained argument. Through guided practice, students refine their control over focus, organization, style, diction, and grammar, and use the revision process to achieve their writing goals. Students use University libraries to locate, evaluate, and apply scholarly sources. Some sections may focus on writing with and for new media. Some sections may include a service-learning component.
- Grading:
- 80% Reports/Papers
20% Class Participation Other Grading Information: Percentages may vary slightly by section. Class participation includes required in-class writing - Class Format:
- 10% Lecture
35% Discussion Instructor-directed work on writing assignments, including one-to-one conferences. - Workload:
- 50-60 Pages Reading Per Week
25-30 Pages Writing Per Term Other Workload: (polished), 3-4 shorter papers, one longer researched paper - Textbooks:
- https://bookstores.umn.edu/course-lookup/65929/1243
- Instructor Supplied Information Last Updated:
- 31 October 2007
Spring 2024 | WRIT 1401 Section 004: University Writing - Community Engaged Learning (65978)
- Instructor(s)
- Class Component:
- Discussion
- Class Attributes:
- Community Engaged LearningFreshman Full Year Registration
- Times and Locations:
- Regular Academic Session01/16/2024 - 04/29/2024Wed 09:05AM - 11:00AMUMTC, East BankNicholson Hall 35501/16/2024 - 04/29/2024UMTC, East BankUMN ONLINE-HYB
- Auto Enrolls With:
- Section 003
- Enrollment Status:
- Open (7 of 18 seats filled)
- Course Catalog Description:
- Students in WRIT 1401 work with a local community organization as they explore writing processes and practices and rhetorical principles that provide a framework for successful written communication in college and beyond. Students analyze how writing works in varying contexts/genres and how it presents complex arguments with an emphasis on exploring ways that writing works to support change in communities and to promote social justice. Students use and expand their writing process and revision to develop writing form/style and rhetorical content that contributes to conversations and provides new insight. Students develop information literacy and hone the ability to locate, evaluate, and effectively and ethically incorporate information into their own texts. The blended course modality combines two credit hours/week of small face-to-face class with two credit hours of online instruction in Canvas, in addition to weekly homework assignments. An additional 2 lab hours/week provide a common time and place reserved for work on and with our community partners. These are considered homework hours. WRIT 1401 fulfills the first-year writing requirement.
- Class Description:
- WRIT 1401 fulfills the first-year writing requirement. It challenges students to think strategically about developing and communicating ideas within different contexts. Students examine increasingly challenging texts as they apply their writing processes, with feedback from the instructor and peers, in order to craft thesis-driven academic analyses and arguments. Students master the concepts of audience, purpose, and context to demonstrate effective communication both for and beyond an academic audience. Classroom activities include discussion of readings, peer review, informal writing assignments. Students craft focused thesis statements that articulate a clearly reasoned position and use credible evidence to support a sustained argument. Through guided practice, students refine their control over focus, organization, style, diction, and grammar, and use the revision process to achieve their writing goals. Students use University libraries to locate, evaluate, and apply scholarly sources. Some sections may focus on writing with and for new media. Some sections may include a service-learning component.
- Grading:
- 80% Reports/Papers
20% Class Participation Other Grading Information: Percentages may vary slightly by section. Class participation includes required in-class writing - Class Format:
- 10% Lecture
35% Discussion Instructor-directed work on writing assignments, including one-to-one conferences. - Workload:
- 50-60 Pages Reading Per Week
25-30 Pages Writing Per Term Other Workload: (polished), 3-4 shorter papers, one longer researched paper - Textbooks:
- https://bookstores.umn.edu/course-lookup/65978/1243
- Instructor Supplied Information Last Updated:
- 31 October 2007
ClassInfo Links - Spring 2024 Writing Studies Classes
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- http://classinfo.umn.edu/?subject=WRIT&catalog_nbr=1401&term=1243
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- http://classinfo.umn.edu/?subject=WRIT&catalog_nbr=1401&term=1243&url=1
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