Course Schedule
IMPORTANT: ALL TIMES EASTERN - Please see the University Policies section of your Syllabus for
details
Week Module Readings Activities and Assignments
Due Date Weight (%)
4th
Edition
5th
Edition
1 Introduction to the Course
Module 1: Introduction to Poetry
H - "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud" Online Copy
p. 111 p. 109 Introduce Yourself
Friday, January 10, 2014 at 11:55PM
Ungraded
H - "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" Online Copy Robert Frost Reading "Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening."
p. 214 p. 205
2 Module 2: Old Ballads and Literary Ballads
H - "Sir Patrick Spens"
p. 25 p. 25
H - "Bonny Barbara Allan"
p. 30 p. 27
H- "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner"
Online Copy
p. 114 p. 112
H- "La Belle Dame sans Merci"
Online Copy
p. 151 p. 147
3 Module 3: Narrative Poetry, Figures of Speech, Sound Devices and Prosody
Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte (Vol 1, pp. 7 - 151) (Chapters 1 - 15)
- -
Exercise 1: Figurative Language
Friday, January 24, 2014 at 11:55PM
1%
H - "The Lady of Shalott"
p. 156 p. 153
H - "anyone lived in a pretty how town"
p. 242 p. 229 Exercise 2: Prosody and Sound Devices
Friday, January 24, 2014 at 11:55PM
1%
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4 Module 4: Essay Writing
Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte (Vol 2, pp. 153 - 296) (Chapters 16 - 26)
- - Quiz 1: Jane Eyre (Volume 1, pp. 7 -151)
Monday, January 27, 2014 at 11:55PM
1%
Exercise 3: Quoting in Essays
Friday, January 31, 2014 at 11:55PM
1%
Exercise 4: Punctuation
Friday, January 31, 2014 at 11:55PM
1%
5 Module 5: Dramatic Poems, Persona, Voice and Diction
H - "I'm Nobody! Who are you?"
p. 183 p. 178 Quiz 2: Jane Eyre (Volume 2, pp. 153 - 296)
Monday, February 3, 2014 at 11:55PM
1%
H - "Telephone Conversation"
p. 317 p. 313
H - "My Last Duchess"
p. 164 p. 160
H - "Helen of Troy Does Counter Dancing"
p. 337 p. 331
H - "Hawk Roosting"
p. 309 p. 306 Assignment 1
Wednesday, February 5, 2014 at 11:55PM
25%
H - "The Ways We're Taught"
p. 362 p. 357 Exercise 5: Diction
Friday, February 7, 2014 at 11:55 PM
1%
Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte (Vol 3, pp. 297 - 452) (Chapters 27 - 28)
- -
6 Module 6: Novel: Jane Eyre
Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte
- - Quiz 3: Jane Eyre (Volume 3, pp 297 - 452)
Monday, February 10, 2014 at 11:55 PM
1%
READING WEEK (Sunday, February 16, 2014 to Saturday, February 22, 2014)
7 Module 7: Sonnets and Audio/Visual Poetry
H - "I, Being Born a Woman and Distressed"
p. 235 p. 223
H - "That time of year thou mayst in me behold"
p. 36 p. 37
H - "Since there's no help, come let us kiss and part"
p. 31 p. 32
H - "Leda and the Swan"
p. 206 p. 198
H - "Blackman p. 358 N/A
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Dead"
H - "Meditation on the Declension of Beauty by the Girl with the Flying Cheek-bones"
p. 360 p. 349
H - "1(a" r-p-o-p-h-e-s-s-a-g-r
p. 243 p. 230
Apfel - -
The Horizon of Holland
- -
8 Module 8: Novel: Wide Sargasso Sea
Wide Sargasso Sea, Jean Rhys
- - Quiz 4: Wide Sargasso Sea
Monday, March 3, 2014 at 11:55 PM
1%
9 Module 9: Poems of Childhood, Parents and Children
H - "The Lamb" p. 98 p. 97
H - "The Tyger" p. 102 p. 100
H - "Nurse's Song" p. 101 p. 99
H - "Nurse's Song" p. 103 p. 101
H - "Fern Hill" p. 276 p. 264
H - "Little Black Boy"
p. 99 p. 97
H - "Daddy" p. 311 p. 307
H - "My Papa's Waltz"
p. 259 p. 248
H - "To a Sad Daughter"
p. 353 N/A
10 Module 10: Novel: As I Lay Dying
As I Lay Dying, William Faulkner
- - Quiz 5: As I Lay Dying
Monday, March 17, 2014 at 11:55 PM
1%
11 Module 11: Anthology of Poems (For your enjoyment - readings only)
H - "My Mistress' Eyes"
p. 37 p. 38
H - "Winter Fields" p. 193 p. 187
H - "She dwelt among the untrodden ways"
p. 109 p. 107
H - "Music, when Soft Voices Die"
p. 143 p. 170
H - "After a Death" p. 363 N/A
H - "I heard a Fly Buzz"
p. 184 p. 179
H - "Because I could not Stop for Death"
p. 186 p. 180
12 Catch up No Readings Assignment Wednesday, 30%
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week #2 April 2, 2014 at 11:55 PM
Final Exam 35%
Final Examination Arrangement and Schedule
In courses with a final exam, students who are exclusively taking online classes must provide examination
arrangement information, using Quest, by Friday, January 24, 2014. (Students taking one or more on-
campus classes in addition to an online class within the same term do not need to provide exam centre
information. Those exams will automatically be scheduled to be written at the University of Waterloo.)
Examination schedule details will be available on Quest approximately four weeks prior to the exam date.
For instructions on how to find exam information, go to the Quest Help page.
Official Grades and Course Access
Official Grades and Academic Standings are available through Quest.
Your access to this course will continue for the duration of the current term. You will not have access to this
course once the next term begins.
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Communication
Email/Discussions
Administrative questions or technical problems with Waterloo LEARN should be directed to the Centre for Extended Learning office at [email protected].
Questions relating to academic issues (e.g., course content, deadlines, etc.) should be posted on the “Ask
the Instructor” discussion topic. This allows other students to benefit from your question as well. Discussion
topics can be accessed by clicking Connect and then Discussions on the course navigation bar above.
Questions of a personal nature can be directed to your instructor, Lacey Beer, at [email protected].
Your instructor checks email and the “Ask the Instructor” discussion topic frequently and will make every
effort to reply to your questions within 24–48 hours, Monday to Friday. Please wait 24 hours after marks
have been returned before contacting with questions, concerns and comments.
A "General Discussion" topic has also been made available to allow students to communicate with peers in
the course. Your instructor may drop in at this discussion topic from time to time.
CLASS POETRY BOARD (OPTIONAL)
This discussion forum will be available for students to post original poems and for other students to respond
to these poems.
News
Your instructor uses the News section of the Course Home page to make announcements during the term to
communicate new or changing information regarding due dates, instructor absence, etc., as needed.
To ensure you are viewing the complete list of news items, you may need to click Show All News Items.
Winter 2014 ENGL 102B Online University of Waterloo
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Course Description, Objectives and Key Terms
Course Description
English 102 provides an introduction to the university-level study of four major forms of English literature.
English 102A examines plays and short stories; English 102B examines poetry and novels.
For this course, I have arranged the poems according to type and theme rather than chronological sequence.
An important aspect of our study will be to examine how a poem's form and language support its meaning.
Our emphasis on novels will be on such basic features as character, plot development, and narration. We will
also apply certain basic critical approaches to the novels, such as reader response, structuralism, cultural
criticism and feminism.
Objectives
English 102B has several related objectives:
1. To introduce you to some basic terms and concepts that will help you as you continue your studies in English.
2. To give you practice and training in reading and interpreting individual pieces of literature with greater insight and in making comparisons among them.
3. To help you write more effectively.
4. To help you to articulate your responses and interact with other students.
5. To increase your enjoyment of reading (I hope!).
Key Terms
Types of Poetry: e.g., ballad, sonnet, visual poetry, sound poetry
Figurative Language: figures of speech (simile, metaphor, catachresis, synaesthesia, metonymy,
synecdoche, personification); symbolism (archetypal, conventional, contextual)
Prosody: types of rhyme (end, internal, perfect, imperfect, masculine, feminine); stanza forms (especially
couplet, tercet, quatrain, etc.); conventional verse forms (especially ballad, Italian and English sonnets);
basic rhythmic patterns (iamibic, anapestic, trochaic, dactylic, spondeic); rhythmic variations (caesura,
enjambment); and metre (especially dimeter, trimeter, tetrameter, pentameter, hexameter)
Sound Patterns and Devices: alliteration, assonance, consonance, onomatopoeia
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Persona, Voice, Diction: creating a persona; basic levels of language, especially monosyllabic, polysyllabic,
archaic, colloquial, specialized, figurative (poetic), dialect
Narrative Elements: plot; characters; setting (time and place); point of view (especially first person, but
some reference to third person); narrator (reliable, unreliable, homodiegetic, heterodiegetic); narrative
distance; time and order (fabula, sjuzet, analepsis, prolepsis, paralipsis, achrony); direct and indirect
speech (monologue, dialogue, interior monologue, stream of consciousness)
Reader-Response Terminology: readerly, writerly, intertextuality
This online course was developed by Paul Kreller, with instructional design and multimedia development
support provided by the Centre for Extended Learning.
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About the Course Author/Instructor
Course Author — Paul Kreller
My name is Paul Kreller. I live in Elmira, which is about
10 miles north of Waterloo. I received by B.A. from
what is now Wilfrid Laurier University, and my
teaching diploma from the University of Western
Ontario. From 1974 to 1986 I taught English and Latin
in Bermuda. After I returned, I received my M.A. and
Ph.D. in English at the University of Waterloo. My main
interests are 19th century British literature and
rhetoric.
Since 1995 I have taught several English courses on
campus at the University of Waterloo, including first-
year genre courses (102A and B), second-year survey
courses (200A and B), second-year courses in criticism
(251A and B), and fourth-year literature courses (460A,
B, and C). For several years I have marked the following English courses for Online Learning: 251A and B. I
also give the lectures for the Reader Response section in English 251B-DE.
Course Instructor — Lacey Beer
Welcome everyone! My name is Lacey Beer and I have
completed my Honours Bachelor of Arts in English and
Film with minors in French and music at Wilfrid Laurier
University in 2010 and my Master’s in English Language
and Literature at the University of Waterloo in 2011.
Currently, I am a third year "PhD candidate" working
towards the first chapters of my dissertation. I
specialize in Canadian Literature (primary) and
Composition and Pedagogy (secondary). I am also
interested in issues related to ESL and translingualism
and my dissertation will focus on what George Elliott
Clarke calls "‘criminal’ justice literature."
In my “spare time,” I enjoy composing music and
creative writing, specifically short stories and novels. I
have my A.R.C.T. in piano and my Gr. 10 (RCM) violin. I also love travelling and volunteering!
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I’ve had considerable experience teaching online, specifically as a Teaching Assistant for ENGL 210F: The
Genres of Business Communication for three years now! I am excited to have this opportunity to teach such
diverse works of English literature (well, novels and poetry!) and engage in class discussions in the online
“Coffee Shop/Ask the Instructor.” My hopes are that each and every one of you will gain new insights into,
new understandings of, and new knowledge on the course texts, some of which you may have already
encountered in academia.
I wish you all every success!
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Materials and Resources
Textbooks
Required:
1. The Harbrace Anthology of Poetry, (Canadian) 4th edition, Jon C. Stott, Raymond E. Jones, and Rick Bowers, Nelson Thompson Learning, 2005.
2. Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte, Oxford World's Classics, Oxford University Press, 2008.
3. As I Lay Dying, William Faulkner, Vintage International edition, 1991.
4. Wide Sargasso Sea, Jean Rhys, Penguin Classics, 2000.
Recommended:
1. The Little, Brown Compact Handbook, 5th Canadian Edition* with MyCanadianCompLab, Jane E. Aaron and Aimée Morrison, Pearson Education, 2013, 9780321818539 (This text has useful sections on grammar, punctuation, and sentence errors, as well as suggestions for writing essays and a summary of the MLA style. All royalties derived from the sale of this text will be donated to the Department of English scholarship fund.)
* The 1st to 4th editions can also be used.
For textbook ordering information, please contact the Waterloo Bookstore.
For your convenience, you can compile a list of required and optional course materials through BookLook using your Quest userID and password. If you are having difficulties ordering online and wish to call the Waterloo Bookstore, their phone number is +1 519 888 4673 or toll-free at +1 866 330 7933. Please be aware that textbook orders CANNOT be taken over the phone.
eReserves
The eReserves can be accessed using the eReserves widget on the Course Home page.
ResourcesUniversity of Waterloo Library (Services for Students Taking Online Courses)
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Grade BreakdownThe following table represents the grade breakdown of this course.
Activities and Assignments Weight (%)
Introduce Yourself Ungraded
Online Quizzes 5%
Online Exercises 5%
Discussion Boards Possibility for up to a 5% bonus for participating in these activities
Assignment 1 25%
Assignment 2 30%
Final Exam 35%
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University Policies
Submission Times
Please be aware that the University of Waterloo is located in the Eastern Time Zone (GMT or UTC-5 during
standard time and UTC-4 during daylight saving time) and, as such, the time that your activities and/or
assignments are due is based on this zone. If you are outside the Eastern Time Zone and require assistance
with converting your time, please try the Ontario, Canada Time Converter.
Accommodation Due to Illness
If your instructor has provided specific procedures for you to follow if you miss assignment due dates, term tests, or a final examination, adhere to those instructions. Otherwise:
MISSED ASSIGNMENTS/TESTS/QUIZZES
Contact the instructor as soon as you realize there will be a problem, and preferably within 48 hours, but no
more than 72 hours, have a medical practitioner complete a Verification of Illness Form.
Email a scanned copy of the Verification of Illness Form to your instructor. In your email to the instructor,
provide your name, student ID number, and exactly what course activity you missed.
Further information regarding Management of Requests for Accommodation Due to Illness can be found on
the Accommodation due to illness page.
MISSED FINAL EXAMINATIONS
If you are unable to write a final examination due to illness, seek medical treatment and provide
confirmation of illness to the Centre for Extended Learning within 48 hours by emailing a scanned copy of
the completed University of Waterloo Verification of Illness Form to support your request for
accommodation. In your email, provide your name, student ID number, and the examination(s) missed. You
will be REQUIRED to hand in the original completed form at the time you write the make-up examination,
which should be within a week of having missed your exam. The original completed form must be received
before you are able to write a re-scheduled exam.
Further information about Accommodation Due to Illness regulations are available in the Undergraduate
Calendar.
Academic Integrity
In order to maintain a culture of academic integrity, members of the University of Waterloo community are
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expected to promote honesty, trust, fairness, respect, and responsibility. If you have not already completed the online tutorial regarding academic integrity you should do so as soon as possible. Undergraduate students should see the Academic Integrity Tutorial and graduate students should
see the Graduate Students and Academic Integrity website.
Proper citations are part of academic integrity. Citations in CEL course materials usually follow CEL style,
which is based on APA style. Your course may follow a different style. If you are uncertain which style to use
for an assignment, please confirm with your instructor or TA.
For further information on academic integrity, please visit the Office of Academic Integrity.
Discipline
A student is expected to know what constitutes academic integrity to avoid committing an academic
offence, and to take responsibility for his/her actions. A student who is unsure whether an action
constitutes an offence, or who needs help in learning how to avoid offences (e.g., plagiarism, cheating) or
about “rules” for group work/collaboration, should seek guidance from the course instructor, academic
advisor, or the undergraduate Associate Dean. For information on categories of offences and types of
penalties, students should refer to Policy 71 - Student Discipline. For typical penalties, check Guidelines for
the Assessment of Penalties.
Appeals
A decision made or penalty imposed under Policy 70 - Student Petitions and Grievances, (other than a
petition) or Policy 71 - Student Discipline, may be appealed if there is a ground. A student who believes
he/she has a ground for an appeal should refer to Policy 72 - Student Appeals.
Grievance
A student who believes that a decision affecting some aspect of his/her university life has been unfair or
unreasonable may have grounds for initiating a grievance. Read Policy 70 - Student Petitions and
Grievances, Section 4. When in doubt please be certain to contact the department’s administrative assistant
who will provide further assistance.
Final Grades
In accordance with Policy 19 - Access To and Release of Student Information, the Centre for Extended
Learning does not release final examination grades or final course grades to students. Students must go
to Quest to see all final grades. Any grades posted in Waterloo LEARN are unofficial.
Note for Students with Disabilities
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AccessAbility Services, located in Needles Hall, Room 1132, collaborates with all academic departments to
arrange appropriate accommodations for students with disabilities without compromising the academic
integrity of the curriculum. If you require academic accommodation to lessen the impact of your disability,
please register with AccessAbility Services at the beginning of each academic term and for each course.
Use of Computing and Network Resources
Please see the Guidelines on Use of Waterloo Computing and Network Resources.
Copyright Information
uWaterloo’s Web Pages
All rights, including copyright, images, slides, audio, and video components, of the content of this course are
owned by the course author, unless otherwise stated. These web pages are owned or controlled by the
University of Waterloo, Centre for Extended Learning. By accessing the web pages, you agree that you may
only download the content for your own personal, non-commercial use. You are not permitted to copy,
broadcast, download, store (in any medium), transmit, show or play in public, adapt, or change in any way
the content of these web pages for any other purpose whatsoever without the prior written permission of
the course author and the University of Waterloo, Centre for Extended Learning.
Other Sources
Respect the copyright of others and abide by all copyright notices and regulations when using the computing
facilities provided for your course of study by the University of Waterloo. No material on the Internet or
World Wide Web may be reproduced or distributed in any material form or in any medium, without
permission from copyright holders or their assignees. To support your course of study, the University of
Waterloo has provided hypertext links to relevant websites, resources, and services on the web. These
resources must be used in accordance with any registration requirements or conditions which may be
specified. You must be aware that in providing such hypertext links, the University of Waterloo has not
authorized any acts (including reproduction or distribution) which, if undertaken without permission of
copyright owners or their assignees, may be infringement of copyright. Permission for such acts can only be
granted by copyright owners or their assignees.
If there are any questions about this notice, please contact the University of Waterloo, Centre for Extended
Learning, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, N2L 3G1 or by email.
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