Online World Literature Discussion Guidelines (Summer Courses)
This is the most important area of the course. The time you spend contributing to the discussion area substitutes for the time you would spend in the classroom in a regular World Literature course. You can expect to spend a about three hours per forum/academic day here reading the comments of other students and the instructor, and making contributions of your own. Note that there will be five forums per week with midnight deadlines five days per week--this substitutes for the five days we would normally meet in a classroom.
Although the course is scheduled to run Mondays through Fridays, I've decided to make the discussion deadlines begin each Sunday at midnight. The last discussion deadline each week will be Thursday at midnight. This will free up Friday night for those of you who have weekend commitments, although those of you who might want to make early submissions and free up your Sunday nights are free to do so.
Discussion deadlines: You are required to make a minimum of three substantive responses per forum (each forum corresponds to the classroom work you would normally do in one academic day). Feel free to make more than three submissions per week. You do not need to respond to every thread, but the three or more responses you make to the instructor's questions or to other students' responses should be thoughtful and energetic, and should present strong arguments about or analyses of the text. You will not receive a passing grade for perfunctory responses or responses that merely summarize the text or string together quotations without analysis. Students are encouraged to raise questions that will help us penetrate these works more deeply. Your responses to questions for each group of readings are due by midnight (i.e., the end of the day, one minute past 11:59 pm) Sundays through Thursdays. After the deadlines make sure you go back and look at my concluding responses. After the deadlines I'll try to tie things together in each thread, and I may ask follow-up questions if I feel that the initial question hasn't been addressed adequately enough. Your responses to these follow-up questions will be factored into your discussion grade for the next week/forum.
Time commitment: Keep in mind that the three hours you spend in the discussion area each day doesn't include time you spend reading. Remember that college students are generally expected to spend 2-3 hours preparing for each hour of classroom instruction—you should expect to spend a minimum of six to nine hours per academic day/forum deadline preparing for this class (i.e., reading the assignments), and an additional 3 hours in the discussion area. Please complete the assigned reading before you submit responses to the questions in the discussion area. Some of these questions are very specific, but some address larger themes that apply to the entire reading assignment.
Quality of submissions: You are expected to read all of the submissions made to the discussion area by other students and the instructor each day, and you will be expected to make a minimum of three of your own submissions to the discussion area each day. Your responses can be either direct responses to one of the questions posed in the discussion area by the instructor, or responses to other students’ responses. These responses should be thorough, thoughtful, and insightful. Your responses should not simply paraphrase the text, supply a factual summary of narrative events, or string together a list of quotations without analysis. You should use your responses to make arguments about what you think about the text, and you should use quotations, and an analysis of those quotations to support your arguments. Try to be original and imaginative. If someone has already made a point, don't simply repeat it--either add something to the idea, disagree with it, or move on to a thread that vewer people have responded to. Avoid broad generalizations, and try to construct arguments that are supported by a close reading of the text. Avoid responses that are brief, vague, and flippant. See the rubric below for a detailed outline of what is expected. Avoid Internet shorthand ("Lazarillo stole the blind man's wine--ROTFL!! ;)")--including the use of all lower-case letters and unconventional abbreviations ("diomedes pwned him lol")--and avoid using the discussion area to discuss things not related to the course ("Wanna go to the party at Delta house on Saturday?"). Humor and wit are welcome, but let's try to stay on topic.
"Attendance": Failure to submit responses to a forum by the deadline will result in a grade of zero, and will be treated as an "absence" for the purposes of attendance. The Longwood University attendance policy in the Undergraduate Catalog will be the attendance policy for this course. Your grade will be lowered by one letter grade if you miss 10 percent of the scheduled class meeting times (i.e., the discussion forum deadlines) for unexcused absences. You will receive an F for the course if you miss a total (excused and unexcused) of 25 percent of the scheduled class discussion deadlines. "Absences" can be excused, and Exams can be made up only under the most grave circumstances, and with documentation from an MD or a Longwood University official. If you foresee a conflict, I expect you to discuss it with me beforehand. Written assignments submitted late will lose one letter grade for each class day late. A technology failure is not a good excuse for missing a discussion deadline, especially if it extends beyond a single discussion deadline. Have a backup plan in case your technology fails. Remember that most public libraries provide Internet access. Go here to find a wireless network near you.
Formatting and citation: When you use quotations in your response, make sure you quote verse properly. Please also remember that "quote" is a verb and "quotation" is a noun. You should also underline or italicize the names of books, such as Homer's Iliad. If you are using MS Internet Explorer or Firefox with Blackboard, there is a font menu in Blackboard that will allow you to do this. If you are using another browser, you may need to insert the HTML tags for underlining yourself: <u> before the title, and </u> after it.
Instructor submissions: The instructor will not respond to every submission, and students are encouraged to ask questions amongst themselves rather than appeal to the instructor for clarification on each topic. The instructor will address issues that arise throughout the week, and try to tie things together as the discussion comes to a close, but you should not expect the instructor to dominate the discussion. The instructor will try to post his comments no later than twelve hours after each midnight deadline.
Grades: Within 24 hourse after each deadline , you will receive a grade (posted on Blackboard) on the previous day ’s submissions. You will receive a grade of 1-100 points per forum, and at the end of the semester the average of your forum grades will account for 50% of your final grade (your lowest discussion grade will be dropped). This grade is based on the quality of your contributions, and will take into account the following factors: ability to understand and analyze the text, ability to generate questions that engage other students, and ability to make connections between specific passages and episodes and larger themes in a literary work. You will lose points if you merely paraphrase the weekly readings, and if you make frequent errors of spelling, grammar, and usage. You should try to balance direct responses to instructor questions with responses to other students. Abbreviations, acronyms, slang, and forms of shorthand common in other Internet discussion forums are discouraged. There will be a number of issues on which class participants disagree, but you should make every effort to maintain a civil, respectful, and constructive tone of discourse. If our discussion touches on issues of theology, keep in mind that it is unlikely that everyone in the class shares your religious beliefs. Please be tolerant of perspectives different from your own. Uncivil, hostile, and profane responses will receive a 0, and may be turned over to the Honor Board for adjudication as honor violations.
If you have questions about your discussion grades, contact the instructor.
Discussion Board Grading Rubric
Criteria |
A (90-100) |
B (80-89) Good |
C (70-79) Average |
D/F (69 and below) Poor |
Content, Critical Thinking, and Analysis |
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Connections |
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Themes and Ideas |
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Timeliness |
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Writing Style |
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Responses to Peers |
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Content of Responses and Followup |
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Originality and Creativity |
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(Adapted from Jeannine Perry, Longwood University)


