ࡱ> y Nbjbj 4{{bF$ 8@|&U("" TTTTTTT$DWY^TTT!!!fT!T!!OmTlyfiQ,TT0&UQTZ :TZXmTTZmT$!TT!&UTZ : San Jos State University College of Humanities and the Arts English and Comparative Literature ENGL 115.01: The Bible as Literature Spring 2012 Place/Day/Time: Boccardo Business Center 120, T/Th 1:30-2:45 Instructor:Dr. Mary WarnerOffice Location:FO 127Telephone:408-924-4417Email:mary.warner@sjsu.eduOffice Hours:M: 3:00-5:00, T: 4:00-6:00, F: 3:00-5:00 Class Days/Time:T/Th. 1:30 1:15Classroom:BBC 120 (Boccardo Business CenterPrerequisites:As this is an upper division course, it is expected that you have already taken general education requirements such as ENGL 1A and 1B, and that you have already developed upper division skills as well as high standards for your written work. In English department courses, your instructors comment not only on the content of your written work, but also on the quality of work being displayed. All student writing should contain clear focus, correct grammar and punctuation, appropriate diction and syntax, and well-organized paragraphs. (See the English Department Paper Evaluation Guide later in the syllabus.)  Web Page: http://www.sjsu.edu/faculty/mary.warner/ Course Description: Study of the Bible from the perspective of literature. In ENGL 115, The Bible as Literature, students will examine key portions of the Bible, exploring its array of subjects, themes, literary styles and genres, and contributions to the literature of Western Civilization. (3 credits) Course Objectives: Students will learn to 1. read, discuss, and understand the Bible from a non-sectarian literary perspective 2. identify, analyze, and interpret the literary devices used 3. identify, analyze, and interpret major themes in specific books of the Bible 4. recognize the Bible's rich contribution to other major literary works and integrate this knowledge with that for other course work in the humanities 5. produce thoughtful written work demonstrating the abilities learned in 1-4 above Student Learning ObjectivesDepartment of English & Comparative Literature Students will demonstrate the ability to read closely in a variety of forms, styles, structures, and modes, and articulate the value of close reading in the study of literature, creative writing, or rhetoric. show familiarity with major literary works, genres, periods, and critical approaches to British, American, and World Literature. write clearly, effectively, and creatively, and adjust writing style appropriately to the content, the context, and nature of the subject. develop and carry out research projects, and locate, evaluate, organize, and incorporate information effectively. articulate the relations among culture, history, and texts. ENGL 115 specifically addresses the following Student Learning Outcomes read closely in a variety of forms, styles, structures, and modes, and articulate the value of close reading in the study of literature, creative writing, or rhetoric Course Requirements 1, 4, 5, 6 write clearly, effectively, and creatively, and adjust writing style appropriately to the content, the context, and nature of the subjectCourse Requirements 2, 5 develop and carry out research projects, and locate, evaluate, organize, and incorporate information effectively Course Requirements 2, 3 articulate the relations among culture, history, and textsBy its very nature the Bible is a work of many genres and of cultural and historical significance and addresses this SLO. Required Texts/Readings: The New Oxford Annotated Bible with the Apocrypha, Revised Standard Version, 4th edition. Coogan, Michael D., ed; Brettler, Marc Z., Carol A. Newsom, and Pheme Perkins, assoc. eds. New York: Oxford University Press, 2001. The Bible and Its Influence, 2nd edition. Cullen Schippe and Chuck Stetson, general editors, New York & Fairfax, VA: The Bible Literacy Project Publishing Course Handouts: located at http://www.sjsu.edu/faculty/mary.warner/English115_HandoutsSpr2012.html Library Liaison: Toby Matoush; Email:  HYPERLINK "mailto:judyr@sjsu.edu" Toby.Matoush@sjsu.edu; Phone: 408-808-2096 Course Requirements/Evaluation: 1. Thorough and engaged reading of all assigned texts. The course's fundamental purpose is to increase students' familiarity with the literary aspects of the Bible, comprehensively, not as isolated quotations, and to this end, students must do consistent and careful reading. 20% of the overall grade for the course is determined by participation and discussion, neither of which can be done well without doing the necessary reading. One specific measurement of participation will be the Key Quotes due Tuesdays at the beginning of class. Additionally any oral presentations the response to a video in the Genesis: A Living Conversation series, for example are components of participation. (SLO 1) 2. Two essays of 3-5 pages--one of the essays will come from topics connected to the study of the Old Testament, specifically the Torah (Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy); the Neviim (the Prophets)--selections from the Former Prophets: Joshua, Judges, 1 and 2 Samuel, 1 and 2 Kings; and the Latter Prophets: Amos, Hosea, Habakkuk, Jonah, Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel; and the Ketuvim (the Writings)--including selections from Psalms and Proverbs, the book of Job, the Song of Songs and Ecclesiastes). The second essay will be based on topics from New Testament or the Christian Foundational Writings--the Gospel According to Mark, the Gospel According to John (selections), the Acts of the Apostles, selections from Romans, 1 & 2 Corinthians, and Galatians; and Revelation. Each essay is worth the following percentage of the overall course grade. (SLO 1 & 2) Essay One--15% Essay Two--15% I will provide a rubric for scoring the essays as a separate handout. 3. You will give an oral presentation of one of your papers--you will be able to select that paper on which you'd like to report. Oral presentations should be 7-10 min. and should offer your insights and research findings. Oral presentations will earn 10% of your overall grade. (SLO 4) 4. A mid-term examination that will account for 10% of the course grade. 5. Sustained Silent Writing (SSW)each week we will do 20 minutes of SSWyour writing might provide the basis for one of your papers, response to readings or to ideas raised in class discussion. Please keep a folder with the writing done in each of the SSW times and plan to submit it every other week for review. This writing helps meet the requirement for upper level literature courses of 5000 words of writing. The writing is done in-class only. The SSW requirement is 15% of the course grade. (SLO 1 & 2) A final examination that will account for 15% of the course grade; the exam is on May 19 from 9:45-12:00. Grading: The above requirements total 100%; I will be assigning a percent for each and averaging the scores. The letter equivalent is as follows and allows for plus/minus grading: A--91-100 B--82-90 C--73-81 D--64-72 F--below 64 The Department of English & Comparative Literature reaffirms its commitment to the differential grading scale as defined in the official 91 Catalog (The Grading System). Grades issued must represent a full range of performance: A=Excellent; B=Above Average; C=Average; D=Below Average; F=Failure Paper Evaluation Guide (Developed by the English Department) In English Department courses, instructors will comment on and grade the quality of student writing as well as the quality of ideas being conveyed. Student writing should exhibit correct grammar/punctuation and organized paragraphs. The A essay will be well organized and developed demonstrate a clear understanding of audience and purpose display original, provocative thought demonstrate advanced reading abilities incorporate both primary and secondary supporting materials effectively and correctly show students ability to use language effectively and to construct sentences distinguished by syntactic complexity and variety have no logical fallacies essentially be free of grammatical, mechanical, and usage errors The B essay will demonstrate competence in the same categories as the A essay, but show some describable slight weaknesses in one of those categories slight one of the assigned tasks, show less facility of expression, or contain some minor grammatical, mechanical, or usage flaws The C essay will complete all tasks set by the assignment, but show weaknesses in fundamentalsusually development be weak in support of its thesis have less mature sentence construction have less effective and correct use of language than the B essay The D essay will neglect one of the assigned tasks and be noticeably superficial in fulfilling the assignmentmay be too simplistic or too short show problems in logic or development, lack sufficient information to support its point have grammatical, mechanical, and/or usage errors that are serious and/or frequent enough to interfere substantially with the writers ability to communicate The F essay will demonstrate striking underdevelopment of ideas and insufficient or unfocused organization. contain serious grammatical, mechanical, and/or usage errors that make some sentences incomprehensible. University Policies Participation Policy: According to University policy F69-24, Students should attend all meetings of their classes, not only because they are responsible for material discussed therein, but because active participation is frequently essential to insure maximum benefit for all members of the class. Because this course is predominantly discussion and lecture based, attendance and participation are essential. The best education is more student-centered than teacher-directed, and to receive the best education, each student must be willing to make a significant contribution to the learning that happens. Remember that 20% of the overall grade in the course is earned through participation, oral presentations and discussion. Academic integrity The University emphasizes responsible citizenship and an understanding of ethical choices inherent in human development. Academic honesty and fairness foster ethical standards for all those who depend upon the integrity of the university, its courses, and its degrees. This policy sets standards for such integrity. The public is defrauded if faculty and/or students knowingly or unwittingly allow dishonest acts to be rewarded academically and the universitys degrees are compromised. Plagiarism: At 91 plagiarism is the act of representing the work of another as ones own without giving appropriate credit, regardless of how that work was obtained, and submitting it to fulfill academic requirements. Plagiarism includes, but is not limited to the act of incorporating the ideas, words, sentences, paragraphs, or parts of, and/or the specific substance of anothers work, without giving appropriate credit, and/or representing the product as ones own work; representing anothers artistic/scholarly works such as musical compositions, computer programs, photographs, paintings, drawing, sculptures, or similar works as ones own. (Adapted from the 91 Academic Senate Policy, S04-12; please check this web site for the full policy: http://www.sa.sjsu.edu/judicial_affairs/index.html) According to the 91 policy, the minimum penalty for plagiarism is failure of the assignment/paper/exam. It is your responsibility to become informed about the Academic Integrity Policy. I am more than happy to help you learn, but if you do not do your own work, that goal cannot be accomplished. Please see me if you have any questions about documentation. Campus Policy in Compliance with the American Disabilities Act If you need course adaptations or accommodations because of a disability, or if you need to make special arrangements in case the building must be evacuated, please make an appointment with me as soon as possible, or see me during office hours. Presidential Directive 97-03 requires that students with disabilities requesting accommodations must register with the DRC (Disability Resource Center) to establish a record of their disability. 91 Writing Center The 91Writing Center is located in Room 126 in Clark Hall. It is staffed by professional instructors and upper-division or graduate-level writing specialists from each of the seven 91 colleges. Ourwriting specialistshave met a rigorous GPA requirement, and they are well trained to assist all students at all levels within all disciplines to become better writers. Check out this link: http://www.sjsu.edu/writingcenter/ Course Calendar: (Subject to change to better address your needs and to accommodate any outside presenters) Table  SEQ Table \* ARABIC 1 Course Schedule WeekDateTopics, Readings, Assignments, Deadlines1 Th., Jan. 26 Introduction to the course, the syllabus; Protocols for study of the Bible from a literary perspective; Introductory writing activity; Presentation of key terms and background ASSIGNMENT: Introduction; Genesis 1-13-- and bring 2 Key Quotes to class; The Bible and Its Influence (B&IInf) Chapters 1 &2; 2 T., Jan. 31 Th., Feb. 2Voices in the Text/Creation Stories/the "Silent Spots"--Begin discussing Genesis 1-13 and material from Chapters 1& 2 B&IInf, SSW ASSIGNMENT: Genesis 15-23, Chapters 3&4 B&IInf, Video from the Genesis: A Living Conversation series ASSIGNMENT: Cont. work on Genesis through Ch. 23, Chapter 5 B&IF; 2 Key Quotes due; Responses to the video weve viewed in class; View one of the videos in the Genesis series before Feb. 9 and record notes for an oral report; Group 1 SSW folders due on Feb. 93 T., Feb. 7 Th., Feb. 9Voices in the Text/Creation Stories/the "Silent Spots"discussion of Genesis 15-23, SSW ASSIGNMENT: Genesis 24-35; View a video from the Genesis series before Feb. 9; Oral Presentations on Genesis videos: Temptation, First Murder, Apocalypse; Cont. discussion of Genesis 24-35, Oral Presentations on Genesis videos ASSIGNMENT: Genesis 37-50 and 2 Key Quotes for class; Reports on remaining Genesis videos; Group 2 SSW folders due on Feb. 164 T., Feb. 14 Th., Feb. 16Finish discussion of Genesis; Finish Oral Presentations on Genesis videos, SSW ASSIGNMENT: Exodus 1-20; Chapter 6 B&IInf,; Begin discussion of Exodus; ASSIGNMENT: Exodus 21-24, 28-29, 32-34; 2 Key Quotes; Chapter 7 B&IF;5 T., Feb. 21 Th., Feb. 23Explanation of Commentary Essays, Topics & Rubric for Papers; Cont. discussion of Exodus: the Meeting on Sinai; the Theme of Memory, SSW ASSIGNMENT: Leviticus 1, 4, 7, 10, 12, 19-26; Group 1 SSW folders due on Feb. 23 the Slave mentality, Offerings, the Law and Service to God; ASSIGNMENT: Numbers 6, 8, 11, 12-17, 20-24, 27; 2 Key Quotes;6 T., Feb. 28 Th., Mar. 1Discussion of the Book of Numbers, SSW ASSIGNMENT: Deuteronomy 1-13, 15-16, 18-20; Group 2 SSW folders due on Mar. 1 Deuteronomy and "the Threefold If;" ASSIGNMENT: Deuteronomy 21-23, 25-27, 30-34; 2 Key Quotes7 T., Mar. 6 Th., Mar. 8Completion of Deuteronomy; SSW ASSIGNMENT: Joshua 1-13; Chapter 8 B&IInf; Paper 1 due March 8 or 13 the Taking of the LandJoshua 1-13; SSW ASSIGNMENT: Joshua 20-24, Judges 1-6, 8, 11; 2 Key Quotes; Paper 1 if not in; Group 1 SSW folders due on Mar. 158 T., Mar. 13 Th., Mar. 15Finish Joshua; Songs--the Song of Deborah; Jephthah's daughter; Samson; SSW ASSIGNMENT: Judges 13-16, 19-21; 1 Samuel Oral Presentations of Paper 1; The History Books: I Samuel/"Absalom, Absalom"; ASSIGNMENT: 2 Samuel 1-24; Kings 1-4, 8, 10-13 2 Key Quotes; Chapter 9 B&IInf,;9 T., Mar. 20 Th., Mar. 222 Samuel and begin I Kings; Review for Mid-term; SSW ASSIGNMENT: Review for Mid-term; Group 2 SSW folders due on Mar. 22 Mid-term ASSIGNMENT: 1 Kings 17-19, 22; 2 Kings 1-5, 23-252 Key Quotes; Chapter 10 & 12 B&IInf,; Group 1 SSW folders due on April 510 T., April 3 Th., April 5Finish Kings; "The Prophetic Conventions; SSW ASSIGNMENT: Amos, Hosea, Habakkuk, Jonah; Group 1 SSW folders due on April 5 "The Prophetic Conventions; Amos, Hosea, Habakkuk, Jonah; Paper 2 Topics ASSIGNMENT: Isaiah 1-10, 40-662 Key Quotes; Chapter 11 B&IInf; Group 2 SSW folders due on April 1211 T., April 10 Th., April 12Isaiah: the Messianic Prophet; SSW ASSIGNMENT: Jeremiah 1-15 and Ezekiel 1-10, 20 Guest Lecture or Video lecture on the Book of Job, Dr. Ralph Williams, the University of Michigan ASSIGNMENT: Proverbs 1-8 and Psalms 1-10, 19, 23,42, 51, 89, 90, 120-130, 139, 150; Song of Songs-- 2 Key Quotes; Chapters 13-15 B&IF; Group 1 SSW folders due on April 1912 T., April 17 Th., April 19Wisdom Literature and the Book of Job, SSW ASSIGNMENT: Specific Chapter of the Gospel of Mark for Oral Reading; Chapters 19 & 21 B&IInf, The Drama--The Gospel According to Mark; ASSIGNMENT: selections from the Gospel According to John--Ch. 1 and 13-21 2 Key Quotes; Chapters 22-24 B&IInf; Group 2 SSW folders due on April 2613 T., April 24 Th., April 26The Poetic Gospel; Introduction to Acts, SSW ASSIGNMENT: Acts of the Apostles; Chapters 25-27 B&IInf; Paper 2 due May 8 or 10 Acts of the Apostles; The Ancient Form of the Letter ASSIGNMENT: Romans 1-11; I Corinthians 1-5, 7, 11-13, 15; Galatians 4 2 Key Quotes; Chapters 28-30 B&IInf; Paper 2 due May 8 or 1014 T., May 1 Th., May 3The Letters; SSW ASSIGNMENT: Chapters 34-36 B&IInf; SSW folders for Final Check due May 10; Paper 2 if not in; Introduction to Apocalyptic Literature &The Book of Revelation, ASSIGNMENT: Revelation 1-22; Final set of Key Quotes; Paper 2 due May 8 or 1015 T., May 8 Th., May 10The Book of Revelation, Begin Oral Presentations of Paper 2; SSW ASSIGNMENT: SSW folders for All Oral presentations of papers; ASSIGNMENT: Prepare for the Final Exam16 T. 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