English 5182-091
Information Design & Digital Publishing

Fall 2010

 

Dr. Aaron A. Toscano (atoscano)

Office: Fretwell 280F

Office hours:  Tues. & Wed. 4:00 – 6:00 (and by appt.)

 

 

Classroom: Fretwell 219 (Computer Lab)

Time: Wed. 6:30 – 9:15 pm (with 15 min break)

http://www.english.uncc.edu/atoscano/

Course Description and Purpose

 

The purpose of this course is to introduce you to the principles, vocabulary, and theories of computer-aided document design. You will be expected to use the computer to solve a variety of writing problems, including planning, drafting, editing, and publishing. All students will plan, design, and complete print and electronic documents that will be evaluated in a course portfolio. The course meets in a computer classroom with various Adobe and Microsoft software applications students will use for assignments. This course, however, is not a course on InDesign, Photoshop, and even Dreamweaver. Not only is it inappropriate to consider giving students credit for a 4000-level course based on software instruction, a once-a-week 3-hour class is an ineffective situation for software instruction. Any software/technology skills students come away with are secondary to the goal of exploring the theoretical, cultural, and rhetorical frameworks implicit and explicit concerning information design. (Satisfies writing requirement).

 

Texts and Materials

 

Required:

Kimball, Miles A. and Ann R. Hawkins. Document Design. Bedford/St. Martin's, 2007.

978-0312436995.

Williams, Robin. Non-Designer's Design Book. 3rd Ed. Peachpit Press, 2008. 978-0321534040.

Access to a UNCC Internet account (e-mail, web space, etc.)

Willingness To Learn

 

Recommended:

Some means of portable storage (i.e. your “h” drive, a flash drive, a floppy disk, etc.)

Cohen, Sandee. InDesign CS3 for Macintosh and Windows. Berkeley, CA: Peachpit Press, 2008.

0-321-50306-6

Weinmann, Elaine and Peter Lourekas. Photoshop CS3 for Windows and Macintosh. Berkeley, CA:

Peachpit Press, 2008.

Mohler, James L. and Kyle Bowen. Exploring Dreamweaver 8. Clifton Park, NY: Thomson-Delmar

Learning, 2007. 1-4180-1610-1

Other Adobe software guides for the programs we have in the lab

 

Expectations

 

I expect students to be prepared to participate in class—activities, workshops, discussions, etc. Therefore, students should finish all reading before the class meets and expect to be in class for the entire time. Unless otherwise stated, hand in all work to me. Again, unless otherwise stated, hand in all work to me. Do not e-mail me any attachments—I will not accept attachments. Please do not beg for an exception. You are solely responsible for backing up your work and getting hardcopies to me. The potential for computers crashing and Internet connections failing calls for backing up your work and avoiding procrastination. If last minute “issues” come up, you may upload your assignment to a webpage—this does not mean e-mailing an attachment—but you must also bring a hardcopy to me on the next class meeting. Do not expect me to provide printing resources. Also, the computer lab printer doesn’t always work, so, if you plan to use it, get here early and plan for alternative means of printing. Do not print out material during class discussions. Alternative assignments and extensions are given at my discretion. If you are unwilling to fulfill these expectations, please reconsider your enrollment in this course.

 

Prerequisites


Students must have graduate standing or be exempted by the English Department.

 

Work Requirements

 

Students in this course are expected to be able to complete unified, coherent documents nearly free of mechanical, logical, or structural errors. The ability to read advanced college-level texts critically is also a requirement. Students will complete documents, maintain a website, do reading quizzes, take a midterm and final exam, and do presentations aimed at lay audiences individually and in groups. Most documents will be portfolio assessments and are listed below along with other assignments:

 

  • Document #1: Business Card & Letterhead (Due 9/14)
  • Document #2: Flyer or Advertisement (Due 10/05)
  • Document #3: Tutorial (Due 10/26)
  • Document #4: Brochure (Due 11/09)
  • Web site (ongoing)
  • 5182 Projects: Bibliographic Essay (10-15 pages) or Rhetoric Project (hmm...) (Due 11/17)

o    New Media

o    Copyright law and electronic media

o    Typography & History

o    Hypertext/Hypermedia Authoring

o    Contemporary Printing Methods

o    Page Description Languages

o    Multimodal Composition

o    Document Design (many possibilities)

o    Visual Rhetoric (many possibilities)

o   Other: _____________________________________ (see me)

  • Presentation on Bibliographic Essay (5-6 min) (Due 12/01)
  • Portfolios (Due 11/30)
  • Presentation on the theory(ies) of your final portfolio documents (12/14)

 

The above documents (1-4) must be accompanied by a project assessment memo designed to provide me with information about the context for and the design of the document, as well as a rationale for and evaluation of the use of each application employed. Specific criteria for evaluation and discussion will be assigned with each project. Without this memo, the assignment is incomplete, so your grade will be lowered for each day the memo is late.

 

The midterm and final exams will cover our readings and class activities/discussions. All of these assignments must be completed to receive a passing grade in the course. Just because the assignments have percentage values below does not mean you will pass the course if your missing assignments do not drop you below 60%.

 

Assignments/Grade Distribution

 

Portfolio Assignments
(45%)
pts.
Other Assignments
(15%)
pts.
Exams/Quizzes
(20%)
pts.
Everything Else (20%)
%

Document #1

100

website (ongoing)

200

Reading Quizzes

50

Theories Pres.
5%

Document #2

200

5182 Project

100

Midterm

100

Participation
15%

Document #3

300

5182 Project Pres.

50

Final

100

 

Document #4

200

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total

800

Total

350

Total
250
Grand Total
100%

 

Grading Policy

 

Your final grade is supposed to reflect your entire work for the semester and will be based on the percentages below:

 

Grading Scale for Graded Assignments and Final Grade:

A= 90 – 100

B= 80 – 89

C= 70 – 79

D= 60 – 69

F=Below 60

 

Definition of A, B, C, D, and F Grades


Remember, your final grade is a combination of the four areas above in the assignment percentage table. An ‘A’ means your work was excellent—not mediocre, average, or just good. A ‘B’ means your work was good—not quite excellent but definitely above average and thoughtful. A ‘C’ means your work was barely adequate enough to satisfy the assignment—showing a lack of effort or thought for the assignment guidelines. A ‘D’ or ‘F’ usually means assignments were late, missing, or incomplete—often this work does not demonstrate appropriate college-level work for a 4000/5000-level course.

 

Late Work

 

An assignment is due at the beginning of the class for which it was assigned—printing out work at the end of the class in which it was due means the assignment is late. All late work will reduce the assignment by 10% for each class period it is late. If you will not or cannot be in class on the day a paper is due, you should make arrangements to get the paper to me via another student, putting it in my mailbox, or uploading the paper online and e-mailing the link to me. Of course, you must still bring in a hardcopy of the assignment on the next class meeting. Again, you must still bring in a hardcopy of the assignment on the next class meeting. Remember, I will not accept assignments attached to e-mails. Please discuss any problems you may have regarding attendance or late work before class if at all possible. Remember, you are responsible for making up all work missed. Something I’ve learned from past semesters is that if you don’t turn things in on time early in the semester, you end up not turning other things in on time (or at all). Do your best to get all your work—drafts and final documents—in to me on time. If you are absent, get the information from another student. Do not expect me to e-mail the class notes to you. Of course, never e-mail me and ask, “so…like, Dr. Toscano, man…did we…like…you know…do anything the other day in class?”

 

Participation

 

Although this course is more of a hands-on or applied course, there are chances for discussion. Because separating one’s theories and practices is artificial (if not impossible), we will discuss theories behind the rhetorical strategies of document design. However, unlike a course dominated by theory, we will not have class-wide discussions for the entire class time. Instead, students should expect discussions at the beginning of class and more practical endeavors in the second half of class. Participation is expected, and you must participate thoughtfully during class discussions. Merely showing up will not get you participation credit—you must speak. If you’re not in class, you can’t receive credit, so your participation grade will be affected. I will note your participation (or lack thereof) daily. Thoughtful participation means that you engage critically in our discussions or ask engaging questions about the subject. Simply making jokes or telling the class an irrelevant story about last night’s American Idol does not warrant thoughtful participation. Getting on MySpace, FaceBook, IM, or a similarly distracting web tool to chat with others or doing work for another class will lower your participation grade—even to the point of falling below 15% (meaning, you can have a negative participation grade). Please see me ASAP if you’re concerned about your participation grade because you’re shy or if you don’t understand these requirements. Telling me at the end of November that you didn’t participate because you’re the quiet type or because you didn’t understand what “thoughtful” meant will be too late. Even worse, e-mailing me after the semester is over to complain that participation isn’t a “valid” class assignment or shouldn't apply to you because you're better than the rest of us is too late. The purpose of discussions is for students to have control over their own learning and to reinforce critical thinking. Because this is more of a “hands-on” course than a theory-heavy course, there won’t be as much chance for classroom-wide discussions:  Much of your class time will be devoted to planning, creating, and revising your major assignments. I am willing to provide a quasi-alternative to supplement a student’s participation grade, but please note that discussion, which allows speakers to exchange ideas, is an extremely important component of critical thinking.

 

Attendance

 

I will take attendance each day of class.  It is very important that you attend every class in order to keep up with the work and reading. Your grade will be lowered after missing 2 classes. Your final grade will be lowered by a full letter grade for each day missed beyond 2 absences.  After 4 absences you will receive a failing grade for the course. Please make an effort to come to every class and to get here on time. Don’t just skip class because you feel you have two “free” days. Save your absences for emergencies. Cars break down, parking is limited, students get sick, and traffic is brutal, but class still happens. I will ask you to request a meeting with the Dean of Students if you have situations that you feel should allow you an exception to missing more than 2 classes. Additionally, as of this school year, you have two days per academic year that can be used for religious observance without penalty. However, if you must be absent for a religious observance, you are required to file a “Request for Religious Observance” form, and notify me at least a week before the absence. If you are absent for any reason, you are responsible for any missed work and any modifications to the syllabus and/or assignments.

 

Important Dates and Administrative Information

 

The syllabus schedule on the last two pages has important dates marked. Students are responsible for not only knowing course deadlines but also knowing UNCC deadlines (drop/add, billing, vacation, etc.). Please visit the following link for the registrar’s calendar: http://registrar.uncc.edu/calendars/1080_Printable_Acad_Calendar.pdf.

 

Academic Integrity

 

All UNC Charlotte students have the responsibility to be familiar with and to observe the requirements of The UNC Charlotte Code of Student Academic Integrity. This Code forbids cheating, fabrication, or falsification of information, multiple submission of academic work, plagiarism, abuse of academic materials (such as Library books on reserve), and complicity in academic dishonesty (helping others to violate the Code). Any further specific requirements or permission regarding academic integrity in this course will be stated by the instructor, and are also binding on the students in this course. Students who violate the Code can be punished to the extent of being permanently expelled from UNC Charlotte and having this fact recorded on their official transcripts. The normal penalty is zero credit on the work involving dishonesty and further substantial reduction of the course grade. In almost all cases, the course grade is reduced to "F." If you do not have a copy of the Code, you can view it on UNC Charlotte’s Academic Integrity Web site at http://integrity.uncc.edu/. Standards of academic integrity will be enforced in this course. Students are expected to report cases of academic dishonesty they become aware of to the course instructor who is responsible for dealing with them.

 

If you try to pass off any work in full or part as your own without proper credit being given to the original source—you will receive an ‘F’ in this course.

 

You will also receive an ‘F’ in the course for other academic integrity violations. Do not expect another warning—this is it. Please see me if you need further clarification regarding cheating, fabrication or falsification of information, multiple submission of academic work, plagiarism, or complicity in academic dishonesty. Again, so there’s no confusion, you will most likely fail the course if you violate any part of the academic integrity code.

 

A Note to Students from UNC Charlotte's English Department, Statement on Diversity (April 2009)

 

The English Department strives to create an academic climate that respects people of varied cultural backgrounds and life experiences. As a community of scholars and teachers who study language, literature, and writing, we are committed to nurturing intellectual and aesthetic diversity. In all our activities, we invite participation by diverse groups, including, but not limited to, those who define themselves in the following terms: race and ethnicity; gender; political orientation; sexual orientation; special health needs; age; religion; country of origin; and socio-economic status. Finally, by fostering multiple perspectives in our coursework, we can help our students prepare to participate in our increasingly diverse society, as well as in the global community.

 

The Department of English is committed to the centrality of writing in our curriculum.

 

Disabilities Modification Statement

 

Students who have a condition that may impair their ability to complete assignments or otherwise satisfy course criteria are encouraged to meet with the instructor to identify, discuss, and document any feasible instructional modifications or accommodations. Please inform the instructor about circumstances no later than the second week of the semester or as soon as possible after a disability or condition is diagnosed, whichever occurs earliest. For information and auxiliary assistance, contact the Disabilities Resource Center.

 

Statement of Academic Freedom

 

I strongly encourage students to use class as a place for free inquiry and intellectual growth. Although we as a class will not always agree or be comfortable with the views of others, every student has the right to his or her own tastes and convictions. As students engaged in college-level intellectual endeavors, however, it is your responsibility to recognize your own biases that contribute to your construction of reality. I want to have us scrutinize our assumptions by developing critical faculties for reflection. I promise to be fair and always support your right to look at the world from your own position, but I encourage all students to branch out and consider multiple perspectives. I will not tolerate any harassment or abuse (emotional or physical) or any instance where others adversely affect students’ learning.

 

Air Conditioning Issue

 

Fretwell has an A/C problem. Occasionally this building gets closed and classes are canceled because it is too brutally hot to remain inside. If the A/C “issue” (or other climate related control system) cancels class, continue to keep up with the class web page, readings, and assignments. The library has lots of space and many computers. We’ll pick up where we left off on the syllabus when we return to class. This also goes for inclement weather.

 

Right to Make Changes

 

I reserve the right to make changes to the syllabus when necessary to meet learning objectives, to compensate for missed classes, or to make our lives easier.

 

Schedule for Readings and Assignments

(have readings and assignments done before class)

 

August 25

Introduction to the course

 

September 1*

Document Design Ch. 1 & 2

 

*September 1st: Big day for the semester:

§  Last day to register.  If you’re not registered, you will not be allowed to continue in the course.

§  Deadline to apply for December 2010 graduation.

 

September 8

The Non-Designer’s Design Book Ch. 1, 2, & 8 (pp. 109-130 at least, but try for the whole enchilada…umm, I like enchiladas, but I like burritos more)

 

September 15

Document #1 DUE: Business Card and Letterhead

Document Design Ch. 3

The Non-Designer’s Design Book Ch. 3

 

September 22

Midterm Exam (30 min)

 

September 29

Document Design Ch. 4
The Non-Designer’s Design Book Ch. 4

 

October 6

Document #2 DUE

Document Design Ch. 5

The Non-Designer’s Design Book Ch. 5

 

Fall Break October 11 – 12

 

October 13

 No Class—Watson Conference

 

October 20*

Document Design Ch. 6

 

*November 1st: Last day to withdraw from a course with a "W" grade (and retain other courses)

 

October 27

Document #3 DUE

The Non-Designer’s Design Book Ch. 9, 10, 11

 

November 3

Document Design Ch. 7

 

November 10

Document #4 DUE

Document Design Ch. 8
The Non-Designer’s Design Book Ch. 7

 

November 17*

5182 Projects DUE

Document Design Ch. 9

 

*November 22nd: Deadline to withdraw from all courses with "W" grade.

 

November 24-27: No Class Thanksgiving Break

 

December 1

Presentation discussion

5182 Project Presentations

 

December 8

Presentations (4182 & 5182)

Web sites Finished
Portfolios Due

 

December 15
6:30 – 9:30 pm

Final Exam

Because no one has a conflict, we'll meet at this time, which is different from the registrar's schedule: http://registrar.uncc.edu/calendars/1080_printable_exam.pdf

 

Commencement December 18th. I'll see you there.