ENGL 1000H: Academic Reading and Writing - Honors

Citrus College Course Outline of Record

Citrus College Course Outline of Record
Heading Value
Effective Term: Fall 2025
Credits: 4
Total Contact Hours: 72
Lecture Hours : 72
Lab Hours: 0
Hours Arranged: 0
Outside of Class Hours: 144
Total Student Learning Hours: 216
Prerequisite: Placement as determined by the college's multiple measures assessment process; student must be eligible for the Citrus College Honors Program or obtain a recommendation from an Honors instructor.
District General Education: A1. English Composition
Transferable to CSU: Yes
Transferable to UC: Yes - Approved
Grading Method: Standard Letter

Catalog Course Description

In this course, students receive instruction in academic reading and writing, including writing processes, effective use of language, analytical thinking, and the foundations of academic research. This is an honors course. Extensive writing practice based upon reading culturally diverse fiction and non-fiction and related critical material. In addition, students are expected to work and participate at an honors level which includes strong critical thinking skills, thorough analysis of fiction and non-fiction texts, demonstration of presentation, and service learning in the community. Formerly ENGL 101H. 72 lecture hours.

Course Objectives

  • Part 1: Objectives/Outcomes (Identical and Required):\\n\\nRead analytically to understand and respond to diverse academic texts.
  • Compose thesis-driven academic writing that demonstrates analysis and synthesis of sources as appropriate to the rhetorical situation.
  • Demonstrate strategies for planning, outlining, drafting, revising, editing, and proofreading written work.
  • Part 2: Objectives/Outcomes:\\n\\nWrite a multiple-paragraph deductive essay in response to a reading with the following components at a minimum level: logic, focus, organization, unity, coherence, and college-level sentence variety
  • Annotate, analyze, and evaluate reading selections through the application of metacognitive reading strategies.
  • Write a research paper demonstrating knowledge of source evaluation, research methods, and documentation.
  • Demonstrate awareness of writing as a process by applying writing strategies for different purposes.

Major Course Content

Part 1: Course Content: Required Topics (Identical):

  1. Read, analyze, and evaluate diverse texts, primarily non-fiction, for rhetorical strategies and styles.
  2. Apply a variety of rhetorical strategies in academic writing, including well-organized essays with effective theses and support.
  3. Develop varied and flexible strategies for generating, drafting, revising, editing, and proofreading formal writing.
  4. Analyze rhetorical choices in students’ own and peers’ writing and effectively provide and incorporate feedback.
  5. Write in various genres and modalities, including low stakes, analytical, argumentative, collaborative, reflective writing, synthesis, literature review, and other forms.
  6. Exhibit acceptable college-level control of mechanics, organization, development, and coherence.
  7. Identify, evaluate, and effectively integrate material from source texts through paraphrasing, summarizing, and quoting using appropriate documentation conventions
  8. Compose a minimum of 5,000 words of formal writing across major assignments.

Course Content: Part 2: Optional Expanded or Additional Topics (optional):

  1. Instruction in Effective Essay Writing, including Exposition, Analysis, and Argument.
  2. A minimum of three 1000-word analytical essays.
    1. Formulating an original, argumentative thesis.
    2. Developing an outline.
    3. Composing a draft.
    4. Revising to improve sentence variety, development, coherence, and unity.
    5. Editing to correct errors in grammar and usage and citation.
    6. Writing the final draft.
  3. One research essay of 2000 to 3500-words following MLA method of documentation, with secondary sources and a formal outline.
    1. Attributes of the Outline:
      1. One topic outline and one full sentence outline.
    2. Research techniques should include the following:
      1. Method for locating credible secondary sources from print and online sources.
      2. Procedure for annotating and evaluating the authenticity and relevancy of secondary sources.
      3. Systematic method for accurately recording research for primary sources, secondary sources, and student analysis.
      4. Technique for paraphrasing an integrating secondary sources into the essay.
    3. Attributes of the research paper:
      1. The paper must assert an original, argumentative thesis.
      2. The paper's minimum length should be 2,000 words, not counting the works cited page.
      3. A minimum of five and a maximum of eight secondary sources should be integrated into the paper.
      4. An effective use of direct quotations should be evident in the essay.
      5. A mixture of direct quotations and paraphrases of secondary sources should be integrated into the essay.
      6. Apply MLA documentation guidelines.
      7. Submission to a plagiarism checking program.
  4. Instruction in Reading for Critical and Analytical Responses.
    1. A variety of narrative fiction (short stories and/or a novel) and non fiction works (essays and/or a book-length text), which lend themselves to critical analysis.

Examples of Required Writing Assignments

Students will be required to complete the following types of writing assignments outside of the regular class time:
Answer discussion questions. Write analytical, critical essays, research paper, and journals.

Examples of Outside Assignments

Students will be required to complete the following types of assignments outside of the regular class time:
Course Content: 1. Essays: Each student will write three formal essays to advance an original thesis asserted by the student. 2. Research Paper: Each student will complete an 8- 10 page analytical research paper. The paper will demonstrate the ability to integrate and analyze primary and secondary sources. 3.Responses to Readings: Students will respond to a topic provided to help the student reflect on the readings. 4. Oral Presentations: Each student will present oral reports throughout the semester. The reports will present relevant information that relates to text and/or topic and will clarify the relevance of the information. The presentations will be based on individual and group projects.

Instruction Type(s)

Lecture, Online Education Lecture

IGETC Area 1: English Communication

1A. English Composition