Central Texas College

Course Proposal for the Core Curriculum

School: Central Texas College

Department: Communications

Date Submitted/Revised: 12/8/2014

Academic Course Guide Manual (ACGM)Course Information

Course Prefix/Number: Engl 1301

CIP Code:

Course Title:

Course Description:

Prerequisites:

Please select the THECB Foundational Component Area for which this course is being submitted. (Please select only one)

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☒Communication

☐Mathematics

☐Life & Physical Sciences

☐Language, Philosophy & Culture

☐Creative Arts

☐American History

☐Government / Political Science

☐Social & Behavioral Sciences

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☐Component Area Option - # of SCH requested:

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☐This course is currently a part of CTC’s current Core Curriculum.

☐This course is a new proposal or course revision for the Core Curriculum.

Signatures:

Course Proposal Initiator: ______Date: ______

Department Chair: ______Date: ______

FOR OFFICE USE ONLY

Core Curriculum Committee Approval: ______

Curriculum Review Committee Approval: ______

THECB Approval Date: ______

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Foundational Option Course Form

Course Prefix/Number: Engl 1301

Foundational Component Area Option:

Content: (Content can be found in THECB Chapter 4:4.28. This information is also included at the bottom of this document)

  • Courses involve the command of oral, aural, written, and visual literacy skills that enable people to exchange messages appropriate to the subject, occasion, and audience.
  • Students practice developing ideas and expressing them clearly, considering the effect of the message, fostering understanding, and building the skills needed to communicate persuasively.

Rationale: Provide a rationale for the course; which explains how the course being proposed fits into this component based on the component’s description. Please provide the overall description and rationale for this component.

Rationale:

ENGL 1301 is an indispensable course in the core curriculum. Students’ success in college depends largely on how well they can read, grasp, react, and recall complicated texts in any discipline and on how effectively they can communicate that knowledge in writing. Thus, Composition I prepares freshman undergraduates for their college-level reading and writing assignments. Second, both in college and at the work place, students are expected to write in different formats for a wide range of audiences and for a variety of purposes. Hence, this writing course helps learners become more flexible writers who are attentive to the particular needs of all their readers by studying literary works that are intellectually challenging. Third, this freshman class develops the critical thinking skills required of every major to identify problems, explore new ideas, discover fresh solutions, and communicate those discoveries to others. Last, this course becomes one of the most rewarding college experiences to first-year students since, upon its completion, they will have learned to express themselves more clearly, confidently, and persuasively in speaking and writing scenarios.

STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOME ALIGNMENT FORM

At minimum, two Core Objectives must be addressed in each course approved to fulfill this component area requirement:

  • Critical Thinking Skills: to include creative thinking, innovation, inquiry, and analysis, evaluation and synthesis of information.
  • Communication Skills: to include effective development, interpretation and expression of ideas through written, oral and visual communication.

(Please refer to THECB Chapter 4:4.28 for the other Core Objectives that must be addressed to fulfill the component requirements.This information is also included at the bottom of this document)

Core Objective:
Fill in the ones you used on page one / SAMPLE College SLO
This column will be deleted / Course SLO
from the syllabus / General Learning Activities / Assessment
Must Include Assignment & method of analysis
Critical Thinking Skills / e.g.: Generate & communicate ideas by combining, changing, or reapplying existing information
Communication Skills
Teamwork
Personal Responsibility
  • AddCTC Course Syllabus Sections I & II reflecting the new core objectives

THECB Chapter 4: 4.28 can befound by following the link:

Content

  • Communication
  • Courses in this category focus on developing ideas and expressing them clearly, considering the effect of the message, fostering understanding, and building the skills needed to communicate persuasively.
  • Courses involve the command of oral, aural, written, and visual literacy skills that enable people to exchange messages appropriate to the subject, occasion, and audience.
  • Mathematics
  • Courses in this category focus on quantitative literacy in logic, patterns, and relationships.
  • Courses involve the understanding of key mathematical concepts and the application of appropriate quantitative tools to everyday experience.
  • Life and Physical Sciences
  • Courses in this category focus on describing, explaining, and predicting natural phenomena using the scientific method.
  • Courses involve the understanding of interactions among natural phenomena and the implications of scientific principles on the physical world and on human experiences.
  • Language, Philosophy, and Culture
  • Courses in this category focus on how ideas, values, beliefs, and other aspects of culture express and affect human experience.
  • Courses involve the exploration of ideas that foster aesthetic and intellectual creation in order to understand the human condition across cultures.
  • Creative Arts
  • Courses in this category focus on the appreciation and analysis of creative artifacts and works of the human imagination.
  • Courses involve the synthesis and interpretation of artistic expression and enable critical, creative, and innovative communication about works of art.
  • American History
  • Courses in this category focus on the consideration of past events and ideas relative to the United States, with the option of including Texas History for a portion of this component area.
  • Courses involve the interaction among individuals, communities, states, the nation, and the world, considering how these interactions have contributed to the development of the United States and its global role.
  • Government/Political Science
  • Courses in this category focus on consideration of the Constitution of the United States and the constitutions of the states, with special emphasis on that of Texas.
  • Courses involve the analysis of governmental institutions, political behavior, civic engagement, and their political and philosophical foundations.
  • Social and Behavioral Sciences
  • Courses in this category focus on the application of empirical and scientific methods that contribute to the understanding of what makes us human.
  • Courses involve the exploration of behavior and interactions among individuals, groups, institutions, and events, examining their impact on the individual, society, and culture.
  • Component Area Option
  • Except as provided in subparagraph (B) of this paragraph, each course designated to complete the Component Area Option must meet the definition and Core Objectives specified in one of the foundational component areas outlined in paragraph (3)(A) - (H) of this subsection.
  • As an option for up to three (3) semester credit hours of the Component Area Option, an institution may certify that the course(s) meet(s) the definition specified for one or more of the foundational component areas.

Core Objectives for each Component Area

  • Communication
  • The following four Core Objectives must be addressed in each course approved to fulfill this category requirement: Critical Thinking Skills, Communication Skills, Teamwork, and Personal Responsibility.
  • Mathematics
  • The following three Core Objectives must be addressed in each course approved to fulfill this category requirement: Critical Thinking Skills, Communication Skills, and Empirical and Quantitative Skills.
  • Life and Physical Sciences
  • The following four Core Objectives must be addressed in each course approved to fulfill this category requirement: Critical Thinking Skills, Communication Skills, Empirical and Quantitative Skills, and Teamwork.
  • Language, Philosophy, and Culture
  • The following four Core Objectives must be addressed in each course approved to fulfill this category requirement: Critical Thinking Skills, Communication Skills, Personal Responsibility, and Social Responsibility.
  • Creative Arts
  • The following four Core Objectives must be addressed in each course approved to fulfill this category requirement: Critical Thinking Skills, Communication Skills, Teamwork, and Social Responsibility.
  • American History
  • The following four Core Objectives must be addressed in each course approved to fulfill this category requirement: Critical Thinking Skills, Communication Skills, Personal Responsibility, and Social Responsibility.
  • Government/Political Science
  • The following four Core Objectives must be addressed in each course approved to fulfill this category requirement: Critical Thinking Skills, Communication Skills, Personal Responsibility, and Social Responsibility.
  • Social and Behavioral Sciences
  • The following four Core Objectives must be addressed in each course approved to fulfill this category requirement: Critical Thinking Skills, Communication Skills, Empirical and Quantitative Skills, and Social Responsibility.
  • Component Area Option
  • Include(s) a minimum of three Core Objectives, including Critical Thinking Skills, Communication Skills, and one of the remaining Core Objectives of the institution's choice.

Core Objectives: Through the Texas Core Curriculum, students will prepare for contemporary challenges by developing and demonstrating the following core objectives:

  • Critical Thinking Skills: to include creative thinking, innovation, inquiry, and analysis, evaluation and synthesis of information
  • Communication Skills: to include effective development, interpretation and expression of ideas through written, oral and visual communication
  • Empirical and Quantitative Skills: to include the manipulation and analysis of numerical data or observable facts resulting in informed conclusions
  • Teamwork: to include the ability to consider different points of view and to work effectively with others to support a shared purpose or goal
  • Personal Responsibility: to include the ability to connect choices, actions and consequences to ethical decision-making
  • Social Responsibility: to include intercultural competence, knowledge of civic responsibility, and the ability to engage effectively in regional, national, and global communities.

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