WR 120
WR 120 will help you cultivate skills and habits of mind essential to your academic success and to your future personal, professional, and civic life. Writing is a way not only to express what you have to say but also to discover and evaluate it. You will write a great deal at BU and beyond, and each occasion will present you with a range of questions: Who is my audience, and what kind of writing does the occasion call for? How should I structure my writing to engage, inform, persuade, and perhaps even entertain my audience? How can I judge sources wisely and use them effectively and responsibly? How can I clearly express my ideas? In this class we will review general principles about how to address such questions, and we will put those principles into practice as we read, talk, and write about our topic.
WR 120 carries one Hub unit, as a First-Year Writing Seminar.
New to teaching WR 120? Start here.
Learning Outcomes
- read a range of genres with understanding, appreciation, and critical judgment
- express yourself orally and converse thoughtfully about complex ideas
- craft responsible, considered, and well-structured written arguments
- produce clear, coherent prose in a range of genres and styles, using different media and modes of expression as appropriate
- plan, draft, and revise efficiently and effectively, and help your peers do the same by responding productively to their work
- reflect on your own reading, writing, and editing practices
Pedagogical Approach
In WR 120 you will craft a series of writing assignments in multiple genres, entering into an intellectual conversation on the topic of the course. You will learn about the process of writing, from understanding and analyzing sources to organizing your ideas, responding effectively and responsibly to the ideas of others, and revising your writing for clarity and impact. You will participate in workshops and other activities designed to help you make informed rhetorical choices and communicate with an awareness of your audience.
Course Requirements
WR 120 ELL
Resources for Teaching
Essential Lessons
- Generating and Structuring an Argument through Acknowledgment and Response
- Sentences Tell Stories: A Principle of Clarity
- Standard Rhetorical Moves of Introductions
- Summary & Analysis
Major Assignments
- Assignment Sequence: WR 120
- Cumulative Portfolios in the Writing Program
- Sample WR 120 Assignment: Op-ed
- Sample WR 120 Assignment: Rewriting a Fairy Tale
- Sample WR 120/15x Assignment: Academic Paper on an Outside-of-Class Experience
Exercises & Handouts
- Advice to Students on Preparing for Oral Presentations
- Clarity Races
- Class Participation Rubric
- Close Reading Exercise
- Crafting a Template for Your Observation Notes
- Creating an Oral Presentation Rubric
- Decoding a Public Genre
- Developing Key Terms
- Dork Short Oral Presentations
- Formulating Questions and Claims Based on Observations
- Inner Critic
- Paragraph/Essay Reconstruction
- Picture Prompts for Online Classes
- Pre-Reflection for Outside-the-Classroom Experiences
- Remote Learning Expectations & Etiquette
- Strategies for Engaging with Critics
- Using Different Kinds of Sources to Analyze an Exhibit
- Visual Representation of Texts
- Write the Title First
Flipped Learning Modules
- Academic Integrity (Part 1): Avoiding Plagiarism
- Academic Integrity (Part 2): Quoting, Paraphrasing, Summarizing
- Acknowledgment and Response
- Claims
- Creating and Presenting Posters
- Creating Reader-based Prose
- Debates
- Effective Visual Presentations
- Facilitating Discussions
- Integrating Ideas from They Say/I Say into your Writing
- Integrating the Writing Center into the Writing Program
- Metacognition
- Oral Presentations
- Oral Presentations for Multilingual Students (ELL)
- Place-based Learning
- Pronunciation Priorities for Multilingual Students (ELL)
- Sentence Clarity: Characters and Actions
- Sentence Structure
- Strategies for Analysis of Text
- Style: The Secret to Becoming a Successful Writer
- Summarizing
- Writing Arguments Part 1
- Writing Arguments Part 2
Guides & Tips
- Accessible Approaches to the Writing Classroom
- Anatomy of an Assignment Sheet
- Building Your Syllabus (Syllabi Templates)
- Equity in Writing Assessment: Alternative Grading Approaches
- Faculty Guide to Teaching WR 120 and WR 15x
- Leveling the Playing Field for Class Participation
- Notes for Inclusive Syllabi: Diversity and Land Acknowledgment Statements
- Outdoor Class Meetings and Activities
- Place-Based Possibilities: Experiential Learning Ideas for WR Courses
- Planning Peer-to-Peer Work: Groups, Peer Review, & Workshops
- Responding to Multilingual Students’ Writing
- Strategies for “Challenging” Conferences and Tutoring Appointments
- Strategies for Conferences and Tutoring Appointments with English Language Learners
- Student Presentations and Strategies for Audience Engagement
- Syllabus Checklist
- Teaching the Hidden Curriculum
- Teaching with the WR Journal: Volume 10 (2018)
- Writing Program Shared Vocabulary