Introduction & Course Outcomes

Introduction Course Outcomes

Introduction

This Open Resource Curriculum (OER) was originally designed for the students attending Lake Washington Institute of Technology (LWTech) in Kirkland, Washington. The college serves an estimated 6,500 students with increasing enrollment rates each year since 2020.

This curriculum was first used in an accelerated English (ENGL) course within general education and the Integrated Basic Education Skills and Training (I-BEST) program. In an accelerated course under I-BEST, two professors are ideal for the classroom dynamic, so my colleague and I teach the class together.

My name is Jessica Dunker, and I am the author of this Pressbook. I teach ELL in our High School Programs and Basic Education for Adults program. I am the Adjunct Professor for I-BEST in this accelerated English course. I have my degrees in Teaching Education, M.A. and English, B.A. and strive to practice EDI and DSJ outcomes in my life, work, and writing. I recently published my first novel, titled, The Walls Between Us.

My colleague is Paul Redman, and he teaches in the English Department. He has an M.A. in English (TESOL) and a B.A. in English. His classes are included in the DSJ curriculum at LWTech. He has lived overseas for several years and lived in numerous states across the U.S.

We have contextualized the reading, writing and classroom activities for this course around topics related to diversity and ethnic studies. This Pressbook is a reflection of the work our students have made in writing as well as gaining a better understanding of themselves and each other.

 


course outcomes

This ethnic studies reading set is required for the class for all students. The resources listed within this text ranges from newspaper and magazine articles, which are relatively short, and longer, data-based academic resources. Students are required to complete a “read and response” assignment every week for 10 percent of the overall grade.

The resources they read within this text set is encouraged to be cited in the 3 essays due throughout the quarter. The 3 essays focus on: identity, culture, and power dynamics. Additional resources are listed at the end for further pursuit of knowledge.

In this accelerated English course, the courses uses combined outcomes of Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (EDI) and Diversity & Social Justice (DSJ) with the outcomes for the college’s General Education English.

Equity:  “…students of different socio-economic status, gender or immigrant and family background achieve … similar levels of social and emotional well-being in areas such as life satisfaction, self-confidence and social integration” (Levinson & Geron, et al.)[1]

Diversity:  “the practice or quality of including or involving people from a range of different social and ethnic backgrounds and of different genders, sexual orientations, etc.” (Oxford Language Dictionary, 2024)

Inclusion:  “the practice or policy of providing equal access to opportunities and resources for people who might otherwise be excluded or marginalized, such as those who have physical or intellectual disabilities and members of other minority groups” (Oxford Language Dictionary, 2024)

Social Justice:  “justice in terms of the distribution of wealth, opportunities, and privileges within a society” (Oxford Language Dictionary, 2024)


English 93: Beginning English Course Description

Instruction in basic sentence grammar and the essentials of writing sentences and paragraphs; an introduction to essays. Review of study skills necessary for college success also provided.
Prerequisites: ELL 50 or ABED 46 (or placement into ENGL 93)
Course OutcomesUpon successful completion of this course students will be able to:
  • Write structured, cohesive paragraphs and essays that make use of supporting examples and basic analysis as appropriate to the writer’s purpose
  • Use various reading strategies to develop reading comprehension skills and critical reading skills by navigating a variety of texts and responding to them
  • Develop and use a writing process to draft, revise, and edit compositions
  • Demonstrate the ability to write sentences with minimal errors in issues such as grammar, spelling, and punctuation
  • Identify and correct common mechanical errors
College-Wide OutcomesThis course teaches to the global outcome of communication and information literacy.

English 99: Intro to Essay Writing Course Description

This course presents grammar and paragraph review and instruction in writing thesis-driven essays. Students will write a minimum of 3500 words of finished composition during the quarter.
Prerequisites: ELL 65 or ENGL 93 (or placement into ENGL 99)
Course OutcomesUpon successful completion of this course students will be able to:
  • Write well-structured, cohesive paragraphs and thesis-driven essays that effectively make use of properly cited, well-integrated supporting examples and clear analysis to suit audience and purpose
  • Demonstrate analysis and synthesis by reading and responding to a variety of texts
  • Develop and use a writing process to draft, revise, and proofread academic compositions
  • Demonstrate the ability to produce written work that adheres to academic writing conventions related to mechanics, grammar, spelling, punctuation, and documentation
  • Recognize and correctly revise common errors in student writing
  • Apply fundamentals of critical thinking to reading, writing, and communicating
College-Wide OutcomesThis course teaches to the global outcome of communication and information literacy.

English 101: English Composition Course Description

Advanced expository writing, reading and evaluating essays, and critical thinking are covered in this course that fulfills the written communication requirement for an AAS degree. Students will write a minimum of 5000 words of finished composition during the quarter.
Prerequisites: ENGL 99 (or placement into ENGL& 101)

Course OutcomesUpon successful completion of this course students will be able to:

  • Consistently apply the stages of the writing process to create finished compositions
  • Consistently exercise critical thinking skills to analyze and express ideas in writing
  • Analyze and evaluate the structural components of written texts
  • Draft and edit effectively structured essays to suit audience and purpose
  • Employ basic research and library skills to locate and evaluate information
  • Synthesize and cite sources using accepted documentation styles
College-Wide OutcomesThis course teaches to the global outcome of communication and information literacy.

Diversity and Social Justice Learning Outcomes

Communication Outcome

  • Communicate one’s own intersecting identities of difference and how they position oneself in relation to power, privilege, and inequity.

Difference Outcome

  • Describe and demonstrate how cultural differences and commonalities among people are reflected in different time periods, institutions, and social systems.

Power, Privilege and Inequity Outcomes

  • Define and apply key terms and concepts of diversity and social justice.
  • Identify how power, privilege, and inequity are or have been reinforced and challenged at individual, institutional, and systemic levels.

  1. AERA Open January-December 2022, Vol. 8, No. 1, pp. 1 –12 DOI: https://doi.org/ 10.1177/23328584221121344

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Ethnic Studies & Marginalized Communities Copyright © 2024 by Lake Washington Institute of Technology is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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