Course Lecturer Names: |
Kasey Larson & Deborah Weinheimer |
Course Director Name: |
Deborah Weinheimer |
Contact Information:
- Deborah Weinheimer
E-mail: dweinhei@sgu.edu: Virtual appointments: https://dweinheimer.youcanbook.me; Office: DES, 3rd floor; Phone: 444-4175 (ext. 3161) - Kasey Larson
E-mail: klarson@sgu.edu; Virtual appointments: https://kasey-larson.youcanbook.me; Office: DES, 3rd floor; Phone: 444-4175 (ext. 3372)
Office Hours: All faculty appointments must be made using YouCanBookMe. Use the links above to set up individual appointments with the faculty. If the available appointment times listed on youcanbook.me conflict with your schedule, contact the faculty through e-mail to request an alternate time.
Course Support: Instructors will host scheduled appointments and respond to e-mails during Grenadian working hours (weekdays from 08:00 – 17:00 –4 GMT). Please feel free to email the faculty at any time but note that the faculty may not be able to respond outside of working hours. While occasional responses outside of working hours will occur, this should not be expected as the norm.
The faculty will generally respond to email within 24 working hours. If you do not hear from them within 24 working hours, feel free to follow up.
Course Description:
“Foundations for Communication” (FC) is a skills-based course intended to provide communication skills necessary for success in academic pursuits at SGU. In this course, students will develop and practice the foundational skills necessary for communication in academic and scientific contexts. These skills include the development of specific language skills (reading, writing, listening, and speaking) as well as general communication skills, critical thinking, and cultural awareness. Overall, students will gain confidence in their ability to communicate effectively through the language and culture of medicine.
The course carries 10 credits and meets for a total of 500 minutes per week over the 16-week term, following the calendar of St. George’s University School of Arts and Sciences. The course is composed of interactive, face-to-face classes and asynchronous, self-directed learning classes/assignments.
Course Objectives:
This course will guide student in exploring three themed sections that focus on specific skill sets: reading/writing, speaking/listening, and self-directed learning. Each themed section has separate assignments that work together to allow students to develop and apply language, skills, and strategies within a meaningful context. Active participation in all course activities will facilitate students’ achievement of the following student learning outcomes:
Student Learning Outcomes:
- Utilize university services to improve student experiences.
- Demonstrate cultural and professional competencies in interactions of various contexts.
- Apply academic literacy and technological skills to complete course tasks and assignments.
- Develop a growth mindset through reflective practices.
- Apply paraphrasing and summarizing skills orally and in writing.
- Construct themed paragraphs by synthesizing information from various sources.
- Use formal and informal language that is appropriate for the situation. 8. Critically appraise sources for use in academic settings.
- Distill information from sources to draw connections and conclusions.
- Evaluate your own and others’ oral and written communication.
- Modify performance and assignments using your own and others' feedback.
- Develop a stance that shows comparison, causation, or persuasion orally and in writing.
EMP Program Goals Met by This Course:
- To prepare students for the medical and academic language and skills necessary to be successful at SGU and in clinical settings
- To extend understanding and skills for sociocultural communications in academic and medical contexts
- To engage in the application of critical thinking and analysis
- To develop and integrate skills for reading, writing, speaking and listening in an academic and medical context.
Course Materials:
Text: There is no required textbook for this course. All course materials, including lecture videos, slides, assignment descriptions, and additional readings, will be posted in MyCourses. You will be required to utilize OneDrive and Microsoft Word through your @sgu.edu e-mail for class assignments.
Course Management tool: To learn to use Sakai, the MyCourse management tool, access the link: https://apps.sgu.edu/members.nsf/mycoursesintro.pdf
SAS Grading Scale: Grades will be assigned as follows:
A = 89.5% or better
B+ = 84.5 - 89.4%
B = 79.5 - 84.4%
C+ = 74.5 - 79.4%
C = 69.5 - 74.4%
D = 64.5 - 69.4%
F = 64.4% or less
Course Grading Requirement:
Students must meet the minimum academic standards for the preclinical program and maintain the minimum WMPG. Additionally, students must earn a minimum of 69.5% in each EMP English course.
Grade Distribution
Graded Components |
Percentage of Total Grade |
Attendance & Professionalism |
10% |
Self-directed Learning |
20% |
Reading & Writing |
35% |
Speaking & Listening |
35% |
Total |
100% |
Course Requirements:
Attendance and Professionalism (10%)
Attendance and professionalism are essential in FC and will be worth 10% of the overall course grade. Student will be marked absent when arriving 10+ minutes late. Four points will be allotted for every class based on the following rubric:
|
0 |
1 |
2 |
Attendance |
Student is absent without previously alerting instructors OR joins more than 10 minutes late. |
Student joined session after class start time but within 10 minutes OR left within 10 minutes of class. |
Student is on time and prepared for synchronous sessions when class begins. |
Professionalism |
Student is disruptive or unresponsive in a way that material is not processed. |
Student is occasionally disruptive or unresponsive in communication and/or assignment submissions. |
Student is professional in communications, is prepared for class, and submits assignments on time. |
If you anticipate that you will be unable to meet the attendance or professionalism requirements, or if an unanticipated circumstance prevents you from meeting the requirements, you must notify your course instructors before the next class/deadline to be excused.
Self-directed Learning 20%
Being a self-sufficient learner contributes to student success in academic settings. To encourage more self-sufficiency, a portion of FC is fully self-directed. This means that you will be provided with guidelines and goals that you are expected to meet on your own before the assigned deadlines. Specific instructions and deadlines for completing the following goals will be posted in MyCourses:
- Learning Strategist (LS) Session 1, 2, 3, & 4
- Peer Learning Group (PLG)1 & 2
- Tech & Typing Session
- Psychological Services Center (PSC) Appointment
- MAC Module (block 2)
Reading & Writing 35%
Students will participate in various written assignments and drafts, peer-review, reading activities, and reflections to assess students’ ability to provide and address feedback, engage with scientific articles, and meet course learning outcomes. The guidelines for each reading/writing assignment and their rubrics will be posted in MyCourses:
Professional E-mail
Reading Strategy Reflection
Summary Assignment
Synthesis Assignment
Argumentative Group Essay
Speaking & Listening 35%
Students will demonstrate their ability to meet the course learning outcomes by engaging in discussions, role plays, reflections, presentations, and debates with classmates and instructors. Students are expected to apply feedback and build on skills learned in previous assignments as the course progresses. These assignments will be evaluated using separate guidelines and rubrics found in MyCourses:
- Professional Role Play
- Team Building Challenge
- Reflection Summary Presentation
- Impromptu Speech Assignment
- Debate
Course Schedule*
S = Synchronous class; A = Asynchronous class; R = Reading; W = Writing; Sp = Speaking; L = Listening
Wk |
Dates |
Class Topic |
Homework Assigned |
Homework Due** |
1 |
Jan 17 S |
Introduction, course expectations, syllabus review |
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Jan 18 S |
R/W: Academic professionalism in Reading and Writing Introduction for (pre-)med school and beyond. |
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Jan 19 S |
Sp/L: Formal vs. informal interactions (demeanor, language, interactions. Introduce role play and challenge assignment) |
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Jan 20 S |
R/W: Reading diagnostic & reading strategies |
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Jan 21 S |
University services and self-directed learning expectations (Gillian Francis PLG/SL & LStrat) |
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2 |
Jan 24 S |
Sp/L: Listening for main ideas +group interaction strategies |
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Jan 25 S |
R/W: Professional Emails |
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Jan 26 S |
Sp/L: Professional interaction role play |
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Professional role play |
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Jan 27 S |
R/W: Professional Emails continued |
Professional Email Assessment |
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Jan 28 A |
Self-directed learning |
Book a LS appt to discuss note-taking (session 2) |
LS Session 1: submit schedule |
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3 |
Jan 31 S |
Sp/L: Team building challenge + reflection (how did the group work go, specific examples, group discussion to reflect using interaction strategies) |
Team building reflection notes |
Team building challenge |
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Feb 1 S |
R/W: Reading & Writing for Main Ideas Intro |
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Professional Email Assessment |
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Feb 2 S |
Sp/L: verbal summary + presentation skills |
Reflection summary presentation |
Team building reflection notes |
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Feb 3 S |
R/W: Summarizing 1 |
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Feb 4 A |
Self-directed learning |
Typing Session |
PLG 1: submit reflection
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4 |
Feb 7-11 |
PCLN Exams – No class |
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5 |
Feb 14 S |
Sp/L: Reflection summary presentations |
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Reflection summary presentation |
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Feb 15 S |
R/W: Summarizing 2 |
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Feb 16 S |
Sp/L: Summary presentation follow-up (discussion about themes within groups) |
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Feb 17 S |
R/W: Summary Assignment Workshop Day |
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Summary Check-in |
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Feb 18 A |
Self-directed learning |
Book LS to discuss topic of choice (session 3) |
LS Session 2: submit lecture notes |
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6 |
Feb 21 S |
Sp/L: PSC Guest Speaker (cultural differences and holding space for others) |
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Feb 22 S |
R/W: Reading & Writing for Specific Details Intro |
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Feb 23 S |
Sp/L: Introduction to impromptu speech assignment (what is improv + brief practice) |
Impromptu speech assignment |
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Feb 24 S |
R/W: Paraphrasing & Summary Review |
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Summary Assignment Draft 1 |
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Feb 25 A |
Self-directed learning |
Review PSC guest lecture session |
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7 |
Feb 28 S |
Sp/L: Inference (drawing conclusions and reading between the lines) |
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Mar 1 S |
R/W: Synthesis 1 |
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Reading Strategy Reflection Part 1 |
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Mar 2 S |
Sp/L: Improvisation activities |
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Mar 3 S |
R/W: Synthesis 2 |
Summary Assignment Final
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Mar 4 A |
Self-directed learning |
Choose one MAC session (block 2) to complete during weeks 10-15 |
Typing/Tech session due |
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8 |
Mar 7-11 |
Midterm Exams – No class |
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Summary assignment final due Mar 11 by 11:55 PM |
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9 |
Mar 14 S |
Sp/L: Note-taking (practice listening and noting inferences and main points) |
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Mar 15 S |
R/W: Synthesis 3 |
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Mar 16 S |
Sp/L: Impromptu speech practice |
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Mar 17 S |
R/W: Synthesis Writing Workshop Day |
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Synthesis Check-in |
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Mar 18 A |
Self-directed learning |
Book PLG 2 (different class) |
LS: submit session 3 reflection |
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10 |
Mar 21 S |
Sp/L: Compare and contrast impromptu speech day |
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Impromptu speech assignment due |
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Mar 22 S |
R/W: Introduction to Argumentation |
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Synthesis Assessment Draft 1 |
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Mar 23 S |
Sp/L: Impromptu speech follow-up discussion |
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Mar 24 S |
R/W: Finding Sources and Assessing Credibility |
Sources for Essay Assignment |
Reading Strategy Reflection Part 2 |
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Mar 25 A |
Self-directed learning |
Book LS to discuss topic of choice (session 4) |
PSC: Submit reflection |
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11 |
Mar 28 S |
Sp/L: Introduction to debate assignment (choose topic) |
Debate assignment |
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Mar 29 S |
R/W: General Essay Format & Introductions |
Synthesis Assessment Final |
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Mar 30 S |
Sp/L: Verbal arguments (ethos, pathos, logos) |
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Mar 31 S |
R/W: The MEAL Plan |
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Sources for Essay Assignment |
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Apr 1 A |
Self-directed learning |
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PLG 2: Submit reflection |
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12 |
Apr 4-8 |
PCLN Exams – No class |
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Synthesis assessment final due Apr 8 by 11:55 PM |
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13 |
Apr 11 S |
Sp/L: Politely disagreeing (rebuttals) |
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Apr 12 S |
R/W: Analysis & Counterarguments |
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Apr 13 S |
Sp/L: Intro to debate (structure, rebuttals vs. refutation) |
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Apr 14 S |
R/W: More on Analysis and Conclusions |
Argumentative Essay Check-in - Outline |
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Argumentative Group Essay Draft 1 |
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Apr 15 |
Good Friday – No class |
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14 |
Apr 18 |
Holy Monday – No class |
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Apr 19 S |
R/W: Inferencing & Argumentative Essay Workshop Day |
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Argumentative Essay Check-in – Outline |
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Apr 20 S |
Sp/L: Debate Skills (note-taking, tone & bias) |
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Apr 21 S |
R/W: Argumentative Essay Workshop Day
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Apr 22 A |
Self-directed learning |
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LS: submit session 4 reflection |
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15 |
Apr 25 S |
R/W/Sp/L: Workshop - Debate and Persuasion Assignments |
Argumentative Group Essay Final |
Argumentative Group Essay Draft 1 |
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Apr 26 S |
Sp/L: Debate |
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Debate Group 1 Outline & Peer Evaluation |
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Apr 27 S |
Sp/L: Debate |
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Debate Group 2 Outline & Peer Evaluation |
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Apr 28 S |
R/W/Sp/L: Course Wrap-up |
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Reading Strategy Reflection Part 3 |
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Apr 29 A |
Self-directed learning |
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MAC session passed (all sessions and assignments completed) |
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16 |
May 2-6 |
Final Exams – No class |
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Argumentative group essay final due May 4 by 11:55 PM |
* Schedule may change throughout the term. All changes will be announced in class and updated on the syllabus.
** Homework is due 5 minutes before the start of class time on the day it is due, unless otherwise stated.
School of Arts and Sciences Master Syllabi — Info for All Sections
Academic Integrity
The St. George’s University Student Manual (2019/2020) states as follows:
“Plagiarism is regarded as a cardinal offense in academia because it constitutes theft of the work of someone else, which is then purported as the original work of the plagiarist. Plagiarism draws into disrepute the credibility of the Institution, its faculty, and students; therefore, it is not tolerated” (p. 48).
Plagiarism also includes the unintentional copying or false accreditation of work, so double check your assignments BEFORE you hand them in.
Be sure to do good, honest work, credit your sources and reference accordingly and adhere to the University’s Honor Code. Plagiarism and cheating will be dealt with very seriously following the university’s policies on Plagiarism as outlined in the Student Manual.
Your work may be subject to submission to plagiarism detection software, submission to this system means that your work automatically becomes part of that database and can be compared with the work of your classmates.
The St. George’s University Student Manual (2019/2020) states as follows:
“Students are expected to attend all classes and or clinical rotations for which they have registered. Although attendance may not be recorded at every academic activity, attendance may be taken randomly. Students’ absence may adversely affect their academic status as specified in the grading policy. If absence from individual classes, examinations, and activities, or from the University itself is anticipated, or occurs spontaneously due to illness or other extenuating circumstances, proper notification procedures must be followed. A particular course may define additional policies regarding specific attendance or participation” (p. 9).
The St. George’s University Student Manual (2019/2020) states as follows:
“All matriculated students are expected to attend all assigned academic activities for each course currently registered. Medical excuses will be based on self-reporting by students. Students who feel they are too sick to take an examination or other required activity on a specific day must submit the online SAS medical excuse, which is available on Carenage. Students are only allowed two such excuses a year. Upon consultation with the Director of University Health Service, the third excuse will result in a mandatory medical leave of absence. The policies regarding make-up examinations are at the option of the Course Director” (p.46).
For additional specific examination policies and procedures, refer to the St. George’s University Student Manual (2019/2020), pages 31 through 37.
The St. George’s University Student Manual (2019/2020) states as follows:
“A student with a disability or disabling condition that affects one or more major life activities, who would like to request an accommodation, must submit a completed application form and supporting documentation to the Student Accessibility and Accommodation Services (SAAS) located in the Dean of Students Office. It is highly recommended that students applying for accommodations do so at least one month before classes begin to allow for a more efficient and timely consideration of the request. If a fully completed application is not submitted in a timely fashion, an eligibility determination may not be made, and accommodations, where applicable, may not be granted prior to the commencement of classes and/or examinations” (p. 8).
It is the responsibility of the student to read and understand the policies, laws, rules and procedures that while they could affect your grade for a course, have not been specifically outlined in the course syllabus. These are contained in the St. George’s University Student Manual.