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ENG 321: Structure of the English Language

Daily assignments

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Students must consult this page before each class to learn the assignment. If you are ever absent, you are expected to view this page and come to the next class prepared.

Daily reading assignment

For each class your reading assignment is to carefully read all of the textbook up to and including the last section covered in the previous class. It is also highly advisable to read a section or two beyond what was covered the previous class. The reading is essential for success in this class.

Daily exercises

For each class your exercise assignment is to do all the exercises in the textbook up to and including the last section covered in the previous class. It is helpful to check your work against the selected answers to exercises posted on the class web site. It is an absolute course requirement for you to do all homework each class without exception.

Your homework will constitute much of the "text" for the course, and the first thing we will do each day is review exercise answers which we will project on the front screen. For each exercise problem, a student will be selected to display her/his homework answer to the class. To aid overhead projection, follow these guidelines for homework:

  • Use only white loose leaf paper (plain or lined).
  • Use only a dark pen or dark #2 pencil.
  • Draw all tree diagrams carefully and legibly.
  • For longer diagrams that take up more than half the page, turn paper sideways (landscape orientation).

Homework exercises are intended as learning experiences, so there are never any penalties for wrong answers. However, missing or shoddy work is never acceptable. If, on any day, you have been unable to complete your homework, you need to notify the isntructor before class; a student who does not have the work when called upon will be required to meet with the instructor to review the student's homework notebook.

If you don't see the assignment for the next class below, refresh your screen (press the F5 key).
Due
                       Assignment
R: Aug. 20 First day of class. Get book and read Chapter 1 prior to the first class. If you do not yet have the book, you can read Chapter 1 online.
T: Aug. 25 Read Chapters 1 and 2. Do all the exercises in Chapter 2. Also do the opening assignment. You can read Chapter 2 online.
R: Aug. 27 Read pp. 20-27 and do Exercises 3.1 and 3.2. It is always a good idea to read ahead in the book as well. You can view Chapter 3 online.
T: Sep. 1 Finish reading Chapter 3 (including the parts we didn't talk about in class) and do all the exercises (including the ones we skipped in class).
R: Sep. 3 Read pp. 36-41 with great care. Do Exercises 4.1, 4.2, and 4.3.
T: Sep. 8 Finish reading all of Chapter 4, and do all the exercises. Also do this exercise.
R: Sep. 9 Read to p. 55. Do Exercises 5.1, 5.2, and 5.3.
T: Sep. 15 Read pp. 55-63. Do all exercises (5.4, 5.5, 5.6).
R: Sep. 17 Read to p. 71 (finish chapter 5). Do exercises 5.7 and 5.8.
T: Sep. 22 Read (carefully) to p. 80. Do exercises 6.1 and 6.2. Use the selected answers to check your homework.
R: Sep. 24 Do these practice sentences. Read to p. 83. Be sure you are reading the book very carefully and with understanding. That is crucial to success on next week's exam. Do exercises 6.3.
T: Sep. 29 A lot of homework, but it's important preparation for the test. (You can skip pp. 84-85, and you can skip Exercises 6.4.) Read pp. 86-89, and do exercises 6.5 (but skip 1i). To prepare for the first exam, also do Exercises 6.8 on p. 97, but skip 1b, 1h,1m, 1n and 1p for now. Do 2a-c.
R: Oct. 1

First exam. To prepare, do exercises 6.6 (1 and 2). Skip pp. 93-95. Do the trees in 6.8 that we skipped (b, h, m, n, p). Take the practice exams.

T: Oct. 6 Fall break. No class.
R: Oct. 8 No assignment.
T: Oct. 13 Read Chapter 7 and do all the exercises.
R: Oct. 15 Read to p. 116. Do exercises 8.1, 8.2, and 8.3.
T: Oct. 20 Reading-response assignment due. Read pp. 117-125. Do exercises 8.4 (including #3), 8.5, and 9.1. You can use the broken-line method for all derivations.
R: Oct. 22 Read to p. 130. Do exercises 9.2-9.4. Finish reading Chapter 9.
T: Oct. 27 Read pp. 131-141. Do exercises 9.5, 9.6 (you can skip #1, but do #2), 10.1, and 10.2. We will start relative clauses, which can be somewhat tricky, so you might want to read ahead.
R: Oct. 29 Read to p. 143. Do exercises 10.3. Read ahead.
T: Nov. 3 Read to p. 152. Do exercises 10.4 (in #3, you will draw trees for 3e and 3f; you can skip the tree for 3g, unless you are up for a challenge). Do exercises 10.5.
R: Nov. 5 Read pp. 152-155. Do exercises 10.6 (#1-3; you can skip #4). You can skip pp. 157-158. Read p. 159 and 160-162. Do exercises 11.1.
T: Nov. 10 Be prepared to spend many hours on this homework. It is essential preparation for the exam. Read to p. 167. Do exercises 11.2 and 11.3. You can skip pp. 167-170. Review for the exam by doing the very important exercises 11.5 (but skip sentences 1i and 1p). Do these on your own, but if you get stuck, consult the answers online.
R: Nov. 12 Second exam.
T: Nov. 17 Read pp. 173-176. Do exercises 12.1.
R: Nov. 19 Finish reading Chapter 12. Do exercises 12.2 and 12.4.
T: Nov. 24 Be certain you have memorized all the data in these tables. Read pp. 184-195. Do exercises 13.2 (#1 and 2), 13.3 (#2), 13.4, 13.5, and 13.6.
R: Nov. 26 Thanksgiving vacation. No class.
T: Dec. 1 Last class.
T: Dec. 8 Final exam begins at 11:30 a.m.