
The C Requirement Home General Education Requirements in Writing at UCSC The C Requirement
This information is relevant only to students who entered
UCSC before Fall 2005.
The C General Education Requirement was replaced by the C1/C2 General Education Requirement in fall of 2005. For students who first enrolled at UCSC prior to fall 2005, taking and passing "Writing 1: Composition & Rhetoric," satisfied the "C" requirement. As of fall 2005, "Writing 1: Composition & Rhetoric" and "Writing 2: Rhetoric & Inquiry" were cross-listed and taught concurrently as the same course. As of December 2008, Writing 1 was retired as an enrollment option.
Writing 1 is no longer available as an enrollment option. Students who entered UCSC before fall 2005 who are seeking to satisfy the C requirement should request a permission number to enroll in a Writing 2 class during their first-pass enrollment period by sending an e-mail message to writingprogram@ucsc.edu.
Students who wish to attempt to satisfy the C requirement by exam may take the campus Analytical Writing Placement Exam (AWPE), which is offered five times
per year in September, November, January, March, and May. A score of 11 or 12 on the exam will satisfy the C requirement.
Students who do not
satisfy the C requirement by receiving a score of 11
or 12 on the exam may submit the appeals materials listed below
within two weeks after receiving their exam results. Appeals
must be submitted no later than one calendar year after the exam was
taken. Students will be notified of the results of the appeal about three weeks
after they have submitted these materials. Students should plan their appeal far enough in advance of their
intended graduation date to enroll in Writing 2 (formerly Writing 1) should the appeal be denied.
Students may initiate the
appeal by contacting the Writing Program (writingprogram@ucsc.edu)
to arrange for their bluebook to be retrieved from storage, and submitting items #2 and #3 below to the Writing Program Office,
Kresge 166, or by inserting items #2 and #3 into their bluebooks at the time they
take the Writing Placement Exam.
Appeal Packet:
(1) The Writing Placement Exam (bluebook) most
recently taken.
(2) A cover letter
asking to be considered for a C appeal, including the following information:
- Name
- Student ID numberYear and quarter in school
- College
- College mailbox number
- Local phone number
- E-mail address
- Whether want your papers returned to you by campus
mail; returned to you by U.S. mail (please
include a SASE envelope); discarded; or whether you will pick
them up from the Writing Program office (Kresge 166).
(3) Two or three papers (a total of twelve or more pages of writing)
or a senior thesis (20+ pages):
- The papers should demonstrate the writer's
ability to compose a clear, coherent, purposeful argument based
upon analysis and using accurate citation forms and standard
written English. The analysis can be of texts or data or both.
- The papers can be from
any UCSC course as long as they make an argument and do not
simply report. Scientific reports and social science papers that
make arguments in the results and discussion sections are fine
to submit for this appeal.
- The
citation style should follow the one required by the
discipline (e.g., Sociology uses APA style, Literature
uses MLA style, Biology uses CBE).
- The
work submitted
should include
evidence that
it is the
student's own
work. Sufficient
evidence would
be an instructor's
marginal and
end comments
on a paper,
or a narrative
evaluation that
makes specific
references to
the paper(s)
submitted.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS:
Can I appeal the C1 or C2 requirement?
No.
Only
the
C
requirement
(for students
who
entered
UCSC prior
to Fall
2005)
may be appealed.
Can I submit
poetry
or fiction?
No. The
C requirement
is designed
to develop
the student's
ability to
compose an
argument
based upon
analysis
because that
is the kind
of writing
required
by academic
disciplines.
I haven't
written an
actual essay
since Core.
I'm not sure
I have any
writing to
submit. What
should I
do?
You do not
have to submit
essays to
appeal this
requirement.
Any writing
that makes an argument based upon the analysis of readings, data, or other kinds
of evidence is fine. For instance, many papers written for courses in Psychology,
Sociology, Chemistry, etc., require students to do research, to analyze whatever
they have found, and to make claims and support those claims using logic and
evidence. These kinds of papers are fine to use to appeal.
My major
doesn't require
much writing,
but it does
require so
many courses
that I don't think I have room for Writing 2 (formerly Writing 1). How can I appeal the C requirement?
Unfortunately,
if you haven't
been writing
papers, you
won't have
materials
to appeal. You also may not be getting the opportunities to develop the writing
abilities needed in most jobs that require a bachelor's degree. Fortunately,
Writing 1 can help you develop those abilities as well as the abilities needed
in many G.E. courses.
Who reads
the appeals?
If I don't
pass, will
they tell
me why?
A member
of the Writing
Program faculty
who teaches
Writing 1
will read
your appeal.
Appeal readers
often write
short explanatory
notes when
the appeal
is unsuccessful.
If theres
no note,
you may contact
the Writing
Program office
and ask to be put in touch with the appeal reader.
Do I get
credit for
Writing 1
if my appeal
is successful?
No. A successful
appeal does
not confer
credit; it
merely says
that you
do not need
to take Writing
1. You can,
of course,
take Writing
1 if you
want to and
get 5 units.
If you plan
to transfer
to another
university,
you should
keep in mind
that most
colleges
require that
you take
a course
to satisfy
a composition
requirement and may not exempt you on the basis of our exam.
I'm really
bad at
writing and
I know I'd
do awful
work in Writing
1. Do I
have to take
it?
Yes, and
here's
the good
news: Writing
1 teachers
are experts
at helping
people who have had bad experiences with writing, who have writer's blocks,
who struggle
at any
stage of
writing,
and who
may dislike
or avoid
writing
for a variety
of reasons.
We will
work with
you individually
to help
you develop
strategies
to address your fears and to meet the challenges. And you may find others in
the class who have similar concerns and who can give you support and suggestions.
And you will probably have suggestions and ways you can help them! In fact,
most students
who take
Writing
1 feel
more confident
as writers
and do
better
in their
other courses, and you will too.
Can I get
my papers
back?
Yes. If
you request
the return
of your
papers,
we will send
them to the
on-campus
address you provide. If you live off-campus, we will hold your papers in our
office for you to pick-up because our budget does not allow for off-campus
mailing
at this time. Please let us know in your cover note if you would like
us to send them (to an on-campus address), hold them, or discard them after
the appeal.
If
you have
any questions,
please
contact
the Writing
Program by
email at writingprogram@ucscs.edu;
by phone,
(831) 459-2431;
or visit
us in Kresge
166.
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