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Advanced Greek Prose
Composition
Classics 419, fall 2006
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10:10-11:25 (Room TBA)
Jeffrey Rusten, Cornell University
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Compositions
STATEMENT ON ACADEMIC INTEGRITY
Classics 107 will require strict adherence to Cornell's code of academic integrity,
detailed at this website:
http://cuinfo.cornell.edu/Academic/AIC.html
It is especially emphasized that all coursework must be the original work of the student in question; handing in another's work, preparing written assignments in common, as well as copying of answers or other code violations will be considered a serious offence.
GUIDELINES FOR COMPOSITIONS:
Please DOUBLE-SPACE so I can insert comments.
Please hold on to your compositions and keep them in a folder which you hand
in each week and we can review at the end.
The written components of Tuesday assignments (sentences from Stephens, Written versions of reports, literary compositions) should be handed in on Monday by noon, and will usually be discussed and handed back on Tuesday. Vocabulary quizzes listed under Tuesday should be taken outside of class sometime the weekend before.
The written components of Thursday assignments should be handed in on Wednesday by noon, same timetable.
(Note that the assignments to complete for Tuesday (i. e., over the weekend) are heavier; in practice, you may want to complete the assignments for Thursday also over the weekend.)
Greek on the computer: this is a good time to start using Greek on the computer, either Mac or Windows (you can use whatever fonts you want, as long as you know how to convert the files to acrobat to email them: learn how to do this. )
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This page last modified May 31, 2006