Monday, Wednesday, Friday, 10:00 a.m.
To understand and produce the resonance and sound shifts operative in selected dialects.
To learn to use subtext and character development to lend credibility and interest to dialects.
To master Standard American Diction by treating it as a dialect.
To understand and demonstrate the differences among Standard American Diction, substandard
diction, and elevated diction.
To learn to balance vocal articulateness with fluency, whether using Standard American Diction
or dialects.
To gain the skill to study and master independently the dialects not studied in the class.
Text and Study Materials
Carla Bolin and Ron Fischli. Voice and Diction Workbook. Denton, Texas: Ronjon.
Evaluation
Attendance (0 miss = 100, 1 miss = 95, 2 misses = 85, 3 misses = 75, 4 misses = 60, 5 misses = 0)..............100
Sutstandard/Standard/Elevated Presentation....................................................................................................................100
Standard British Presentation................................................................................................................................................100
Cockney Presentation..............................................................................................................................................................100
New York Presentation............................................................................................................................................................100
Standard/Substandard Southern Presentation...................................................................................................................100
German Presentation...............................................................................................................................................................150
Written Exercises/Tests............................................................................................................................................................150
Total Points 1000
Final Grade: 890-1000 = A, 795-894 = B, 695-794 = C, 595-694 = D, 0-594 = F
Scale for grading daily work (grades figured to nearest percentage point):
A = 96-100% B+ = 87-89% C+ = 77-79% D+ = 67-69% F = 0-59%
A- = 90-95% B = 83-86% C = 73-76% D = 63-66%
B- = 80-82% C- = 70-72% D- = 60-62%
*Note: If, for some reason, assignments administered total more or fewer than 1,000 points, the method of obtaining the final grade will remain essentially the same: the total points achieved will be divided by the total points possible to obtain a percentage, and a grade will be assigned according to the percentage scale outlined above.
All graded assignments should be submitted on or before the deadline; late assignments may not be accepted or, at best, they will receive lowered grades.
Student Rights and Responsibilities
PRIVACY:
Federal law prohibits the instructor from releasing information about students to certain parties outside of the university without signed consent of the student. Thus, in almost all cases the instructor will not discuss a student’s academic progress or other matters with his/her parents.
ADAPTATIONS AND ACCOMMODATIONS:
If a student (1) needs course adaptations or accommodations because of a disability, (2) has emergency medical information that needs sharing, or (3) requires special accommodations in case the building must be evacuated, he/she should make an appointment with the professor as soon as possible.
CONDUCT:
Classroom behavior that interferes with either the instructor’s ability to conduct the class or the ability of other students to profit from the instruction will result in the instructor’s removing the disruptive student(s) from the class.
PLAGIARISM:
Plagiarism is (1) the use of source material of other persons (either published or unpublished, including the Internet) without following the accepted techniques of giving credit or (2) the submission for credit of work not the individual’s to whom credit is given. If a student in the class is caught plagiarizing, appropriate disciplinary action will be taken. The Student Creed developed and adopted by the MSU Student Government reinforces the discouragement of plagiarism and other unethical behaviors. The first statement of the Creed reads, “As an MSU student, I pledge not to lie, cheat, steal, or help anyone else to do so.” Plagiarism is lying, cheating, and stealing.