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Welcome to the English & Communications Department at Miami Dade College Kendall
Campus. As you browse through our site, keep in mind that writing and
communication are the gateway for the future success of our students.
Our staff and faculty are here to support and provide you with help, as well as
to answer questions about your respective needs. For more information regarding
our academic programs, our department, our courses, or for advisement in the
related majors, please feel free to call us or just walk in for a visit. We look
forward to hearing from you, the student. We are here for you!
Sincerely,
Jose M. Blanco
Chairperson
English & Communications Department
Mission Statement
The mission of the English
and Communications Department of Miami Dade College
– Kendall Campus is for each student to achieve proficiency in English in the
following areas: reading, writing, speaking, and listening.
We prepare our students to read at the college level, to express themselves
coherently in written and oral presentations, and to analyze and understand
presentations made by others.
Through a wide variety of courses in composition, creative writing, journalism,
speech and literature, the department seeks to encourage students to live an
ethical and humane life, to explore human relationships, to think and act
creatively, and to develop the critical analytical skills that foster effective
communication in college, career and life.
Values Statement: Miami Dade College is committed to the pursuit of truth, and to the promotion of the values of responsibility and honor.
Academic Dishonesty (from the Code of Conduct - Students' Rights & Responsibilities Guide 2004-2005 Ed.)
Academic Dishonesty includes, but is not limited to the following:
- cheating on an examination;
- receiving help from others in work to be submitted, if contrary to the stated rules of the course;
- plagiarizing, that is, the taking and passing off as one's own the ideas, without citing the sources;
- submitting work from another course unless permitted by the instructor;
- stealing examinations of course materials;
- falsifying records;
- assisting anyone to do any of the above.
In the event that students are suspected of classroom cheating, plagiarism, or otherwise misrepresenting their work, they will be subject to procedural due process. The specific steps involved are outlined in Procedure 4035.
Plagiarism
According to the Merriam-Webster OnLine Dictionary, to “plagiarize” means
- to steal and pass off (the ideas or words of another) as one's own
- to use (another's production) without crediting the source
- to commit literary theft
- to present as new and original an idea or product derived from an existing source.
In other words, plagiarism is an act of fraud. It involves both stealing someone else’s work and lying about it afterward.
For more information on this issue, feel free to download the package: What is Plagiarism? provided to us as a courtesy of Turnitin.com
General Information
| Location: |
Room 2217 |
Phone:
Fax: |
(305) 237-2284
(305) 237-0828 |
| E-mail: |
alexandra.alessandri@mdc.edu |
| Office Hours: |
Monday through Friday: 8:00 AM - 4:30 PM |
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Visit our
A Good Read!
website for
The Exception
by Christian Jungersen
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