About the Course

Schedule & Readings

Culture Repair Projects

The Fine Print

> Assessments

> Team Activities

> Extra Credit Options

> Extra Credit Readings

> (i)FAQs

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Infrequently Asked Questions

Below are questions that I wish students would ask more frequently. If you are asking yourself any of these questions, please give yourself a pat on the back for doing so, and then look to the answers below. If you don't yet have any questions, I hope this list will give you some ideas regarding what you should be thinking about as you go through the course.

I've never heard of a Team Readiness Assessment (TRA), Unit Challenge or a Culture Repair Project. What's the best way to approach such assignments?

  1. The first step in preparing for a given TRA & End-of-Unit Challenge is to do all the required reading (see #1-4 above for suggestions) listed on the schedule, and view the relevant image presentation. At the same time, keep in mind that for each TRA & Unit Challenge I providea reading guide that lists terms/names and a set of excerpts from the readings that will serve as the basis of the multiple choice questions on these assessments; I urge you to use these so that you know what is most important to grasp as your read. [View the guidelines for Assessments.]

  2. Also, two questions on each Unit Challenge will deal with images from the presentations that are available for you to review independently. (If you have any trouble accessing them on-line, send me an email immediately.) When you view such images, concentrate on those which contain terms found in the reading guide. You may find it helpful to take selective notes to remind yourself of the details of historical periods, the functions of the objects in the images, and the meanings of important symbols. Try to observe and include details that are both obvious (i.e., general subject depicted) and less-obvious (i.e., subtleties of style, minor but significant symbols, etc.). For the in-class Application Exercises you will have the opportunity to draw connections between historical documents and the images you view, so you may want to think about this as you do the primary reading & view the images.

  3. With regards to the Culture Repair Projects, these assignments are designed to lead you through a five step writing process, which includes turning in several worksheets detailing your ideas one week before the facilitation plan is due. This allows time for friends (or member of the CSUS Writing Center staff) to proofread them and suggest improvements, and insures that you will begin writing at least a week before the final deadline. I insist on this because multiple drafting is the single most effective way to improve one's writing; this not only allows for consultation with others, but also lets you step back from your words to observe where they fit together well and where they need reworking.(Note: you may also wish to take advantage of the English department's On-Line Writing Lab (OWL), an excellent resource addressing basic writing concerns.)

  4. As noted on the "Course Policies," no rewrites will be accepted, except in extraordinary circumstances; but you may wish to submit a prelimary drafts for me to review, or even simply to discuss your ideas with me. Preliminary drafts must be submitted at least three days before your work is due to allow sufficient time for both response on my part and reflection on yours.

  5. Finally once you've written the assignment, make sure all of it gets to me! Pages that are not fastened together in some way are likely to get separated; you are required to staple or paper-clip all submitted work. Also make sure to keep copies of work you submit.  Even (especially?) professors occasionally lose things.

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[Occasional statements throughout this document are derived, with permission, from a similar document written by my colleague Peter Fosl, Associate Professor and Chair of the Philosophy Department at Transylvania University.]