COURSE REQUIREMENTS
READING
QUIZZES
|
Weeks
1-10: Due each Sunday before
11:59pm
|
10%
of grade
|
ATTENDANCE/LECTURE
QUIZZES
|
Weeks
1-10: Hybrid students receive
credit for each hour of class
attended. Online students must
complete an online quiz by Sunday
11:59pm based on the watching the
class live on Zoom or viewing the
uploaded recording later.
|
10%
of grade
|
FORUM POSTS
|
Week 1:
Post to the Personal Introductions
Forum by Sunday 11:59pm
Weeks 1-10: Post to 4 of
the 10 weekly forums by the end of
the term. Due each Sunday before
11:59pm
|
20% of grade
|
FIRST
MIDTERM EXAM |
Opens:
Monday of Week 4 at 12am
Closes: Tuesday of Week 5 at
11:59pm
|
20% of grade
|
SECOND MIDTERM EXAM
|
Opens: Monday of Week 7 at
12am
Closes: Tuesday of Week 8 at
11:59pm
|
20% of grade
|
FINAL EXAM |
Opens: Thursday
of Week 10 at 12am
Closes: Thursday of Final Exam
Week at 11:59pm
|
20% of grade
|
READING: It is important to read the
material and watch the videos in Moodle in
order to perform well in on quizzes and exams
and in online forums.
LIVE/RECORDED LECTURES: In addition
to the reading and other material in Moodle,
there is a hybrid classroom lecture every
Tuesday 2-3:50 held in the hybrid classroom and
broadcast live to
the
instructor's personal meeting room on
Zoom. Hybrid students must attend in person.
Online students may either watch live or view
the recording uploaded after class. Make sure to
attend in person or watch each week, as these
lectures will help you understand the readings,
especially primary source material, which can
sometimes be rather dense and complex. There may
be material on exams which is covered in these
recordings but not explicitly stated or covered
in the text.
READING QUIZZES: There are ten weekly
quizzes based on that week's reading plus any
other material linked in Moodle for that week.
Some of these questions may appear again on the
midterm exams and final. Quizzes are due every
Sunday before 11:59pm.
Late quizzes are not
accepted. The Syllabus Quiz from the first
week will also count towards your total score
for quizzes. The lowest of these eleven quiz
scores is dropped.
ATTENDANCE/LECTURE QUIZZES: Hybrid
students sign an attendance roster that
circulates at the beginning of the first hour
and near the end of the second hour of class to
receive credit for this grade category,
receiving credit for one week's absence. Online
students may either watch the lecture live or
watch the recording and complete an online quiz
by Sunday 11:59pm.
A password is required.
That password will be given out at some time
during lecture. If you are in the online
section, make sure to give yourself time to
watch the entire recording in order to obtain
the password necessary to take the lecture quiz.
Late quizzes are not accepted.
FORUM POSTS: The purpose of the forum
assignment is to give you the opportunity to
interpret, evaluate and apply what you have
learned, and to discuss the merits and
implications of class concepts and theories with
your classmates. It emphasizes peer-to-peer
learning in which you learn from your fellow
students.
Every Monday new topic prompts will be posted.
Choose
FOUR of the ten weekly forums to
respond to throughout the term
. In
each of the four forums you select, make
one
post of 150 to 300 words to a topic
in the forum
before the deadline. For
example, you might make a post to the Week Two
Forum, Week Three Forum, Week Eight Forum and
Week Nine Forum throughout the term. These posts
would be made in their respective weeks and due
by Sunday 11:59pm of Week Two, Week Three, Week
Eight and Week Nine.
These four required
posts are in addition to your post in
the Personal Introductions Forum, which is due
THURSDAY of Week One along with the Syllabus
Quiz.
Avoid all titles, headers, greetings and
signatures. Moodle displays your name, the
date, the topic and the forum week; duplicating
this information clutters up the forum. When
replying to another student, include that
student's first name in your reply. Write in
block
format, like this syllabus, with no
indenting, single-spaced with
two or more
paragraphs,
spacing between paragraphs,
and
using the default font.
Do not
post a wall of text with no paragraph breaks
or your post will be penalized. Do not wish
people a good weekend or sign your name. Please
save niceties for the Personal Introductions
Forum and Social Forum.
It is recommended that you compose your post in
Google Docs
or Word (or similar word-processor) and check
the word count by choosing Tools --> Word
Count. This will also prevent your post being
lost in case of a connection error in Moodle. If
you're pasting from Google docs, Microsoft Word
or similar programs, you may need to
save as
plain text first. After you've posted,
make
sure that your post's formatting looks OK,
that
the font size and style is the same
as the rest of the forum, that there
are
no extra spaces above or below the
text (a common problem with copying and
pasting), that you have at least two paragraphs
and that the word count is above 150 and below
300 words.
Your post formatting must look
exactly like the prompt. Formatting
errors will be penalized. Posts below 150
words or above 300 words according to the
Moodle word count will be penalized. Do
not post over 300 words and apologize for going
over length; edit your post down to below 300
words. See the
Student
Help Desk for help using Moodle forums.
You may reply directly to the prompt or reply to
another student. You do not need to do both. To
reply to the prompt, click its "reply" link. To
reply to another student, click the "reply" link
in that student's post. Your post must
substantially and directly address the prompt
and display a familiarity with the reading and
video lectures and discussions, i.e.
your
post must be distinguishable from someone who
hasn't done any of the reading or seen the
lectures, looks at the prompt and "gives their
opinion.
" Make sure to do the
reading and watch the videos before answer the
question. Do not try to just wing it, "Google
it" or ask a chat bot what the answer is.
IMPORTANT: Do not use any materials other than
the text and class videos in writing your
post. Any evidence of copying, paraphrasing or
consulting chat bot output or other secondary
resources, online or otherwise, will be
considered PLAGIARISM, result in a zero on the
assignment and may involve additional
penalties, including a course penalty of one
letter grade, an F in the course and referral
to Academic and Student Affairs for
disciplinary action. Word to the
wise: The same Google searches and AI chat
bots that can be used to cheat can be used
to detect cheating, and there are other
means of detecting it as well. Don't do it!
Avoid phrases like "personally" and "in my
personal opinion." You are expected to
give your
impersonal opinion, backed by
logical arguments, empirical evidence and clear
examples. For example, instead of saying "In my
personal opinion, Montaigne isn't a cultural
relativist" say "Montaigne can't be a cultural
relativist because he criticizes his own
culture." Don't use phrases like "I feel," "I
believe, or even "I think." It is assumed that
anything you state in your post is what you
believe or think, and "I feel" suggests you are
trying to think with your emotions, which is
always a bad idea, but especially so in an
academic assignment. Generally speaking,
first-person pronouns like "I" and "my" should
not occur in your post. Express your thoughts in
objective, third-person language.
Do not quote dictionary definitions of
philosophical terms. A dictionary
definition gives the popular or colloquial usage
and is often different from the technical,
philosophical usage of a word. For example, in
ethics the term "consequences" simply means the
results of an action, good or bad. In popular
usage, this term has negative connotations, as
in the phrase "There will be consequences!"
"Consequence" is often used as a synonym for
punishment in the context of disciplining a
child. This is totally different from the use of
the term in discussions of utilitarianism and
deontology.
Avoid tedious references to lots of people
having lots of different opinions on the
subject or the suggestion that this fact alone
-- if it is a fact -- shows that "there is no
(one) answer." Assume that there is always an
answer, and say what you think that answer
might be.
Read the prompt carefully before answering.
Be careful about misinterpreting or
misunderstanding the question or wandering
into irrelevant biographical information or
personal anecdotes unless you're absolutely sure
they apply to the subject. Posts which do not
directly address the prompt will not receive
credit. The inclusion of irrelevant material
a.k.a. "going off on tangents," will be
penalized. Before replying to another student,
make
sure that student's post is directly
responsive to the topic. If it isn't on
topic, the original poster won't receive any
credit and neither will you. "Me, too" and "Good
job!" comments will not receive credit, though
you are free to make them. For credit you need
to add something original to the discussion: a
supporting example, a counter-example or
objection, an observation, an application, a
request for clarification, etc.
Your answer should include examples or
illustrations that demonstrate your
understanding of the concepts being discussed
and present arguments to support your claims.
Chains of assertions without supporting
examples, illustrations or arguments will be
penalized.
It is up to you to convince me in the space
allotted that you understand the material;
it is not up to me to pore over vaguely worded
assertions without examples or illustrations in
order to divine whether you understand the
material or to attempt to judge whether what you
say could reasonably be construed as an
argument. You need a claim (that is, a clear
answer
to the prompt) and an argument for it (reasons
why your answer is the right one).
Simply
explaining the point of view of one of
philosophers under discussion or various
possible takes on an issue is not sufficient.
Say what you think is
the correct answer and why. If you
receive no credit and tell me what you
meant
by your post was such and such, I will tell you
that then you should have written
that.
Posts which are dashed off at the last minute
without serious thought and consideration and
with no revision or proofreading are unlikely to
receive good scores.Topics are posted every
Monday. Start early. This is 20% of your grade,
so please put some thought and effort into your
posts so that you can do well in the course.
You will have 30 minutes to edit your post after
you have made it. Moodle will display your word
count; make sure it is over 150 but under 300
words. Make sure the font and formatting matches
other posts and that there are no blank spaces
at the bottom.
Carefully revise and
proofread your post for typos, awkward
language, conceptual vagueness and
inconsistency. Be precise. Use particular
examples. Make every word count. Make sure you
are using the
right words.
Use
proper grammar. Avoid long run-on sentences and
ambiguous reference problems.
Avoid
overly formal language. This typically just
comes off as pretentious and makes your post
more difficult to read. Don't use overblown
rhetoric, excessive sarcasm, slang, obscenities
or other language or tones which are
inappropriate for an academic assignment. Give
some consideration the other side(s) and avoid
straw man and ad hominem arguments.
Your post should not
read like a stream of consciousness of you
trying to figure things out "on the fly."
It should
not be a series of disjointed
observations. If it helps you to write something
like that first, go ahead, but then revise it
into a clear, methodical and coherent argument.
Avoid meaningless, introductory throw-away
comments or restating the question; get
straight to the point. If you pad your
post with meaningless fluff at the beginning,
your post may be penalized for insufficient word
count.
Omit needless
words. Be concise.
Don't overuse quotes.The maximum length
is 300 words, so there is not room for a lot of
quotes. Generally speaking, you should only use
direct quotations from primary source readings,
not instructor commentary on them in the text.
If you use a long quote, it should probably
be the only one, and your post should be closer
to the 300 word maximum than the 150 word
minimum. Attributing the quote to the author in
the text (e.g. "as Socrates says...) is
sufficient for citation purposes. You can do a
10/10 post without any quotes whatsoever. Don't
feel like you have to use them.
Postings will be awarded a grade of "10" (full
credit) to "0" (no credit) and are due
before Sunday
11:59pm at the end of each week. Please
note that I have the grade book set to ignore
empty grades. Therefore, if you miss the
deadline for too many forum posts, it won't show
up in your grade until the end of the term. At
that time, any of the four required forum posts
you didn't do will turn into a zero. I have the
"ignore empty grades" setting on now to give you
a meaningful and accurate assessment of your
grade "thus far,"
assuming you complete the
assignments.
Even though the requirement is to make four
posts by the end of the term,
each week's
forum has it's own Sunday 11:59pm deadline.
Only one post per forum per week will count
for credit, so make sure that you are not
caught flat-footed near the end of the term,
having missed too many posting opportunities.
Late
posts are not accepted. Posting after the
deadline Sunday 11:59pm deadline is blocked in
each forum. If you miss the deadline, you
will have to post to a future week's forum. If
you wait until Week Seven, you'll have to post
by the deadline every week to meet the
requirement. Set a weekly reminder in your phone
or online calendar so you don't forget to post
and don't miss out on any juicy topics you
wanted to sound off on (and, while you're at it,
you might want to put in the weekly quizzes and
exam dates along with the grade option/drop
deadline).
EXAMS:
Exams are taken in Moodle and may be taken from
home from any personal computer. The exam format
will be multiple choice and true/false
questions.
The final will not
be comprehensive.
Each
exam has a study guide linked in Moodle. Read
the questions and make sure you can answer each
of them. If you don't know the answer to a
particular question, search the relevant section
of the online textbook, the Powerpoints, your
notes from the lectures and videos for the
answer. You may even want to write out the
answers, which you can consult while taking the
exam.
Once you take the exam, you will immediately
receive your score. Because of test security
issues, you won't able to review your exams
unsupervised, as you were able to with the
weekly quizzes. You won't be tested on this
material again, but if you would still like to
review your exam, please come by my office hours
.
If you just missed a few questions, I can
send you the ones you missed in a Moodle
message.
You will have about a week to take
each exam. Exams are taken via Moodle with a
time limit of 50 minutes. The opening and
closing times of exams are listed in the table
above, in the course outline below and in the
Weekly Outline in Moodle. Clicking on any exam
in the main course view in Moodle will also show
you the exact opening and closing dates and
times as well, along with the chapters and weeks
it covers.
EXAM DEADLINE
POLICY: Since you will have at least a
week to take each midterm, you will be expected
to meet the deadline, however, you may contact
the instructor
before the deadline via
Moodle message to request an extension without
penalty. Make sure include date to which you
would like the exam extended. If you miss the
deadline for the final due to some unforeseen
circumstance or emergency situation, contact the
instructor via Moodle message for options ASAP.
Moodle will tell you your grade based
on the assignments completed so far. Anything
you don't complete will be converted to a zero
near the end of the term.
Make sure to
complete all of the exams by the deadlines!
GRADING:
There is no curve. At the end of the term, the
class will be graded on the following absolute
scale, with course totals rounded up
to the nearest whole number: