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course introduction and objectives |
ASSUMPTIONS
AND EXPECTATIONS: Often
individual student expectations concerning a course of study vary substantially
from those of fellow students and from those of the course instructor.
The
following paragraphs are intended to clarify what is assumed and expected
of students enrolled in this course.
These
guidelines are meant to provide a common ground upon which to build
and to avoid misunderstandings that might otherwise arise.
Please
read through the guidelines carefully and then indicate at your earliest
convenience (via an email
to the instructor) your understanding and acceptance of these standards.
This course has been designed with the following set of assumptions
and expectations in mind:
- This
is not the only course in which you are enrolled. In fact it is
assumed each student is typically taking a twelve semester hour course
load, is employed twenty hours per week, and has significant social
and family obligations beyond the university and academic community.
- Regular
and consistent course attendance and participation is a basic core
requirement. Students whose usual personal schedules preclude
on-time arrivals and for whom regular departures must occur prior
to the scheduled conclusion of class time are encouraged to find a
more appropriately scheduled course.
- As
a four credit course, each classroom hour is expected to be combined
with three hours of preparatory reading, writing and reflection,
requiring a commitment of twelve hours weekly (as part of an assumed
total of thirty-six hours of weekly academic involvement for a fulltime
student taking twelve credits per semester).
If
you fit the above profile and are willing to make the commitment, you
should find the course challenging but manageable.
If not (you may be working more hours per week, have a set of demanding
family obligations beyond the ordinary, be enrolled for more than twelve
hours this semester or regularly arrive in class after the start of lecture),
you should carefully calculate the cost of trying to work this course
into your existing schedule -- ask yourself, for example, if you are willing
to accept a lower (or failing) grade for not having the time available
to be in class or to devote to course expectations and requirements.
- Unlike
other courses you might have taken in the past, this course of study
is not oriented towards the more-or-less passive acquisition and mastery
of a set body of information as outlined by a specific text or in
instructor-defined lecture materials.
Instead the course of study opens a subject matter area -- the history,
civilization and culture of traditional and modern Japan -- within the
context of a "learning community".
In this setting students are expected to work actively to define personally-defined
interests and to explore them adequately using the ways and means established
by the course structure -- assigned reading, independent research, written
journal entries and essays, Internet web materials, written and oral
discussion, and formal lectures.
Students
will not be expected nor required to march as part of a single group
in lock step towards a predefined set of goals. Instead each will be
asked to define personal learning objectives, to chart an independent
course towards their achievement and to demonstrate mastery of the general
subject matter of the course in a variety of ways to the satisfaction
of the instructor.
If
you are unwilling -- or unable -- to undertake this self-motivated,
independently-directed, individually - monitored, active approach to
learning, you might be better off in an alternative course offering
utilizing a more compatible and comfortable educational setting.
- As
an upper division History Department offering, this course assumes
students have taken advantage of their earlier fourteen years of schooling
to acquire the essential academic skills needed to assure success.
Specifically these skills include an ability to read a variety of
materials with comprehension and understanding, to write clear and
accurate prose, to structure written and oral communication in an
appropriately organized and documented fashion and to participate
willingly and profitably in oral and written discussion. The course
provides an opportunity to hone these skills but not to acquire them.
- As
a WRITING ACROSS THE CURRICULUM offering, this course also assumes
mastery of the basics needed for successful academic writing. This
proposition is tested with a WRITING SKILLS
ASSESSMENT PROJECT due early in the semester; the failure to successfully
complete this project by the assigned deadline will be grounds for
dismissal from the course at the discretion of the instructor.
(You might want to check out the project requirements by clicking
on the link in the preceeding paragraph just to make sure you can
handle the assignment.)
- Access
to email and the world wide web -- as well as a basic level of computer
literacy -- also is assumed.
Most students already possess word processing skills (or know someone
who does). Furthermore every enrolled student at CSU has an assigned
email address (usually [given name initial].[family name] @ popmail.csuohio.edu);
the restricted course materials portion of the web site also features
an internal email system making possible direct contact with the instructor
and fellow students enrolled in this course.
On-campus labs, the university library and many other Cleveland area
libraries have public access computers available with Internet connections.
If you own (or have access to) a personal computer with a modem, you
can gain free access to CSU computers by contacting the Office for Computer
Facilities on the eleventh floor of Rhodes Tower.
If, however, these facilities are inconvenient or inadequate to meet
your own personal needs and/or schedule, please consider the impact
these circumstances might have on your ability to meet course expectations
and requirements and take steps accordingly.
If
any of these essential skills are particularly weak, you must be prepared
to devote extra time and effort to their remediation in order to accomplish
fully what the course requires of you.
EMAIL
THE INSTRUCTOR
(CLICK ON THE UNDERLINED WORD FOR AN EMAIL
FORM TO USE)
NO LATER
THAN FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 2001
TO INDICATE YOUR UNDERSTANDING AND ACCEPTANCE
OF THESE EXPECTATIONS AND ASSUMPTIONS .
PLEASE
INCLUDE IN THE MESSAGE YOUR CURRENTLY PREFERRED EMAIL ADDRESS.