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HIS
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THE
HISTORY OF JAPAN
JOURNAL
ASSIGNMENTS
The following series
of specific assignments is to be completed in journal form and submitted
for instructor evaluation at those points designated in the syllabus.
NO LATE ASSIGNMENTS WILL BE ACCEPTED BY THE INSTRUCTOR AFTER THE LISTED
DUE DATE HAS PASSED.
Your completed journal will be reviewed with the following criteria
in mind:
- the intelligence
with which the topics covered are addressed;
- the thoroughness
with which the assignments are completed;
- the depth of
insight expressed in your confrontation with the subjects considered;
- the thoughtfulness
with which the assignments are approached.
Although effective
written communication is essential, the journal WILL NOT be evaluated
with respect to "correct" English and/or punctuation -- the ideas, in
this instance, are the most important ingredient, not the form in which
they are expressed.
The result of this series of assignments is meant to be an informal JOURNAL,
not a classroom exercise nor a series of answers to the specific questions
posed below. Therefore do not merely "answer the questions" or "follow
the directions" indicated; do not number your responses as if completing
a "fill-in-the-blanks" exercise; do not try to complete the entire series
of assignments at one sitting -- instead tell me (in entries spaced over
several sessions) about what peaks your interest about Japan and Japanese
history as you examine the material assigned for the course and as you
listen to the opening series of lectures.
Then continue through the semester to keep me informed about your mastery
of the material covered in your quest for answers to the questions raised
by your interest. Your goal throughout the coming semester is to
convince the instructor that you have completed the assigned reading for
the course, that you have mastered the content of the course lectures
and that you have taken the initiative to follow up on your identified
personal interests in the subject matter of the course.
In essence the assignments posed below are meant to focus your attention
on a particular stimulus, a topic for your consideration; in each instance,
I am more interested in how that particular stimulus excites your interest
in the broader subject matter, the history of Japan. The directions
given and the questions asked, then, are merely meant to stimulate your
thoughts about the topic or information source raised in the assignment.
Your may choose to ignore these questions or directions entirely (in many
cases they are very repetitious anyway!), as long as you write about what
the assignment asks you to consider.
This overall journal assignment grows out of a conviction that learning
is an active (not a passive) process; that learning is remembering what
interests you; and that learning is both goal oriented and concept centered.
Therefore, to enable learning to occur, you, the student, must start with
what you know, admit ignorance about what you don't know, identify interests
growing out of that ignorance, then ask questions and seek to establish
connections, building on current knowledge to achieve a new level of understanding.
This series of assignments, then, is designed to give you the opportunity
to describe your interests, to relate what you don't know to what you
know already, to expand your interests, to refine and reinterpret them
and ultimately to restate and formulate them into appropriate inquiry
questions to guide your study of Japanese history. Approach the
writing of your journal with these criteria in mind and you should find
the experience serves both to enlarge your interest in Japan and to focus
your attention on specific topics and questions you would like to delve
into in greater detail over the weeks ahead.
JOURNAL
ASSIGNMENT ONE
(due
Wednesday, August 31, 2005)
JOURNAL
ASSIGNMENT TWO
(due
Monday, September 12, 2005)
JOURNAL
ASSIGNMENT THREE
(due
Wednesday,
September
28, 2005 or Wednesday,
October 19, 2005 depending on the piece of literature on which you
have chosen to write your extended essay -- see assignment for details)
JOURNAL
ASSIGNMENT FOUR
(due
Wednesday,
November 16, 2005)
JOURNAL
ASSIGNMENT FIVE
(due
Monday,
November 21, 2005 or Wednesday,
November 23, 2005)
JOURNAL
ASSIGNMENT SIX
(due
Wednesday,
December 14, 2005)
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