Link to What's New This Week Class Page: Sociology of Reality, CSUDH, Spring 2003

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Sociology of Reality
Class Page

CRF 27799, Soc. 395-05, 3 units
Alternating Wednesdays and Thursdays
SBS B-326., and Jeanne Curran.

Mirror Sites:
CSUDH - Habermas - UWP - Archives

California State University, Dominguez Hills
University of Wisconsin, Parkside
Soka University Japan - Transcend Art and Peace
Created: March 8, 2003
Latest Update: April 12, 2003

E-Mail Icon jeannecurran@habermas.org
takata@uwp.edu

Sociology of Reality, Spring 2003

  1. Announcements

    Schedule change: Jeanne plans be in on Wednesday, April 16, 2003.

  2. Suggestions for Submissions

    • Weeks of April 7 and April 14, 2003:

      • April 12, 2003: Cats: Love 'Em or Leave 'Em? by Ariana Rivera. Excellent submission for explaining how and why our measures of learning are different on Dear Habermas. Please read as a sample. jeanne

      • April 10, 2003: Arnold Rock Climbing in Yosemite. A photo essay, designed to illustrate ways of creating such an essay, and ways of creating an academic climate in which shared collaboration can flourish. Discussion questions included.

      • April 10, 2003: Virtuality in Africa: Photo essay by Wim van Binsbergen, Professor at Erasmus University in Rotterdam. No discussion questions up yet, but there are several photo essays on Prof. van Binsbergen's site. Try creating a photo essay on a sociological issue relating to the war as we have experienced it.

      • Weeks of March 24 and March 31, 2003:

      • Weeks of March 10 and march 17, 2003:

      • Week of March 3, 2003:

          Some choices for a beginning submission:

        • Rescuing a Boy From the Streets Illocutionary Understanding that Produces Change.

          The questions are for discussion. DO NOT send me answers to all the questions. For a submission choose an aspect of the story that interests you, connect it to concepts we have studied, and send me a couple of paragraphs on what that piece of the story means to you in your lived experience. That's your first essay submission. (Unless you're already caught up and have done this.)

        • Motivation to Achieve: The Long Wall Discussion questions included.

          The questions are for discussion. DO NOT send me answers to all the questions. For a submission choose an aspect of the concept of the long wall that interests you, connect it to concepts we have studied, and send me a couple of paragraphs on what that piece of the story means to you in your lived experience. That's your first essay submission. (Unless you're already caught up and have done this.) You might want to consider how the concept applies to motivating students to study.

        * * * * *

      For those of you who feel more comfortable with specific guidelines, try this:

      1. Do the Required Submission: I'd like all of you to send some sort of submission or participate in a discussion on interpreting common charts. It's stuff you gotta know as part of civic understanding.

        Interpretation of a New York Times Chart on the Job Market Discussion questions included.

        That can count as your first submission, if you wish.

      2. Then do another submission around late mid-term.

      3. Then do a final submission near the end of the term.
      Remember that you can do some of your submissions orally, but you should send me a short e-mail reminding me of your topic when you do that. Submissions should be no more than a few paragraphs, because you are NOT answering all the discussion questions, you are choosing something you learned that intrigued you and/or relates to your lived experience.

      No, I can't tell you how many submissions equal an A for all of the reasons given above. That's why you have to stay in touch with me over the semester. jeanne

    • Syllabus

      Sociology of Reality Syllabus, Spring 2003.



Copyright: Jeanne Curran and Susan R. Takata and Individaul Authors, August 2002.
"Fair use" encouraged.