Sociology 370-01 Syllabus
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Moot Court and Social JusticeLocal Hub Sites Jeanne Curran, Ph.D., Esq. Moot Court: Course is geared to the academic discourse, with an emphasis on oral argument. Issues presented are on social justice and democratic representation. We use the Moot Court model to move superficial discussion to levels of legal and philosophical argumentation, in the consideration of race, sex, and gender in the modern world. This Spring we have had several panels accepted at major conferences, and we will prepare presentations for those panels in preparation for a panel performance with Derrick Bell of New York University Law School for Fall 2001.
We have worked very hard over the last three years to offer you as much choice in possible in both choice of reading, interactive projects, and a broad range of measures for learning. To access information on grades and grading go to:
Don't do it. Give credit to those whose ideas and words you use. Cooperation and sharing in this class will earn you a better grade. Adversarialism is not a part of our teaching. We believe that learning flowers in an environment that permits mutuality to flourish.
Students will:
All objectives shall be measured by the grading standards and by the measurements for grading set out above.
Created: December 24, 2000
Latest Update: January 29, 2001
Curran or
Takata.
27424 SOC 370 01 Moot Court 3.0 TTh 5:30 - 6:45 pm SBS B115 J Curran
25604 SOC 370A 01 Moot Court 0.0 TBA J Curran 11 64
Co-req: 27424 SOC 370
Professor of Sociology
Member, California State Bar
Office: SBS B 336
Soc. 370-01: Moot Court
Classroom: SBS B115
Registration Numbers: 27424 AND 25604
Tuesday-Thursday, 5:30 - 6:45 p.m.
Practice: TBA
Office Hours: T 4-5:15, W 5:30-6:45, Th 4-5:15 p.m. and by appointment.
Phone: (310) 243-3831
E-mail: jeannecurran@habermas.org
Website: http://www.csudh.edu/dearhabermas
jeanne's site. Contains syllabi, instructions, vocabulary and concept index, lecture notes, self-test quizzes, discussion questions, and a broad set of reviews and essays on the issues that you will need to consult for quality work in the class. Active attempt to provide you with sources that range from liberal to conservative, in keeping with our effort to teach critical thinking. Online.
TR Young's Site. Aimed more directly at graduate students, but covers much of the same material we do. Excellent source for study, and very supportive in learning to cope with dominant discourse. At minimum, you should be acquainted with its offerings. Radical left perspective. Online.
The best site I know of for keeping abreast of general occurrences in those issues which most interest me. Messages posted by advanced students and professors, and activists. Archive permits me to link you directly to the messages. Very useful. Site reflects a left, progressive viewpoint. Online.
Sharing Collaborative Credit
This site offers four examples with the faculty's opinion as to whether the example is plagiarism. Good practice.