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II. Framing Statement III. Thesis Statement. IV. Syllabus V. Course Narrative VI. Final Comment VII. Spring Semester 1997 Instructor's Statement & Syllabus VIII. Appendices A. T.A.'s Pedagogical Diary, Fall 1996 & spring 1997 B. Discussion Prompts, Fall, 1996 & Spring 1997 C. Mid Term Exminations, Fall, 1996 and Spring, 1997 VII. Spring Semester 1997 Instructor's Statement & SyllabusIn the spring term 1997 I taught History 67 again when a graduate class that I was scheduled to teach was cancelled. Taught on Temple's Main Campus, this class followed a Tuesday/Thursday schedule which required me to reorganize the class routine. I gave general presentations each Tuesday and devoted Thursdays to discussion. For the first hour on Thursdays, students went to one of two discussion sections held in different rooms. I ran one, my TA the other. For the last thirty minutes the whole class reassembled in one room for reports from the separate discussion groups. A student from each would summarize the main points discussed in his/her group and then a general discussion would follow. The Main Campus class was larger than its analog at Ambler, having more than forty students at the beginning and settling at 35 by mid semester. The student body in this class featured far more ethnic and cultural diversity than the Ambler section which was entirely white and, as near as I could tell, native born. The Main Campus section included students born in Ireland, Russia, and Vietnam as well as several African and Asian Americans. A few of the non-native students had some difficulty writing English.Jennifer Coleman, my teaching assistant for this class, came to me with much less teaching experience than Martin Wilson. However, she made up for her lack of experience with large quantities of enthusiasm, energy, and effort. I gave her my instructor's diary from the previous semester to orient her to the course, and she reported finding it helpful. During the term she prepared discussion questions each week for the two discussion groups and taught one group every Thursday. She gave a lecture on the Civil War and helped me grade the mid terms, book reports, and final examination. We met at least once each week and often twice to discuss our instructional strategies and objectives for the Thursday discussion groups. In assembling documentation for this class, I chose not to write another instructor's diary because the course content in the spring was similar to that accounted for in the diary that I prepared in the fall. Instead, I focused on assessment, using the comments that we wrote on student exams and papers as well as the students' own final examination questions as evidence of what and how well the students were learning. The reader might want to compare these materials with their counterparts from the fall. The final examination questions that the students wrote in both semesters are especially revealing. In both classes, the students questions show a very good understanding of what the teachers considered to be important. They include many references to the three themes of the class -- migration, diversity, and freedom -- as well as a special interest in the historical experience of minorities and women. Put another way, most students realized what they were supposed to be learning even if some did a better job than others actually writing their final exams. In both the spring and fall renditions of this class students were expected to write a weekly journal based on the assigned reading. Students find this task onerous, and many complained about it in their course evaluations. More than a few had difficulty keeping up and were forced to submit several journal entries at once or take a deduction in their final grade because they failed to submit the requisite number. The journal is designed to make students do the reading and think about what it means. It is also supposed to help them improve their writing. I have found that students don't seem to be able to translate their journal entries each week into classroom participation. Insights put on paper often don't get introduced into classroom discussion. Perhaps this argues for having the students share their journals with one another as part of classroom participation. |
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SCHEDULE OF CLASSESTop of Schedule Go to Week 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14WEEK ONE1/21-1/23 IntroductionReading: Divine, ch. 1: 1/23 Special Topic: Is the Past a "Foreign Country"? Questions:
WEEK TWO1/28-1/30 Exploration and ConquestReading: Divine, ch. 2: 1/28 Dinnerstein & Jackson, ch. 2: 1/30 Special Topics:
WEEK THREE2/4-2/6 Colonial AmericaReading: Divine, ch. 3: 2/4 Dinnerstein & Jackson, ch. 3 & 5: 2/6 Special Topics:
WEEK FOUR2/11-2/13 Provincial AmericaReading: Divine, ch. 4: 2/11 Dinnerstein & Jackson, ch. 6 & 7: 2/13 Special Topics:
WEEK FIVE2/18-2/20 The American RevolutionReading: Divine, ch. 5: 2/18 Dinnerstein & Jackson, ch. 8: 2/20 Special Topics:
WEEK SIX2/25-2/27 The Early Republic, IReading: Divine, ch. 6: 2/25 Dinnerstein & Jackson, ch. 10: 2/27 Special Topics:
WEEK SEVEN3/4-3/6 The Early Republic, IIReading: Divine, ch. 7 & 8: 3/4
Special Topics:
WEEK EIGHT3/18-3/20 Economic ExpansionReading: Divine, ch. 9: 3/18 Dinnerstein & Jackson, ch. 13: 3/20 Special Topics:
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WEEK NINE3/25 Mid Term Examination3/27 Jacksonian Democracy
WEEK TEN4/1-4/3 Domesticity and ReformReading: Divine, ch. 11: 4/1 Dinnerstein & Jackson, ch. 9 or 12: 4/3 Special Topics:
WEEK ELEVEN4/8-4/10 Westward ExpansionReading: Divine, ch. 12: 4/8 Dinnerstein & Jackson, ch. 14: 4/10 Special Topics:
WEEK TWELVE4/15-4/17 Slavery and SectionalismReading: Divine, ch. 13 & 14: 4/15 Dinnerstein & Jackson, ch. 15 or 17: 4/17 Special Topics:
WEEK THIRTEEN4/22-4/24 Secession and Civil WarReading: Divine, ch. 15: 4/22 Dinnerstein & Jackson, ch. 18: 4/24 Special Topics: The Republican Party and the South Questions:
WEEK FOURTEEN4/29-5/1 ReconstructionReading: Divine, ch. 16: 4/29 Dinnerstein & Jackson, ch. 19: 5/1 Special Topics:
Special Assignment: Write a question for the final examination. The class will review submissions for their suitability as determined such criteria as: clarity, scope, relevance, and creativity. VIII. AppendixiesA. T.A.'s Pedagogical Diary, Fall 1996 & spring 1997B. Discussion Prompts, Fall, 1996 & Spring 1997 C. Mid Term Exminations, Fall, 1996 and Spring, 1997
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