Difference between revisions of "JAN 19"

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(Created page with "==1: JAN 19. Course Introduction== ===First Day of Class Information=== :*'''Welcome - personal introduction and welcome.''' (Some student introductions.) ::*About the Cou...")
 
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:*'''Required Assignments and Default Grade Weights for your Grading Scheme'''
 
:*'''Required Assignments and Default Grade Weights for your Grading Scheme'''
::*Points 35-65% default = 60%
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::*Points 35-65% default = 55%
 
::*Position Paper 1 15-25% default = 20%
 
::*Position Paper 1 15-25% default = 20%
 
::*Position Paper 2 20-30% default = 25%   
 
::*Position Paper 2 20-30% default = 25%   

Revision as of 21:20, 19 January 2021

1: JAN 19. Course Introduction

First Day of Class Information

  • Welcome - personal introduction and welcome. (Some student introductions.)
  • About the Course (Overview of course focus. Detail to follow.)
  • Course Websites: SharePoint, Wiki & Courses.alfino.org (Some student introductions.)
  • Overview of Teaching Approach.
  • 1. Student choice in work and grading scheme - Your "grading scheme" (the assignments you will be graded on) has both required and optional elements. You can customize up to 30% of your grading scheme to suite your learning style or motivations in the course.
  • 2. Transparency grade information and student work - You will see most of the writing and scoring for required writing assignments. This will require the use of pseudonyms.
  • 3. Opacity of grade information, peer comments, and student identity - Like blind review in academic life.
  • 4. Writing Enhanced - Students participate in reviewing and evaluating student writing. This also requires the use of pseudonyms. (Some student introductions.)
  • Succeeding in the Course:
  • Prep Cycle - view reading notes as you are reading, read, note, quiz, evaluate preparation. Hierarchy of skills and goals.
  • Reading - Keep track of the time you spend reading for the course. Mark a physical text. Contact me if your reading quiz scores are not what you expect.
  • Writing - Try to learn the rubric, read other students' writing and compare scores, discuss your writing with me, especially during office hours.
  • Keep in mind course research questions Major_Ethics_Course_Questions (Some student introductions.)
  • Required Assignments and Default Grade Weights for your Grading Scheme
  • Points 35-65% default = 55%
  • Position Paper 1 15-25% default = 20%
  • Position Paper 2 20-30% default = 25%
  • More About the Course (Orientation, Content, major research questions)
  • Naturalism in Ethics -- What if Ethics has its origins in our natural history? Why this is/was a radical claim.
  • Fields of study represented in the course: Biology, Psychology, Moral Psychology, Evolutionary Psychology, Behavioral Economics, Philosophy, Political Science, Sociology, History
  • First six weeks:
  • 1. Lots of theory from the fields mentioned above directed toward our research questions Major_Ethics_Course_Questions
  • 2. Exercises in "moral phenomenology" (discussion and writing about morality drawing on your experience). Also in Ethics news.
  • Next nine weeks: Major Applied Topics:
  • The nature of political and moral difference, and implications
  • Justified Partiality
  • Empathy
  • Moral Responsibility Skepticism and Alternatives
  • Zoom
  • Video on/off
  • Synchronous attendance. Send excuses for absence prior to class, if possible.
  • If you miss class, please try to view the recorded class within 24 hours.
  • Try think of ways to personalize the virtual experience: examples from last semester - put up a pic for video off. Share something about where you are. Dogs, cats, music, etc.
  • First Day TO DO list
  • Make sure you can find the three course websites and that you understand what information and tools each provides.
  • Browse some links on the course wiki page
  • Find reading for next class on wiki and pdfs from courses.alfino.org
  • Buy Jonathan Haidt, "The Righteous Mind"
  • Keep an eye out for Ethics News!
  • Sign up for in person attendance. Feel free to sign up for three or four classes at a time. If that crowds others out we might need limit signups to each next class.