Course "Quips"

These are important points about the course and about student conduct
in general. They are offered in a humorous fashion because, while important, we
need to recognize that some of them are also bemusing. Pay attention to each of
these and keep them in mind as you progress through the course. These are
designed to increase civility in the course. They will also increase learning
and understanding of course materials. You might remember these beyond this
course to your academic or university experience, (life?) in general. Some of
these items and the idea of this set of material originated from Wm. Irving,
"A Modest Proposal for Students" The Teaching Professor
(August/September, 1999) p. 8.

In the Classroom
- Enthusiasm is Contagious. People learn and professors teach better in a setting
with alert, attentive, and engaged people. That means all of us, students included.
- Be Involved in Class. Participation in class
discussions is required and it is essential to learning the material in
this course. Do not be afraid to contribute positively, even if you are
unsure of the contribution. That does not mean the sound of your voice
(without substance) is valuable. It does mean that if you think of a
problem, a question, a point, or an idea you should contribute those to
class discussions. This point is another way of indicating students must
be active learners in the course. It is all right to take risks,
making statements or arguments that you are unsure of is all right, as
long as you are willing to be proven wrong, as well as be proven correct
in using that argument.
- The "too cool for school" posture is not acceptable in
class. Do not slouch, chat, glare at the clock, read the
paper, talk to classmates, laugh at a private joke, or yawn during the
class. You would certainly not appreciate that attitude if you were
speaking to the class. These actions are insulting to the entire class. If
you do not want to be in class, do not register for and take the course.
- When a fellow student speaks, listen. It is not appropriate to tune out when another student
asks questions or responds in class. It is disrespectful, and you will
miss the material in class if you do not listen to what is said. If you do
not follow the conversation or the dialogue you cannot expect to learn in
class.
- Never close your books or rustle your papers to signal the end of
class. This is like looking at your watch when someone else
is talking to you. It is rude and it is unnecessary. Class ends at about
the appropriate time, when the instructor says it is finished!
- Make it a matter of practice to check the web page for the course
daily. Doing that at least once a day will clearly make you
aware of any new announcements, assignments, due dates and the like.
Announcements may be made in class, but they will always be posted on
the web page. Class comments about assignments or other class work,
will NOT be repeated so class attendance and checking the website are both
essential.
- Do not expect to receive credit for work, copied from a textbook
or the casebook. You need to think about what is called for
in an assignment, and the substantive material connected to the assignment
must be mastered before you complete an assignment. That thinking and
analysis must be reflected in what you submit for credit in the class.
Plagiarism is not acceptable, and all the work you submit must be your
own.
- Do not come to class late. That is disruptive and
distracting, and oftentimes announcements and important comments are
presented at the outset of class. If you miss those, they will NOT be
repeated and asking the professor to repeat them will not be welcome.
(Obviously various delays can cause people to arrive late for class.
Choosing to interrupt the entire class by entering late is your choice.
Think about others before you do that!)

Electronics
- Games and Entertainment Devices. No form of electronic equipment,
except for a laptop computer will be permitted in the classroom. One might
wish to live with ear buds in their ears, but those are offensive and
quite unnecessary. If you just have to listen to one more tune or finish a
game, then leave class, and do not return!
- Cell Phones. The use of cell phones in class is
“strictly prohibited.” There is not any reason for having a
cell phone in the class room, and their presence, particularly if they
ring, is completely destructive of the instructional setting. Do not bring
a cell phone into the classroom. If you fail to follow this rule and do
bring a cell phone into class, you will be told to leave the classroom for
the rest of the class period.
- Computers.
Student may use laptop computers in class. These may be useful for taking notes
or referring to notes prepare for class. Students may also use computers
to search their notes or the internet (BUT NOT WICKAPEDIA) for answers to
questions during class. Surfing the web or doing other activities on a
laptop that are unrelated to class is not permitted. Playing games on a
computer during class is strictly forbidden. Some students bring laptops
to class in order to do email or play games or just to entertain them
selves. This is an insult to the class, and such use of computers during
class period is prohibited.

Office Hours
- Make use of office hours. Do not hesitate to make an appointment if the usual
times are inconvenient of impossible. The instructor is interested in your
questions, concerns, or ideas. Using email to communicate these
matters may work, but face-to-face conversation is always better.
- Do not wait until it is "too late" to seek help.
If you are having trouble with class materials, let the instructor know as
soon as possible. Show that you are concerned. When you identify a
question or a problem (whether it is a fundamental problem or a
"little" question) involving course materials, raise it right
away. That is likely to lead to a quick (and hopefully satisfactory)
solution. Waiting may lead to a bigger problem that cannot be solved.
- Come to office hours with definite questions, concerns, or
problems in mind.
Do not wander in to shoot the breeze and kill time until your next class.
Do not wait until you arrive at the office to think about your question.
Do not come to office hours to tell the instructor you "don't
understand" something discussed in class. You may lack understanding,
but it is essential for you to discuss your difficulty with a clear sense
of what you don't understand or a clear sense of what you think you do
understand about the material. To tell the instructor that you don't
"understand an assignment," only indicates you have "no
clue" and probably have not even tried to understand or work through
the assignment. If you have a focused question or problem you are very
likely to get that clarified quickly and clearly. That might lead to
further discussion with the instructor, or it may be the end of the
discussion. It is very likely to lead to your understanding of the
material and clarification of the problem. If you arrive for a meeting
with your professor without a specific question or problem,
that means you just want to talk. That may be beneficial, but remember, your time is valuable and perhaps could be
better used completing assignments and the like.
- Do not give excuses for absences. Absences from
class are noted and they are NOT excused. Your presence or absence is a
matter of choice for you. If you are ill, have a personal emergency, or
something else comes up, you choose, obviously, to be absent. That is your
choice and there may be many things that are much more important than your
presence in this class. The same choice occurs if you just did not feel
like attending class or you were "too tired to get out of bed and
come to class." The reason you were absent is not important to the
instructor. It is a fact that you were absent. You are still (always)
responsible for everything that occurs in class. You are not excused from
the material covered or the subjects treated in class regardless of the
reason for your absence. The instructor will NOT repeat the class
discussion for you. Announcements and assignments that may be made in
class are generally posted on the web for you convenience.
- Never ask "Did I miss anything important in class the other
day?" OF
COURSE YOU DID,
and you are responsible for that. Get a friend or class mate to clue you
in or a member of your study group should be able to outline what was
covered in class. Always check the web page for announcements and
assignments or due dates which you might have missed because your were absent. Do not ask the instructor to repeat a
class session. That cannot be done and it will not be done. Note Number 8
above in the classroom section. Being late for class is likely to
result in you having no idea about the discussion or you will miss
important announcements.
- Do not call the professor at home, unless the instructor has indicated that
this contact is all right.

Papers/Examinations
- Hand all assignments in on time. Late
papers may be explained, but they are not excused. Late papers (little,
daily assignments, or major ones like the project) will NOT be accepted or
graded. One important lesson for everyone to understand is to meet
deadlines, and to manage time so that deadlines can be met.
- Do not ask if your paper has been graded the day
after you handed it in.
Believe it or not, grading and evaluating is difficult and the instructor
may well take extra time to do that in order to insure accurate and honest
grading. It is important for the student to turn materials in a timely and
prompt fashion, and evaluating those will be done just as soon as possible
by the Instructor.
- Read your paper, examination, or essay again. Before
you complain to the instructor or ask the instructor about a paper or an
examination grade be sure you know what was asked
of you and be sure you know what you submitted in fact. So, be sure you
have read your entire paper again, along with the comments that have been
written on the paper, so you know what you did say. Understand the
comments the instructor made on a paper before you go in to talk with the
professor. Your conversations about the paper should be focused on
improvement or "hitting the nail on the head" not on negotiating
a better grade for subpar work. That means you
should not expect to confront or approach the professor at the end of
class immediately after picking up a graded paper. You cannot ask or
expect an answer to important questions of this sort on the spur of the
moment. Do not expect to bargain with the instructor over a low grade. The
purpose of a grade is to indicate the quality of the work you have already
done. What you can do is learn from that work and
that evaluation, rather than argue about the quality of the work. Listen
to what the instructor says about why the work was evaluated as it was and
recognize that you missed a point, you missed the entire assignment, you
did an unsatisfactory job on the assignment, or you need to work on your
(analytic) thinking or your writing skills and techniques. The fact that
the grade may surprise (disappoint) you means you need to learn what is
expected and how to achieve those objectives.
- Never submit a first or rough draft of a paper.
Always submit your best work. If a student submits a paper that is a
"rough" draft or has been prepared quickly, the hour before
submission as though it were your best work, you should expect a grade
appropriate for the quality of that work. The grade will reflect the
quality of the work you have done on the assignment -
little effort or poor quality work will get that kind of credit. Always
ask yourself "Is this my best work?" Going in to talk about a
paper after you get it back will give the professor the chance to ask you:
"Is this your best work?" So ask yourself that very question before
you submit the paper. If your answer is "No," then do not expect
a great grade on the work. This rule should also operate in examination
situations. Re-read your essays before you submit the exam. Sometimes it
will be obvious that you missed an important point, you failed to conclude
or summarize your answer, or you got off the track and did not answer the
questions that the exam asked. You may only have to change the essay
slightly to get it on track and make it crystal clear. But you should do
that before you submit your exam. That will obviously improve your grade.

Learning in General
- Learning is cumulative. Do not
expect to learn the material for a course "the night before the Final
Exam." That strategy will not work for any student who wants to learn
the material or who wishes to earn full credit and a good grade for the
course. Learning is a continual process that builds from day to day. Your
knowledge accumulates over the term. Students who do not recognize that or
who cannot (or will not) learn gradually, are short changing themselves,
they are wasting their time and money, and they will receive disappointing
results.
- Students should expect to learn course material
from each other. It is important to make friends and
develop small study groups early
in the semester for this course. Getting together once or twice a week to
work on (discuss) assignments may lead to much greater understanding and
much more satisfaction with the material and the course than trying to get
the material only in class. Explaining an idea, concept, or relationship
to someone else is a very good measure of how well you understand it. So
if you can explain a point to another student, then you understand it
well, and they will learn from your explanation. It is a good, informal
indicator of your mastery of material, if you can explain it. Do not be a
"free-rider." Doing no work but sucking information out of the
other members of a study group is free-riding or parasitic. This group
system works as long as everyone contributes to it. Missing group meeting
gets old fast and that conveys to the other members of the group that you
do not care or are not interested in their contributions. Do not be a
loner and do not try to be invisible in a course.
- The heart and soul of courses should be "in
the details."
Students learn, in some courses, that general statements and large, global
ideas, imprecisely expressed or understood are adequate. That is not the
case here. Building ideas and structures in this course must be at the
micro level. So even if you begin with generalities, get to the specifics
quickly. Students must be careful, pay
attention to precise wording and explanations. It is important
to recognize subtle differences and similarities
and it is important to follow directions carefully or precisely. Always read and understand footnotes. When students prepare answers to questions
whether oral or written they should NOT make general or vague statements.
The more precise the answers students develop, the more they understand
the material. Vague or general answers are often an indication the student
knows little or nothing about the substance and is trying to
"B.S" their way to a satisfactory grade. That is NOT a good way
to display your knowledge, and you should NOT expect high grades for
garbage.
- Always do a little extra work. The
difference between a high grade and a mediocre grade in a class often
depends on how well the student learns material and what extra reading or
supplemental thinking the student does in a course. The instructor will
suggest examining materials that are beyond the text books in the course.
Students should spend some time at the computer or in the Library
exploring those points. It is amazing just how much a student can learn by
doing a little extra work. (If a student is unwilling to do or
uninterested in doing extra work, they are short-changing themselves and
their level of understanding of course materials will be under-developed.)
