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GNST 201 F07 S02

General Studies (GNST 201) S02
Inquiry Seminar in Communication and Culture
Identity, Participation and Place Making

Fall 2007
MWF 13:00-13:50 in SS315

Instructor:

Dr. Chui-Ling Tam

Office Location:

SS 336

Office Phone:

403-220-7182

E-Mail:

cltam@ucalgary.ca

Web Page:

http://www.ucalgary.ca/~cltam

Office Hours:

By appointment


Additional Information

For electronic communication with the instructor, students are encouraged to use their ucalgary accounts or Blackboard - the instructor will normally reply within 48 hours.

Course Description

First-year students are introduced to university-level research through identifying and examining struggles over space, and how humans participate in creating and shaping built and natural places. Possible places for investigation may include: parks, neighbourhoods, landfills, cultural and sport facilities, shelters, and transportation, among others. The motives for and styles, structures and processes of participation are determined by and help articulate who people are, the communities to which they belong, and their concepts of value and ethics. Students are expected to attend all classes, participate in class discussion, analyse primary and secondary sources, and attend public events, meetings, decision-making processes, and other communicative forums. Coursework is incremental, leading to a final research paper.

Objectives of the Course

The successful student will develop a deeper understanding of:

  • how society is expressed and contested spatially
  • how to ‘do' critical thinking, evaluation, and verbal and written expression
  • how to conduct research with primary and secondary sources, including fieldwork
  • how scholarly inquiry informs practical outcomes, and vice versa
  • how to profit from teamwork, joint analysis, and critique by and with other students
  • how to integrate source material into an original argument

Textbooks and Readings:

No textbook. Readings will be negotiated and announced in class.

Assignments and Evaluation

Task

Value

Due

Other arrangements

Discovery assignment

None

Fri 14 Sep

 

Critical reading

10%

Mon 24 Sep

 

Seminar (idea generation)

10%

To be scheduled

Wk 3-7: Meet professor to discuss seminar/essay proposal

Field report (poster)

20%

Mon 22 Oct

Essay proposal

10%

Mon 29 Oct

Wk 8: Meet professor to discuss research dossier

Research dossier

20%

Wed 14 Nov

 

Final paper

30%

Mon 26 Nov

Wed 28 Nov

First draft for class discussion

FINAL DEADLINE


Discovery assignment

This is an ungraded exercise designed to acquaint students with the university library and relevant sources for the course during the first week of classes.

Critical reading

Students will pick one of the articles ‘discovered' in the library exercise, and review it critically with reference to two other scholarly articles, and one relevant case study in the Calgary area based on any publication, event or personal experience. The case studies will be assembled for class discussion; students will collectively develop a selection of case studies or theme topics to pursue for a group work seminar.

Seminar

Each group will make a 15-minute oral presentation to discuss research sources and data-gathering activities related to their case study. Non-presenting students are expected to engage in joint analysis, critique and brainstorming.

Field report

Students will present and critically reflect on the results of their data-gathering efforts by creating a ‘poster presentation' for sharing and viewing within the Faculty of Communication and Culture, at which students will be available to explain their work.

Essay proposal

Students will develop an essay proposal relevant to the course topic, including their ideas for references and other sources; the outline is a work-in-progress and subject to revision. In lieu of attending regular classes, students will schedule a one-to-one meeting with the professor to discuss their essay proposal. Maximum length is 500 words or 2 pages.

Research dossier

Students will assemble all the reference materials, including scholarly articles, mass media publications, and cultural and social events that will be used in their essay. These references will be presented with an annotated bibliography and updated essay proposal. Students should plan a one-to-one follow-up meeting with the professor.

Research paper

Students will build on their experiences and assignments thus far in the course to prepare a research paper that addresses the them of identity, participation and place-making through a combination of theory, analysis, and case study evidence. A clear position must be stated or reached, via a clear purpose to test an hypothesis, answer a research question or defend a thesis statement. Students are expected to stay true to the spirit of their essay proposal, but may add to or delete materials from their research dossier as their essay develops. Tables, charts, images and list of references are not included in the maximum length. Approximate length is 3,000 words or 12 pages. There is no minimum length.

Style and Length Requirements

Students are urged to stay within the maximum word and/or page length, or risk a penalty. A bibliography and brief appendix are not included in the length restrictions. All written assignments must be TYPED and DOUBLE-SPACED in 12 PT FONT. Page margins should be 1 INCH (2.5 cm) wide, and all pages should be numbered. Double-sided assignments are encouraged to save paper, but are not mandatory. Information to be included on the title page are: title of paper, course code, instructor's name, student's name, student ID, and date of submission. References should follow MLA format.

It is the student's responsibility to keep a copy of each submitted assignment.
Note: Please hand in your essays directly to your tutor or instructor if possible. If it is not possible to do so, a daytime drop box is available in SS110; a date stamp is provided for your use. A night drop box is also available for after-hours submission. Assignments will be removed the following morning, stamped with the previous day's date, and placed in the instructor's mailbox.

Registrar-scheduled Final Examination: No

Please note: If your class is held in the evening, the Registrar's Office will make every attempt to schedule the final exam during the evening; however, there is NO guarantee that the exam will NOT be scheduled during the day.

Policy for Late Assignments

Assignments submitted after the deadline may be penalized with the loss of a grade (e.g.: A- to B+) for each day late.

Writing Skills Statement

Faculty policy directs that all written assignments (including, although to a lesser extent, written exam responses) will be assessed at least partly on writing skills. For details see www.comcul.ucalgary.ca/info. Writing skills include not only surface correctness (grammar, punctuation, sentence structure, etc) but also general clarity and organization. Research papers must be properly documented.

If you need help with your writing, you may use the Writing Centre. Visit the website for more details: www.efwr.ucalgary.ca

Grading System

The University of Calgary's four-point scale is the grading system used for this course. Detailed information can be found in the 2007/2008 Undergraduate Calendar, under Academic Standing (http://www.ucalgary.ca/pubs/calendar/2007/how/How_G.htm).

Plagiarism

Using any source whatsoever without clearly documenting it is a serious academic offense. Consequences include failure on the assignment, failure in the course and possibly suspension or expulsion from the university.

You must document not only direct quotations but also paraphrases and ideas where they appear in your text. A reference list at the end is insufficient by itself. Readers must be able to tell exactly where your words and ideas end and other people's words and ideas begin. This includes assignments submitted in non-traditional formats such as Web pages or visual media, and material taken from such sources.

Please consult your instructor or the Writing Centre (SS 106, efwr.ucalgary.ca) if you have any questions regarding how to document sources.

Students with Disabilities

If you are a student with a disability who may require academic accommodation, it is your responsibility to register with the Disability Resource Centre (220-8237) and discuss your needs with your instructor no later than fourteen (14) days after the start of the course.

Students' Union

For details about the current Students' Union contacts for the Faculty of Communication and Culture see www.comcul.ucalgary.ca/su

"SAFEWALK" Program -- 220-5333

Campus Security will escort individuals day or night -- call 220-5333 for assistance. Use any campus phone, emergency phone or the yellow phone located at most parking lot booths.

Ethics

Whenever you perform research with human participants (i.e. surveys, interviews, observation) as part of your university studies, you are responsible for following university research ethics guidelines. Your instructor must review and approve of your research plans and supervise your research. For more information about your research ethics responsibilities, see the U of C Research Ethics "Information for Applicants," sections 3.0 to 9.0, inclusive:

http://www.ucalgary.ca/research/compliance/ethics/info/undergrad/

Schedule of Lectures and Readings

Date

Topic and activities

Outcome

Wk1

Introduction and library tour

‘Discovery' of scholarly works

Wk2

Developing information literacy and identifying academic literature

Critical thinking and analysis

Wk3-5

Brainstorming, group work, attending public events (fieldwork), and seminars

Competency and confidence in public participation

Wk6

Preparing a poster presentation

Field report and poster

Wk7

Mutual evaluation of posters and faculty-wide show

Feedback, presentation skills

Wk8

Preparing an essay proposal (No classes. One-to-one meetings with professor)

Learning to refine ideas and developing a good argument

Wk9-10

Gathering and documenting evidence

Redrafting a work-in-progress (WIP)

Annotated bibliography; research rigour

Wk11-12

Talking through research paper, joint analysis and critique

Final research paper

Wk13

Post-mortem

Being part of a knowledge-making community

 

  • Last Modified:
    Wednesday, October 8, 2008 - 09:32