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Spring
2007 |
Philip Mitchell's
Office:
Campus Telephone: (214) 333-5226
Learning Center #222 |
| Email: philipm@dbu.edu |
| Office
Hours: M, W 9-11:30am; TTH 2-4pm, F 10-11:30am
|
extbooks |
Anita Desai, Clear Light of Day
Jamaica Kincaid, A Small Place
Naguib
Mahfouz, Children of the Alley
Ben Okri, The Famished Road
Michael Ondaatje, The English Patient
Orhan Pamuk, Snow
Salman Rushdie, East, West: Stories
Derek Walcott, Omeros
Optional
Franz Fanon, The
Wretched of the Earth
Paulo Freire, Pedagogy of the Oppressed
MALA 5340
additional texts
Desai
and Nair, Postcolonialisms
choose one of the following:
Boehmer, Colonial &
Postcolonial Literature
Cooper, Colonialism in Question
|
"Some
seek knowledge for the sake of knowledge: that is curiosity; others seek knowledge that
they may themselves be known: that is vanity; but there are still others who seek
knowledge in order to serve and edify others, and that is charity."
-- Bernard of Clairvaux |
ourse DescriptionA study in the
fiction of writers primarily in the British post-colonial world--Africa, India, Caribbean,
Australia, and the Middle East. Particular emphasis will be given to post-colonial
theory with its interest in ethnicity, representation, hybridity, forms of realism, and
colonial history. |
outcomes:
The purpose of ENGL 4317 Global Studies in
Post-colonial Literature is to assist students in
developing their appreciation, interpretation, and evaluation of post-colonial literature.
Upon completing this course, students will
- exhibit knowledge and understanding of important authors in the post-colonial world
- express this understanding in group settings using discussion and formal
presentation.
- write about literary works using description, appreciation, analysis, and evaluation
- understand and exhibit proficiency in the research process.
- show a basic understanding of post-colonial theory and its application to texts.
- demonstrate an understanding of the application of a Christ-centered worldview to the
subject.
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ethod of InstructionLiberal education
is not a body of knowledge that can be imparted to the student; it is the examination of
the issues raised in various sourcesan examination of texts that engages the
students thinking about these matters but does not merely implant the
answers to the questions. These texts are not taught; they are
read, and reading is dialectical. That is, the sources are taken seriously, as
when one listens to a person who may know something. In this personal dialogue the reader
and the text address each others questions.
-- Edward Tingley
With the above objectives in mind, this course will combine reading,
writing, and discussion. The instructor will guide students through lecture, discussion,
on-line and library research, and testing. Learning is not just a passive intake of
knowledge; instead, it requires an active engaging of course materials. I have
staked much of the success of my course on conversation -- individually, in groups, and as
a class -- and on writing -- responsive, critical, and analytical. Engaging
literature means that we do more than simply impart a supposedly received body of
knowledge; instead, we question and perhaps even change in answer.
I would also encourage students to think about the spiritual and
ethical foundation that every good class needs. These include a regular practice of
prayer, study, and worship, as well as the virtues of humility, silence, honesty, courage,
and wisdom. Click here for a more detailed discussion of these
matters.
rayer
Each class period will open with prayer. Because the primary
business of our classtime is to engage in the ministry of study, these prayers will tend
to be short. However, I want you to know that this
semester I will be praying for each student by name on a regular basis. If you have
prayer requests you wish to share with me, these can sent to me by email, on a handwritten
note, or shared with me after class. As your professor, I want to support you in any
way I can. |
ate PolicyAll major assignments submitted after the due date without an excuse will
be reduced a letter grade per session. Losing material in cyberspace does not constitute
an excuse. Any material submitted by email will receive a confirmation message. If
you do not receive this message, do not assume that I have received the work. If the
student cannot submit the work due to a valid excuse, every effort must be made to contact
me before the due date. All major assignments must be submitted in order to complete the
course. Students must take the final at the assigned time unless a prearranged petition is
filed and approved by the Dean of the College of Humanities.
Return Policy: Students will be required to return
copies of all papers, including the midterm and final (along with evaluation sheets) to me
at the end of the semester. These will be kept on file by the department.
Students are welcome to make photocopies of all their graded work for their personal
files. |
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The GPA grading system adopted by
DBU for courses is:
| A 4.00 |
A- 3.67 |
|
| B+ 3.33 |
B 3.00 |
B- 2.67 |
| C+ 2.33 |
C 2.00 |
C- 1.67 |
| D+ 1.33 |
D 1.00 |
D- 0.67 |
| F 0.00 |
|
Final grades are computed on a
thousand-point scale:
| 940-1000 points - A |
800-839 points - B- |
680-699 points - D+ |
| 900-939 points -- A- |
780-799 points -C+ |
640-679 points - D |
| 880-899 points - B+ |
740-779 points - C |
600-639 points -- D- |
| 840-879 points - B |
700-739 points - C- |
below 599 -- F |
| Grade points are
earned in the following manner [Graduate
students will have slightly different requirements] |
|
| Journals |
100 |
| Midterm |
250 |
| Final |
250 |
| Response Papers (2) |
200 |
Research Paper
or
Book Reviews (2) |
200 |
|
|
| You can ascertain a rough estimate of your final grade
at any point in the semester with the following method: Keep in mind that we
are using a point system, so I do not compute averages. Instead, what you should do
is: |
- 1) add the total points you potentially could have earned from
assignments so far;
- 2) add the total points you did earn and 3) subtract this from number
1;
- 4) subtract this from 1000: this will let you know what you still can
earn in the course. (e.g. If number 4 is lower than 900, you know it isn't possible
to still earn an A-)
|
| Papers and Presentations are assigned
a letter grade, which is then converted into a numerical one.
Essays will be kept on file by the department. You must return major work when it is
requested. |
| Journals will be collected weekly at the beginning of class.
You should turn in 10 out of the 12 weeks possible. |
| If you ever have any question about a grade
you earned, including at the end of the semester, please contact me. I'll do
everything I can to clarify the situation |
General
Standards for Essay Evaluation |
| A essay (demonstrates
unusual competence):
originality of thought and style in stating and developing
thesis statement
clear, logical organization
free of gross errors in usage
all the positive qualities of good writing
|
| B essay (demonstrates
competence):
clearly stated, fairly significant thesis statement,
satisfactorily developed
fairly well organized
comparatively free of errors in usage
many of the positive qualities of good writing, but lacks
originality and style of A essay
|
| C essay (suggests
competence):
reasonably clear thesis statement, adequately developed
discernable organization
comparatively free of serious errors in usage
some of the qualities of good writing, but lacks vigor of
thought and expression of B essay
|
| D essay (suggests
incompetence):
fails to support a thesis statement with sufficient clarity
and effective development
poor or illogical organization
often contains some serious errors in usage
few of the positive qualities of good writing
|
| F essay (demonstrates incompetence):
failure to state and develop a thesis statement
failure to organize logically
failure to avoid gross errors in usage
may also indicate failure to follow directions for given assignment.
evidence of plagirism (see definition
below)
|
| [NOTE: While these serve as general guidelines
for evaluation purposes, I will provide more specific standards with each assignment.] |
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| Course Policy: University policy states that a student cannot miss more than 25% of class
and receive credit for the course. However, because class participation is essential to
your learning, more than four unexcused absences will result in a significant penalty to
the final grade. In a night course or short semester, each hour will be
counted towards absences. [NOTE: This includes late registration, which will
be counted as excused, but will still count towards the toal number of absences.] |
| Excused Absences: Sickness and the death of a loved one constitute excused absences. Other
cases will be judged on an individual basis. In order to be fair to each student, some
documentation must be submitted when you return to class. If you are ill, a note from the
health center, a doctor, a parent, or a residence assistant is required. |
| Missed Classwork: It is YOUR responsibility to contact a fellow class member about missed
discussion, revision in assignments, etc. You may make-up class work for full credit if
you have an excused absence. |
| Tardiness: Excessive tardiness will be penalized. Four tardies will count as one
absence. Unless you have a valid excuse, being fifteen minutes late constitutes an
absence. |
| What can I reasonably and sanely do in a semester? (A
worksheet for the perpetually overcommited.) |
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Miscellaneous Student Information
Academic Misconduct Appeal Procedures and Academic Appeal
Procedures are explained on pp. 84-87 of the 2002-2004 DBU Undergraduate catalog. Academic Conduct Policy (DBU
Undergraduate Catalogue, 2002-2004)
Consistent with the Christian character and values of Dallas
Baptist University and in order to encourage and preserve the honor and integrity of the
academic community, the University expects its students to maintain high biblical
standards of personal and scholarly conduct.
All instructors or proctors shall have the right to examine materials
in the student's possession during quizzes, examinations, and/or laboratory sessions.
In instances of cheating during an examination or other classroom or
laboratory activity or exercise, the instructor shall have the right to suspend the
student(s) who is (are) cheating from further work on the examination or exercise and to
deny the student(s) credit for the examination or exercise. (Please see current student
handbook for details.)
Academic misconduct includes, but is not
limited to, the following:
- Cheating shall be defined as copying from another student's test paper, laboratory
report, other written work, or computer files and listings; using, during a test or
laboratory experiment, material and/or devices not authorized by the person in charge of
the test, including the sharing of calculator results or information; willfully
cooperating with or seeking aid from another person during a test or laboratory experiment
without permission; knowingly using, buying, selling, stealing, transporting, or
soliciting in its entirety or in part, the contents of a test or other assignment
unauthorized for release; substituting for another student, or permitting another student
to substitute for oneself, to take a test or other assignment or to make a presentation.
- Plagiarism
shall be defined as the appropriation, theft, purchase, memorization, or
obtaining by any means another's work, and the unacknowledged submission or incorporation
of that work as one's own offered for credit. (Appropriation includes the quoting or
paraphrasing of another's work without giving credit therefore.)
- Collusion
shall be defined as the unauthorized collaboration with another in
preparing work offered for credit. A student is not guilty of collusion if he or she
merely discusses with another a matter relevant to the work in question.
- Abuse of resource materials
shall be defined as mutilating, destroying, concealing,
or stealing such materials.
- Computer misuse
shall be defined as unauthorized or illegal use or destruction of
computer software or hardware through the DBU Computer Center or through any programs,
terminals, or freestanding computer owned, leased, or operated by DBU or any of its
academic units.
The faculty member endorses the University Honor Code and abides
by the University's Academic Appeal and Academic Misconduct Procedure as stated in
the Student Handbook and the Schedule of Classes.
Final Examination Policy:
Final Examination Policy: Students are expected to take the final exam at
the time stated in the published schedule. If a student believes that he or she has a
conflict of such nature that he or she should be allowed to take the final exam at another
time, a request for consideration should be submitted in writing to the Dean of the
College of Humanities and Social Sciences.
Financial Aid: Students who are receiving federal, state, or institutional
financial aid who withdraw or add hours during the semester may have their financial aid
adjusted because of the withdrawal or addition. This change in schedule may affect the aid
they are receiving during the current semester, and could affect their eligibility for aid
in future semesters.
Disabilities: The student has the responsibility of informing the Associate
Vice President for Student Affairs, at (214) 333-5134, of any disabling condition for
which the student will request course modifications. Dallas Baptist University provides
academic adjustments and auxiliary aid to individuals with disabilities, as defined under
law, who are otherwise qualified to meet the institutions academic requirements. It
is the students choice and responsibility to initiate any request for
accommodations. Required documentation must be provided before the university can make
accommodations.
Posting of Final Course Grades: Final course grades provided to
a student by a faculty member may not be relied upon as official..Students may access
their official final grades online through the WebAdvisor System. The Registrars
Office will only mail grades to a student upon request. The Dallas Baptist University
Undergraduate and Graduate catalogs state that "All accounts must be paid in full
before a student can[. . .]receive transcripts[. . .] ." According to FERPA, faculty
may not provide final grade information to students via telephone, email, posting or any
other source which might compromise student confidentiality.
Presentation Policy: Students
are reminded that DBU is a Christian university. Student presentations should not
use recorded video or audio material that contains excessively obscene language or
material of a pornographic nature. If the student has any questions regarding the
appropriate nature of material for a presentation in class, he or she should consult with
the course instructor.
Children in Classes and
Unaccompanied Children: Children in Classes and
Unaccompanied Children: Minor children of Dallas Baptist University students are not
permitted to attend class with their parents. Furthermore, minor children may not be
unaccompanied at any location or property where Dallas Baptist University classes are
taught. If a minor child is brought to the DBU campus or any location where DBU classes
are taught, the child must be accompanied by an adult at all times. For their safety and
welfare, unaccompanied children on the DBU campus will be escorted to the Campus Security
Office and the parents or guardians will be summoned to pick them up immediately.
Cell Phone Policy: Classroom disruption by cell
phones or other electronic devices is prohibited. All cell phones and similar electronic
devices must remain turned off and out of sight for the duration of class. Electronic
devices utilized in a learning context, such as laptops and language interpreters, may be
permitted at the professors discretion. A student may face a zero and/or failure in
the class if an electronic device is used for cheating during a test. Cheating at Dallas
Baptist University is not tolerated and may result in expulsion.
Senior Grades: It is the responsibility of the student to notify the instructor
if graduating this semester. Final exams for graduating students will be given on 10
December 2004. Final exams for graduates are due in the Registrars Office by noon on
Monday, 13 December 2004. These grades are final. The instructor will not submit late
grades for graduates nor change grades once they are submitted. |
The instructor reserves the right to make changes to the
syllabus as necessary.
It is the students responsibility to be aware of any changes made during this
course.
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