HUMANITIES 1210 FIRST DAY HANDOUT

Dr. Scott received his degrees from Ball State University.  He has held positions in Ohio, Indiana and Maryland. In addition to Humanities 1210, Dr. Scott conducts the Concert Choir MUS 1300 and facilitates directed studies in music. Office: N223. Phone: 286-2277.

Office hours:

Monday 11:00-12:30 a.m. L117-4
Tuesday 2:00-3:00 p.m.  N223
Wednesday 11:00-12:30 a.m. L117-4
Thursday 11:30-12:30 p.m. N223

COURSE DESCRIPTION

Reprinted from www.macomb.edu:

“An introductory course in the Humanities, stressing an objective approach to the arts. It is designed to provide the student with the tools necessary to understanding various forms of artistic expression and to establish the understanding that form and content in art are products of fundamental cultural values. Painting, sculpture, architecture, and music are stressed. Related field trips are a part of the humanities program.”

CLASS ORGANIZATION

 
This class is organized into three different but related components
I.        In Lab - (N110).  The ‘lab’ experience is designed to introduce concepts at the student’s own pace.  After each section the student will be quizzed. These quizzes are designed to reinforce the material just learned.
II.      On ground - (N204). In these sessions we will reinforce concepts that were introduced in the ‘lab’, as well as introduce some new concepts.  This component is designed to take what the student has learned ‘in lab’ and prepare you to apply it to the various assignments.
III.    Assignments - There will be five assignments, and a final. In order to receive an A in the class, the student must submit all five assignments.

GRADING

Like the three components to the class, there are three correlative parts to the student’s grade.

I.        30% of the grade is based on the student’s ‘in lab’ quiz scores.  If a quiz is not taken negative points are added to the score until the quiz is completed. (see downloads)

II.      20% of the grade is based on the student’s ‘on ground’ participation.  This includes attendance, and participation in class activities.
III.    50% of the grade is based on the student’s assignments.  (see assignments)

GRADE SCALE
 

A 93-100     A- 90-92

B+ 87-89     B 83-86    B- 80-82

C+ 77-79     C 73-76    C- 70-72

D+ 67-69    D 63-66    D- 60-62

E 0-59


ATTENDANCE

 
Each student begins with 168 points in this portion of their grade. Each class will have quizzes within the session and will count toward the attendance for that day. Unfortunately, these quizzes cannot be made up, so if you miss the questions you miss the points.

If you do not bring requested materials (questions for seminars, reading assignments, etc.), you will lose points.  Always bring your materials including study guides to the ‘on ground’ sessions.

Your actions, attitudes, participation in class activities and focus within the class evidence your commitment to learning and will be considered when assignments are graded.
 

ASSIGNMENTS

Theater assignment  – 25 pts.
Music assignment – 25 pts.
Film assignment – 25 pts.
Photojournal project – 60 pts.
Culture in the Arts project 15 pts.
Final – 100 pts.

EXTRA CREDIT

In addition, there may be an opportunity for extra credit. This is optional and cannot be substituted for any of the required experiences.

HELP

If at anytime you do not understand a concept or assignment, schedule an appointment or communicate via email.


UPLOADS

You will have up to one week past the date the module is assigned to upload your data (in lab), after that week your upload will not apply to your score. It is imperative that you keep up with the virtual lectures.


PAPERS

Each assignment will have specific criteria, which will be clearly defined in writing. Also refer to the writing criteria page. Submit all assignments in pocket folder (do not staple)
Papers must be submitted to me in class. If I don’t check it in, I didn’t get it! DO NOT put papers in mailbox or under the door – they will not be accepted.
No paper will be accepted that isn’t typed.
Papers that are turned in on time will receive comments.
Papers will be accepted up to one week past due date – no later, but will not receive comments.
Use your login number for confidentiality purposes.
Have someone else read your paper before submitting it.

PLAGIARISM


All work submitted must be the student’s own work. Any works cited must be quoted and support original ideas, not be the substance. Any work that is submitted that does not conform will receive a 0 on that assignment. If the work reflects another student’s work, both will be in jeopardy. If the problem cannot be resolved between the professor and student, it will then be submitted to the humanities board.

NUMBERS

The reason we assign numbers to students is to protect their anonymity.  In this way we can return assignments post grades, etc. without jeopardizing your rights. The number you will be using this term is found in the text purchased. We will reference these in class by the last four digits of that number.

EMAIL

scotts@macomb.edu


Please feel free to contact me with any questions or concerns. Please make sure that you include your name and the day and time your class meets within the email.

WEBSITE


The website is made part of this first day handout. There you will find additional support for various aspects of the class. To access the website: Go to: http://www.macomb.edu/faculty/scotts/HUMN-1210.htm

EXPENSES

 
In addition to Introduction to the Arts, which is available in the book store, you will need access to a camera, a roll of film, cost of developing film, headphones, a floppy disk, $4 when you attend the DIA, and rental of a film (or attendance to a film). Those who want to utilize digital cameras please have them professionally printed. (photo quality does count).

CELL PHONES & PAGERS

Pagers and Cell phones should be put in silent mode in both the lab and ‘on ground’ sessions. If it goes off, the student will be asked to leave for the remainder of that session. Talking is not permitted in lab.

THIS IS A CONTRACT BETWEEN THE PROFESSOR AND STUDENT. BY STAYING IN THE CLASS YOU AGREE TO THE TERMS STATED IN THIS ‘FIRST DAY HANDOUT’.

CALENDAR

All dates reference section class times. Do not submit something on a date your class does not meet.

date

onground N204

inlab N110

assignments

9/20

syllabus review, Intro, Humanities, chronology

 

 

9/25

 

appreciation (IL), subject matter (IL), unity

 

9/27

aesthetics, symbolism/iconography, appreciation

 

 

10/2

 

tension, line, shape

 

10/4

 

theater 1, 2, 3

 

10/9

theater reinforcement

value

 

10/11

play (on video) you must attend this session to submit a critique

color

theater assignment

10/16

Classicism/Romanticism

music melody, music rhythm

theater assignment due

10/18

 

music tonality, music timbre, music texture, music dynamics

 

10/23

music reinforcement

music form

music assignment

10/25

 

rhythm, texture

 

10/30

elements reinforcement

space

music assignment due

11/1

 

photography(IL), film(IL)

 

11/6

film reinforcement

 

film assignment

11/8

 

proportion, emphasis, form

 

11/13

elements reinforcement

sculpture

film assignment due

11/15

elements reinforcement

architecture 1

 

11/20

photojournal reinforcement

architecture 2

photojournal assign

11/27

elements reinforcement

architecture 3

 

11/29

architecture reinforcement

 

cultural literacy reading

12/4

culture literacy

2d

photojournal due

12/6

culture(IL)

culture assignment

culture in the arts assignment due

12/11

review for final, censorship

 

 

12/13

final