Loyola
University Chicago
Department of History
HIST 101: The Evolution of
Western Ideas and Institutions to the Seventeenth Century
Semester II, 2001/2002
Section 005
TTh 8:30 AM
9:45 AM
Damen Hall (DH) 439
| Office
Information: |
| Instructor:
Mr. J. Derek Halvorson |
| Office:
Crown Center 558 (Lake Shore Campus) |
| Office
hours: |
Tuesday,
10:00 AM - 11:30 AM |
| |
Thursday,
10:00 AM - 11:30 AM |
| |
... or by
appointment |
| Office
Phone: 773/508.2229 |
| E-mail: jhalvor@luc.edu |
| URL: http://homepages.luc.edu/~jhalvor/
|
| |
|
| Required Texts: |
| L. Hunt, T.R. Martin, B.H.
Rosenwein, R. Po-chia Hsia, and B.G. Smith, The
Making of the West: Peoples and |
| Cultures,
vol. 1, To 1740 (Boston and New York:
Bedford/St. Martins, 2001). |
| M.A. Kishlansky, ed., Sources
of the West: Readings in Western Civilization,
vol. 1, From the Beginning to 1715, 4th |
|
ed. (New York: Longman, 2001). |
| Plato, The Last Days of
Socrates, trans. H. Tredennick and H.
Tarrant, intr. H. Tarrant (London: Penguin, 1954; |
| rept.
1993). |
| Peter Abelard, The Letters of
Abelard and Heloise, trans. and intr. B.
Radice (London: Penguin, 1974). |
Course Objective:
The aim of this course is fourfold:
- to introduce students to some of
the ideas and institutions that have played a central
role in the development of western civilization, as well
as to the variety of factorssocial, political,
cultural, economic, and religiousthat impact human
experience.
- to challenge students to become
more critical listeners and readers and more skilled
speakers and writers.
- to expose students to the
historians craft, and in so doing to aid them in
analyzing historical texts.
- to encourage students to
participate in the great conversation.
Evaluation:
Your final grade in this course
will be based on the following:
| Classroom participation |
50 |
| Quizzes |
50 |
| Book Review #1 |
50 |
| Mid-term Examination |
50 |
| Book Review #2 |
50 |
| Final Examination |
50 |
| |
300 pts. |
1. Classroom
Participation: Your participation grade is based
primarily on group discussion.
- Group discussions: Primary
source documents from Kishlansky, Sources of
the West will be assigned for each week of
the semester. These should be read before
Thursday's class (unless otherwise indicated by
the instructor), when they will be discussed in a
small group setting. Your grade for this
component of the course depends upon your active
and thoughtful participation in the group's
interaction.
- Attendance: An
attendance sheet will be passed around at the
beginning of each class session. It is your
responsibility to make sure that you have signed
it. Missing more than three classes will
lower your participation grade by 3 points (e.g.,
an 46/A would become a 43/B).
- Prometheus: Registration
for this course in Prometheus (http://courseconnect.luc.edu) is a mandatory aspect of your
participation grade. The Course ID for this class
is 486; the password is aardvark.
2. Quizzes: There will be
twelve short quizzes (either multiple choice or short
identification) on chapters from the textbook (Hunt, Making
of the West), which will be administered on
Tuesdays. These will cover the chapters before we
have discussed them in class. The two lowest of
your quiz grades will be dropped.
3. Book Reviews: Both book
reviews will be based on the critical reading of a
primary source, in this case Platos The Last
Days of Socrates and The Letters of Abelard and
Heloise. Individual assignment sheets will be
handed out for each review. The papers should be 4
- 5 pages long, typed and double-spaced.
4. Examinations: The two
examinations will consist of short identification
questions and essay questions, drawing on lectures and on
readings. Potential questions will be discussed
prior to the examinations, and you will have a choice
from among several essay questions.
Missed quizzes, late papers,
and missed examinations:
Missed quizzes may not be made up
without a medical excuse. Late papers will be subjected
to a penalty of a third of a letter grade (i.e., 2
points) for every weekday of lateness without
exception. Late work will not be accepted after
the date of the final examination. Any requests for
alternate mid-term examination dates should be made in
writing well before the scheduled date of
examination. Such requests will be honored only if
based upon serious illness or some other reason deemed
sufficient by the instructor. All students must
take the final examination as scheduled.
Academic Dishonesty:
The penalty for academic dishonesty
of any kind (including plagiarism) will be a failing
grade for the course.
Plagiarism is
defined as the copying or close paraphrasing of another
persons work, whether living or dead, published or
unpublished, without crediting that person in a citation
or footnote. In other words, it is using another
persons words or ideaswhether they are living
or deadas if they were your own, without giving
your source due credit.
- The instructor retains the
right to make adjustments to the course
groundrules and schedule as he deems necessary.
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