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Term: Fall & Spring, 2008-09
Instructor: Tony Filipovitch= , 106d Morris Hall, (507) 389-5035, 388-2264 (home)
Office Hours: My office hours are posted here
1. Motivation: Students should develop an increa=
sed
sense of civic responsibility and want to be more involved in public activi=
ty.
2. Empowerment: Students should feel more powerf=
ul and
effective. They should become more optimistic about their potential to
influence public events.
3. Skill:
Students should improve their political skills and be more able to influence
public affairs.
4. Understanding: Students should better underst=
and
and appreciate democracy and related concepts.
Erlanso=
n, Bridget and Robert Hildreth. 1998.
Building Worlds, Transforming Lives,
=
span> Making Hi=
story: A
Coaches Guide to Public Achievement. (The Green
Book). Center for Democracy
and
Citizenship.
Dahl, Robert A. 1998.=
On
Democracy.
Bishop, Bill.&n=
bsp;
2008. The Big Sort: Why the
Clustering of Like-Minded
Gertson, Larry N. 2002. Public
Policymaking in a Democratic Society: A Guide to Civic Engagement. M.E.
Sharpe Publishers. (Spring Semester)
You will receive a se=
parate
grade for POLS 381 and for POLS 382.
Grades will likely fo=
llow
these percentages of the total points.
A
=3D 130-117 B =3D 116-104 C =3D 103-91 D =3D 90-78 F =3D below 78
Pols
381 Democracy & Citizenship |
Points |
Pols
382 Public Achievement |
Points |
Class Attendance &a=
mp;
Participation 15 classes to attend (1 points each=
) 12 classes to participate (max 2=
.5
point per) |
20 min 40 max |
PA Coaching Practice
(includes attending Saturday workshop) |
50 |
9 Reading Summaries= in Journal (one reading dropped) |
90 |
Issues Report |
20 |
|
|
10 PA Reports in Jo=
urnal |
50 |
|
|
Email Paragraph on =
team |
10 |
TOTALS |
130 |
|
130 |
<=
span
style=3D'font-size:10.0pt'> =
&nb=
sp; =
&nb=
sp;
RELEVANT TO BOTH COURSES
<=
span
style=3D'font-size:10.0pt'>
<=
span
style=3D'font-size:10.0pt'>PAIRED COURSES
You cannot take Pols 381= without simultaneously taking Pols 382. Students must a= lso register for these courses spring semester.
<=
span
style=3D'font-size:10.0pt'>JOURNAL WRITING
Each course requires writing assignments which y=
ou are
to combine in a journal.
We will divide the cl=
ass into
two groups with different due dates for the first collection.
Required Details:
· = All writing assignments should be typed/word processed.
· = Write your name clearly on the front cover. If you use a dark color binder your n= ame must be easily legible.
· = Only the type of journal binder shown by the professor will be accepted.
· = Pages must be bound together. No loose pages accepted.
· = Reading Summaries and PA Reports should be separated by a divider.
· = Each piece of writing should be labeled following these examples.
September 2&n= bsp; Reading Summary #1 Dahl, chs. 1 3<= o:p>
September
4 PA Report #2 React to Green Book
October 9 PA Report #7 Reaction to Team Meet=
ing #1
Scoring of Journals
CLASS ATTENDANCE AND PARTICIPATION
Class discussions will allow assessment, sharing=
and
enhancement of your learning and that of the professor and class. Sometimes these may be whole class
discussions. Sometimes these may be simultaneous small groups, Sometimes th=
ese
may be small groups taking turns before the rest of the class. All students
should come to class and try to join in discussion. I will keep a record no=
ting
1 points for attendance and up to 2.5 points for informed discussion. Infor=
med
discussion of the readings in class will be particularly noted.
Write a review of eac=
h of the
reading assignments relative to our course objectives. Each review should h=
ave
two parts.
1. Summarize what the author thinks is most important in the reading
and tell why it is supposed to be important. (about 3/4)
2. Evaluate or critique the information or ideas in = the reading assignment. Do not say it was boring or too long or too wordy. Rela= te it to Public Achievement or other contemporary experiences or news about democracy. (about 1/4)
The summaries are worth 10 points each if completed = when checked in class; 7 points if completed by the time the professor collects them.
You must attend and participate in the Public Achiev= ement Site Orientation, Student Orientation, Issues Assembly, and all PA Meetings, unless excused. You must be on time and prepared for your PA meetings. You = must let the professor know as soon as possible if you must be absent. Absences happen only very rarely if at all. Your PA students will be depending on you and the professor and mentors may not be able to effectively arrange for a substitution.
BACKGROUND CHECK
Without a background =
check
you will not be allowed to be a PA coach. You need to go to Lori Bird (COE
Clinical & Field Experience Office) in AH 119
SATURDAY WORKSHOP<= o:p>
You are required to attend at least our Saturday Orientation worksh=
op
on September 6. You also may participate in other workshops if sponsored by
Minnesota Public Achievement.
PA SCHEDULING
On most Fridays we wi=
ll go to
Meadows
First shift/8th grade: team meetings 1:20-2:05 p=
m, coaches meeting 2=
:10 to
about 2:40
Second shift/7th grade: team meetings 2:09-2:54 pm, coache=
s meeting 3:00 to about 3:30
GOOD PA COACHING PRACTICE
The professor and you=
r mentor
will visit your team meetings nearly every week. We will be trying to discu=
ss
what we observe with you in order to be helpful. We presume that if you meet
with your team and give your best effort you will get the points for good
coaching practice.
· =
Your
grade does NOT depend on the success of your PA team in accomplishing any
particular goals. We recognize that your efforts are important, but are only
part of the equation.
PUBLIC ACHIEVEMENT=
REPORTS
IN THE JOURNAL (600 words each)
PA Team Reports
Your writing should address all of these four areas = in identified sections.
1) Experiences
/Descriptions
What did you (and/or your team) experience? What happened? What did you do?=
2) Reflections
/Evaluations
What is the meaning of the experiences? Evaluate: What's going well? What needs improvement? How do you
(and/or your team) feel?
3) Connections/Generalizations
What are you/your team thinking and learning about democratic citizenship? =
Use
core concepts. Mention your reading for PA or the more academic reading for
Democracy and Citizenship.
4) Applications/Experiments/Strategies
What are your plans and strategies? What skills are you and your team
developing?
PA Issue Research =
Paper
You will have MEA week (October 17) to do advance re=
search
on your team¹s issue or problem and think about possible projects or
actions. Effective PA coaches must learn about the issue and possible resou=
rces
in the community. You can¹t just wait for middle school students to
discover this themselves.
1. Describe the issue or problem.
2. Predict how the is=
sue or
problem might be either broadened ³up² from the particular concer=
ns
of your team to connect to some larger concern (Think globally). Als=
o,
imagine ways to make a broad problem or issue more focused, immediate and
actionable by youth (Act Locally). (1 2 paragraphs)
3. Research and Learn=
about
the issue.
Provide a list of com=
munity
groups/individuals who have expertise and interest in the issue. Learn what has been done previousl=
y on
this, or related issues. Find on-line and/or printed sources to help you le=
arn
about the issue. Brainstorm some actions or projects.
EMAIL PARAGRAPHS F=
OR PA
NEWS AND WEBSITE (due
date to be announced)
By a date to be annou=
nced
submit a short update on your PA team. You may write this or have your team
write it with your supervision. These should be well written paragraphs of =
150
-250 words. These should tell a public audience about the mission and
activities of the team. These will be posted on our PA website and send hom=
e in
the school newsletter to families. You may write these or help your team to=
do
so. We are keeping the number (one or two) and the dates open, until we lea=
rn
the deadlines for the DMMS newsletters.&nb=
sp;
FINAL REPORT =
b> (Spring Semester)
The
final report is intended to help you integrate and record your learning from
both POLS 381 and 382 from both semesters. The report should be typed,
double-spaced, 10 or 12 point font, one inch margins, five pages in length.
Think about the course objectives, the four types of writing you did for the
journals and the Social Studies standards relevant to your portfolio. In
writing discuss and evaluate both
a. What you experienced and learned and how you =
were
changed.
b. What your Public Achievement team experienced,
learned, attempted and accomplished.
c. What went well/not so well? What you might do
differently.
Also include a one page letter addressed to an =
MSU,M
student who will be a PA coach next year. Tell them what should they expect
from these courses and PA in particular. What advice do you have?
Wednesday POLS=
321
at MSU |
Friday POLS 322 at Middle School |
Saturday |
August 27 Course Introduct=
ion MSU PA Website |
August 29 &nbs=
p;
Intro to Public
Achievement Read: Green Book chaps. 1-6 PA Report #1 Write on: Kunkel, Johnson et al. Collaboration, Action, Civic Education<=
/a> |
|
Septemb=
er 3 Democracy: What & Why?
Reading
Summary #1 Dahl, On Democracy = chs. 1 - 3
|
September 5 &nbs=
p;
Orientation
to DMMS PA
Report #2 Read & React to Green Book, All |
September 6 |
September 10
Ideal Democracy
Reading
Summary #2 Dahl, On Democracy =
chs. 4-7 |
September 12 PA
Student Orientation to PA (Temporary shift assignments) PA Report #3
|
|
September 17
Actual Democracy
Dahl=
, chs. 8-11
|
September
19 PA
Issues Assemblies (Temporary
shift assignments) PA Report #4
|
|
September 24 Conditions for D=
emocracy
Dahl, chs. 12-14 |
September 26 PA Students Issue Voting PA Report #5 Reaction to Issue V=
oting
|
|
October 1Choose PA Teams
& Shifts
Team Builders &=
Ice
Breakers In-Service |
October
3 No class/No PA · = ; Begin research Your Teams Issue<= o:p> |
|
October 8
P=
opulism
as a form of democracy
|
October 10PA
Team Meeting #1 PA Report #6 Reaction to Team Meeting #1 |
|
October 15Researching Issues
|
October 17 MEA Days-- no PA
|
|
October 22The Strength of Diversity
|
October 24 MSU Issue Paper Repo=
rt |
|
October 29
|
October 31 PA Team Meeting =
#2 PA Report #7 Reaction to Team Meeting #2 |
|
November 5
Election Results=
: What Have We Done?=
David Ma=
met, =
Why
I Am No Longer a Brain-Dead Liberal
|
November
7 DMMS
Teachers Dayno PA |
|
November 12
|
November 14PA Team Meeting #3
|
|
November 19Weakness of Democracy: Tragedy
of the Commons; The Big Sort<= /i>: Politics of People Like Us, chs. 10-12 |
November 21
PA Team Meeting #4 PA Report #9 Reaction to Team Meeting #4 |
|
November 26=
The Miniapple Game
|
November 28
No Class=
es -
Give Thanks
|
|
December 3 Course Evaluatio=
n Final journals due<=
span
style=3D'mso-bidi-font-style:italic'> David Mamet or Melian Debate |
December
5 PA
Team Meeting #5 Paragraph describing Team due PA Report #10 Reaction to Team Meeting #5 |
|
Second Semester CALENDAR
© 2008 A.J.Filipovitch<=
/span>
Revised 13 August 08