SSK
1202 - Critical Reading
and Problem Solving
Syllabus
Objectives
Attendance
Lateness
Grading
Exams
Student Contract
Peer Evaluation
Contact
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Coordinator: Robert Burgess
Office of International Programs Bldg 2
Office hours: As posted
Phone: 2905
E-mail: R.Burgess@aui.ma
Instructor:
Catherine
Owens
Office: Room 106, Bldg 10
Office hours: As posted
Phone: 2422
E-mail: C.Owens@aui.ma
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Instructor: Barbara Huff
Office: Room 103, Bldg 10
Office hours: As posted
Phone: 2999
E-mail: B.Huff@aui.ma
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Purpose and Objectives of the
Course
At the end of this course students should
have the ability to:
- think critically
- read critically
- synthesize from academic reading
materials
- evaluate academic reading
materials
- take notes from academic
reading material
- run a seminar based
on academic reading materials
- work effectively in study
groups/teams/collaboratively/cooperatively
- evaluate peer and
personal academic work
- analyze a problem
solution topic
- apply knowledge to new
contexts
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Attendance
Policy
Your teacher is required by the university
to enter every absence into the university database regardless of whether
it is an excused or unexcused absence. Unexcused absences will have
the following impact on your grades:
1 absence - --
2
absences- oral warning
3 absences- written warning
4 absences- withdrawal/failure
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Lateness
Policy
Students who are late will be marked “late” in the
attendance register. This will have an impact on your teacher
evaluation.
Makeups (exams and
quizzes)
For students with excused absences, makeup tests will be scheduled at the
convenience of the teacher and student. The student is responsible
for scheduling this makeup. Students with unexcused absences will
receive a score of 0 on the test or quiz. Classes will not be
rescheduled for any reason. Students who miss a class for whatever
reason are responsible for the material covered during that class.
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Grading
Overview
Scoring Criteria
10% - Teacher
Assessment (Attendance/Participation/Behavior)
10% - Seminar Preparation
20% - Midterm exam
20% - Final exam
40% - Paper
Grading Criteria
A = 90-100%
B = 80-89%
C = 70-79%
D = 60-69% (must repeat)
F = 0-59%
Seminar
Leadership Grading Scheme
Students
will be responsible for leading at least two reading seminars
during the semester in groups. This
scheme will be used to grade the students leading the seminar.
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The Grade of A
A-level work demonstrates real achievement in grasping what
critical reading and problem solving is, along with the clear development
of a range of specific critical reading skills or abilities. The work
at the end of the course is, on the whole, clear, precise, and
well-reasoned, though with occasional lapses into weak reasoning. In
A-level work, critical thinking terms and distinctions are used
effectively. The work demonstrates a mind beginning to take charge of
its own ideas, assumptions, inferences, and intellectual processes.
The A-level student often analyzes issues clearly and precisely, often
formulates information clearly, usually distinguishes the relevant from the
irrelevant, often recognizes key questionable assumptions, usually clarifies
key concepts effectively, typically uses language in keeping with educated
usage, frequently identifies relevant competing points of view, and shows a
general tendency to reason carefully from clearly stated premises, as well
as noticeable sensitivity to important implications and consequences.
A-level work displays excellent reasoning and problem-solving skills.
The A student's work is consistently at a high level of intellectual
excellence.
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The Grade of B
B-level work
represents demonstrable achievement in grasping what critical reading and
problem solving is, along with the clear demonstration of a range of
specific critical reading skills or abilities. B-level work at the end of
the course is, on the whole, clear, precise, and well-reasoned, though with
occasional lapses into weak reasoning. On the whole, critical thinking
terms and distinctions are used effectively. The work demonstrates a mind
beginning to take charge of its own ideas, assumptions, inferences, and
intellectual processes. The student often analyzes issues clearly and
precisely, often formulates information clearly, usually distinguishes the
relevant from the irrelevant, often recognizes key questionable
assumptions, usually clarifies key concepts effectively, typically uses
language in keeping with educated usage, frequently identifies relevant
competing points of view, and shows a general tendency to reason carefully
from clearly stated premises, as well as noticeable sensitivity to
important implications and consequences. B-level work displays good
reasoning and problem-solving skills.
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The Grade of C
C-level work
illustrates some but inconsistent achievement in grasping what critical
reading and problem solving is, along with the development of modest
critical reading skills or abilities. C-level work at the end of the
course, it is true, shows some emerging critical thinking skills, but also
pronounced weaknesses as well. Though some assignments are reasonably well
done, others are poorly done; or at best are mediocre. There are more than
occasional lapses in reasoning. Though critical thinking terms and
distinctions are sometimes used effectively, sometimes they are used quite
ineffectively. Only on occasion does C-level work display a mind taking
charge of its own ideas, assumptions, inferences, and intellectual
processes. Only occasionally does C-level work display intellectual
discipline and clarity. The C-level student only occasionally analyzes
issues clearly and precisely, formulates information clearly, distinguishes
the relevant from the irrelevant, recognizes key questionable assumptions,
clarifies key concepts effectively, uses language in keeping with educated
usage, identifies relevant competing points of view, and reasons carefully
from clearly stated premises, or recognizes important implications and
consequences. Sometimes the C-level student seems to be simply going
through the motions of the assignment, carrying out the form without
getting into the spirit of it. On the whole, C-level work shows only modest
and inconsistent reasoning and problem-solving skills and sometimes
displays weak reasoning and problem-solving skills.
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The Grade of D
D level work shows only a minimal level of understanding of what critical
reading and problem solving is, along with the development of some, but
very little, critical thinking skills or abilities. D work at the end of
the course, on the whole, shows only occasional critical thinking skills,
but frequent uncritical thinking. Most assignments are poorly done. There
is little evidence that the student is "reasoning" through the
assignment. Often the student seems to be merely going through the motions
of the assignment, carrying out the form without getting into the spirit of
it. D work rarely shows any effort to take charge of ideas, assumptions,
inferences, and intellectual processes. In general, D-level thinking lacks
discipline and clarity. In D-level work, the student rarely analyzes issues
clearly and precisely, almost never formulates information clearly, rarely
distinguishes the relevant from the irrelevant, rarely recognizes key
questionable assumptions, almost never clarifies key concepts effectively,
frequently fails to use language in keeping with educated usage, only
rarely identifies relevant competing points of view, and almost never
reasons carefully from clearly stated premises, or recognizes important
implications and consequences. D-level work does not show good reasoning
and problem-solving skills and frequently displays poor reasoning and
problem-solving skills.
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The Grade of F
The student does not understand the basic nature of critical reading and
problem solving, and in any case does not display the critical thinking
skills and abilities which are at the heart of this course. The work at the
end of the course is vague, imprecise, and unreasoned as it was in the
beginning. There is little evidence that the student is genuinely
engaged in the task of taking charge of his or her thinking. Many
assignments appear to have been done pro forma, the student simply going
through the motions without really putting any significant effort into
thinking his or her way through them. Consequently, the student is
not analysing issues clearly, not formulating information clearly, not
accurately distinguishing the relevant from the irrelevant, not identifying
key questionable assumptions, not clarifying key concepts, not identifying
relevant competing points of view, not reasoning carefully from clearly
stated premises, or tracing implications and consequences. The student’s
work does not display discernable reasoning and problem-solving
skills.
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