WHAT MAKES US HUMAN? 1A

WHAT MAKES US HUMAN? 1A
Course Code
ED 1057
Credit Points
15
Course Coordinator
Elizabeth Curtis

Pre-requisites

No pre-requisites

Overview

At the heart of this course are considerations of the ways in which ideas of gender, power relations, belief and family structures contribute to how we understand what it is to be human and the impact of such understandings on the ways in which people develop as human beings and how they are treated in society.

Structure

2x 1 hour lecture per week Mon, Thurs at 10

1x 90 minute tutorial per week ( To be arranged)

 

Lectures and tutorials will be supplemented by tutor directed learning and discussion using WebCT.

Tutorials will be student led using a Philosophy for Learning approach.

Assessment

This involves a 2000 word essay which has the following specific requirements:


Demonstrates understanding of issues of What Makes us Human?

Demonstrates the contribution of different influences in the development of ideas by a range of relevant references to the course reader and other academic texts.

Makes reference to lectures and tutorial discussions.

Offers reasoned conclusions about the experiences of being human.

 


Resubmission of failed criteria within 2000 word essay.

Formative Assessment

Formative Asessment instrument _ Mind map and written reflection on selected tutorial discussion equivalent to 1000 words:

Students will invited to select one tutorial discussion as a starting point of a mind map supported by a written reflection.  The mind map should identify the pathway of the argument/discussion., and the written reflection should be organised through the use of  Thinking Hats methodology (de Bono).

Feedback

Feedback:

In sufficient time to be able to be used by students to improve their work: ( Formative feedback within 2 weeks of submission; summative feedback within 4 weeks of submission).

Appropriate and relevant feedback to help students to understand where they have both gained and lost marks, and how to improve their mark.

Face to face meetings between tutors and students who have failed.