Freshman
Seminar Neuroscience* Fall 05
Alumni Memorial Hall 214
Tuesday & Thursday 8:00 - 8:50am
http://academic.uofs.edu/faculty/cannon/froshsem/f03/defaultn.html
| Instructor |
Office |
Telephone |
Email |
| J. Timothy Cannon, Ph.D. |
Alumni Memorial Hall 204 |
(570)941-4266 (Office)
(570)586-2022 (Home) |
Cannon |
|
OFFICE
HOURS:
Mon
11:00 - 11:50
Wed 9:00 - 9:50
Thurs 2:30 - 3:20 |
|
|
| ( Dr. Cannon's Home
Page ) |
| Teaching Assistant |
Telephone |
Email |
| Robert Bahnsen |
(631)682-0422 |
Bahnsen |
| Stephanie Kazanas |
|
Kazanas |
| Alex Krupka |
|
Krupka |
Required Materials
Bring to all classes as part of class participation
University Catalog
Personal Calendar or Planner (Paper or Electronic)
I'm usually in the lab on Tuesday, Thursday,
and Sunday evenings. If you can catch me, day or night, I'll be more
than happy to chat (I actually get paid to do what I'd do for
free--talk). On Fridays I am unavailable until 1:30 p.m.
OBJECTIVES: This course is intended to facilitate your entry into
the University community and the life of a college
student. All of the class activities are designed to achieve
these objectives. For the most part, activities and assignments
have been selected in terms of what research in higher education has
shown will help to accomplish these objectives.
None of the course assignments are intended to
be busy work; we all have better things to do. You will
have an opportunity to provide both formal and informal feedback
regarding the course and, believe me, your input is important to
me. This is my second time teaching this seminar and I'm a big
fan of evolution; help shape the future.
CLASS ATTENDANCE/PARTICIPATION:
Normally I don't require class attendance, but a seminar format is
different. Twenty-five percent of the course grade is based upon
attendance/participation. Attendance is essential for a
successful course experience and students are expected to attend all
classes. Unexpected emergencies can occur and, normally, up to
two absences may be approved by the instructor with adequate
cause. Send me a personal email to explain all absences that you
wish to have approved. Please, DO NOT post your reasons
for absences on the public class discussion board. Any absences
beyond two may require dropping the course or receiving a deficient
grade, as three absences constitute approximately 20% of the entire set
of class meetings. All unexcused absences will reduce the final course
grade by one full letter grade for each unexcused absence (e.g., from
C+ to D+ for one absence; from C+ to F for two absences). Class
participation is not defined by talking a lot (I'll take care of
that). The quality of participation, including effectively
relating to other class members is important. Note:
Regular use of the Blackboard web site is considered part of class
participation. The grading system for class participation will be
that described below under GRADING.
IN THE NEWS: Weekly, you should find a
link to a news story on the web that relates to some aspect of Neuroscience.
There will be threads on the Discussion Board for your link
postings. Please include a very
brief (2-3 sentence) description of each link. These
postings will be considered part of class participation and we will
discuss a few each week. Postings should be made before noon each
Friday. Don't wait until the last minute!
ACADEMIC HONESTY: Appropriate
collaboration is encouraged, but plagiarism or cheating will not be
tolerated and will result in an automatic F for the course. You should
consult the University's Academic
Code of Honesty as soon as possible. The code will be
covered as part of the Seminar.
PAPERS: All graded papers
(listed as PA in the course schedule below) are to be two pages (plus,
or minus, 3 lines) of TEXT (titles and Latin Phrases - see
below - don't count), double spaced, 12 point font, with 1 inch
margins. There may be ungraded papers that are shorter. Deadlines
for papers are listed in the Calendar of Events below. Papers
must be word processed in Word (or converted to Word)
and submitted ONLY in word-processed form via the Digital
Drop Box in Blackboard. They will be evaluated for both content
and form. The latter includes grammar, spelling, sentence
structure, organization, and appearance.
Latin Phrases: To expand your vocabulary, you
should include a total of 10 unique items from the Latin
Phrases pages across the first 3 papers (a total of 10, not a total
of 30 phrases). Make these phrases bold in the text and
list them below the body of the paper (the phrases listed below the
body of the paper will not count toward the length of the paper).
For every missing phrase, there will be a 1.0 grade reduction on the
third paper and you will be required to re-write that paper to include
the missing phrases.
GRADING: Unless otherwise noted, each
assignment will be graded on a 4 level system: High Pass (4.67),
Pass (4.17), Low Pass (3.67), and Do Over (0.0). Only rarely can
a High Pass be expected on an assignment, cherish them. I expect
that the majority of students will earn "Pass" grades. All written/quiz
assignments not passed must be repeated until a pass is earned. There
will be 1.0 reduction in the possible grade on an assignment for
each "no pass."
The system for assigning final course grades
is found in the table below. Students must complete/pass all
assignments. Failure to complete/pass any assignment will reduce
your overall seminar grade by 1.0. Failure to complete an
assignment on time will reduce your overall course grade by .1 for each
class day that you are late, until a maximum penalty of 1.0 is reached.
| A |
4.00 to 4.67 |
| A |
3.67 to 3.99 |
| B+ |
3.33 to 3.66 |
| B |
3.00 to 3.32 |
| B |
2.67 to 2.99 |
| C+ |
2.33 to 2.66 |
| C |
2.00 to 2.32 |
| C- |
1.67 to 1.99 |
| D+ |
1.33 to 1.66 |
| D |
1.00 to 1.32 |
| F |
0.00 to .99 |
By October 3rd, students must attend one University event/lecture or
join a club/organization and submit a very brief review of your
experience on the Discussion Board. I'll announce eligible events
as they come up. You are also free to pick your own, but check
with me to see if it will meet this requirement. (PJ-1)
Calendar of Events
A-Assignments, PA--Papers, PJ--Projects,
QZ--Quizzes
| Meeting |
Topic |
Assignments
|
1
August 30th |
Course Overview |
We'll talk and share and plan.
Take a look at letters from Freshmen
and Seniors.
(A-1)
Overview and try to learn some material on Latin Phrase page. You'll be
using these phrases in your papers. (A-1) |
2
September 1st |
Time Managment |
A-1 due!
We'll discuss time management and look over your weekly and semester
schedules.
Write a single paper on your initial reaction
to the University/major and how your reactions relate to the Frosh and
Senior letters (have separate parts of the paper react to the two
letter sources). (PA-1)
Do a 1-page (double spaced) "This is Me" paper.
Submit this electronically through the Digital Drop Box by Tuesday at
3:00pm. This paper will NOT be discussed in class and will NOT be
graded. This is just intended to be a brief introduction of yourself. (A-2)
Go through all of your course syllabi, except
this one, and enter all tests/papers/quizzes onto your semester
calendar. Bring this to your next class period. (A-3)
Prepare and submit a weekly schedule. Separately
total the number of hours that you are: awake, studying, working (if
you have a job), going to classes, and doing "other" things. Bring this
to next Thursday's class period. (A-4) |
3
September 6th |
Computer Resources |
A-2 due by 3:00pm!
We'll use lab computers to see what's out there to support your
academic goals.
Join/attend at least one
group/club/volunteer activity. Post a brief statement about what you
did under the appropriate thread of the Discussion Board. (A-5 and PJ-1)
Due by class on October 4th. |
4
September 8th |
Study Skills |
PA-1 due!
A-3 due!
A-4 due!
We'll have a surprise visitor.
Examine material relevant to career goals. (A-6)
Write a paper on personal rules for maximizing
your own study efficiency. (PA-2) |
5
September 13th |
Go to the Library |
Meet in the Weinberg Memorial Library - Room 306 for an
overview of library resources. |
6
September 15th |
Careers and Graduate School |
PA-2 due!
We will discuss information that will help you choose a career path and
consider what that path demands of you in terms of undergraduate and
graduate school training/requirements.
Write a college and post-college career plan to
meet your primary and secondary career goals. Pay particular attention
to admission requirements for graduate school, if required. Submit by
Wednesday October 22nd. (PJ-2)
Read relevant material concerning your major and
GE course requirements/electives. (A-7) |
7
September 20th |
Course Requirements |
Discuss Major and GE course requirements/electives.
Complete a 4 year academic schedule for your
major and cognate courses (if relevant). Bring this to class next week.
(A-8) |
8
September 22nd |
Advising |
Discussion of the advising process. We will discuss issues
related to academic honesty as well as what an advisor is for.
Arrange to meet with your departmental advisor
(NOT your CAS Advising Center advisor) for next year to introduce
yourself. Simply submit the date and time that you
met with your advisor-- NO PAPER (A-9)
Write brief (ungraded) paper describing your Progress
to Date. (A-10)
Sign up to meet with instructor to discuss the
above issue and paper. (A-11) |
9
September 27th |
Quiz |
A-8 due!
Quiz covering your Major/GE requirements.
Read the University's Academic
Code of Honesty. (A-12) |
10
September 29th |
Academic Honesty |
Discussion of academic honesty and plagarism. |
11
October 4th |
Extracurricular Involvement
Stress |
PJ-1 and A-5
due!
Discussion of options and why getting involved is a good idea.
Suggestions for coping and examination of campus resources that may
help.
Read the history of the University sections
that you chose - copies are on the web. Write a paper overviewing the preceeding; which 2
history topics you are responsible for will be agreed to in class. (PA-3)
Read Do You
Speak Ignatian? (A-13) |
12
October 6th |
Jesuit Education and Mission |
At 8:27 you'll be heading to Dr. Waldeck's lab for a visit - Loyola 17
Facilitated by presentations by you, we will discuss Jesuit
education and University mission in class.
Note!! Annual Major
Opportunities Fair, 2:30 PM to 4:00 PM, Wednesday, October 19th,
Eagen Auditorium - Free popcorn!!
Just a reminder, advising for Neuroscience majors is Thursday, October
10th in the CAS Advising
Center, St. Thomas Hall Rm 309.
|
13
October 11th |
Last Regular Meeting Before the
Final Wrap-up |
PA-3 Due!
Prepare a list of things that you would keep
and change for next year's class. Submit by Friday November 28th (PJ-3) |
| Advising Reminder |
Advising Reminder |
The Major Fair will be on Wed., October 27 -
2:30-4:00pm in Eagen Auditorium
|
14
November 17th |
Final Wrap-up |
Course evaluations and tearful good-byes.
Prepare a letter for next year's freshmen.
Submit by Friday December 2nd (There won't be a final.). (PA-4)
|
NB: Class participation is not defined by talking a lot. I'll
take care of that. The quality of participation, including effectively
relating to other class members, is important.