GEOG 303.04
Geography
and World Affairs
Fall 2007
Dr. Scott Brady
Location: Cyberspace
Office: 523 Butte Hall
Office Hours: MWF 9:30-10:45 and T 2:15-3:15
Phone:898-5588
email:sbrady@csuchico.edu
Men are so inclined
to content themselves with what is commonest; the spirit and the senses
so easily grow dead to the
impressions of the
beautiful and perfect, that every one should study, by all methods, to
nourish in his mind the faculty of feeling
these things... For
this reason, one ought every day at least, to hear a little song, read
a good poem, see a fine picture, and, if it
were possible, to speak
a few reasonable words.
Goethe, Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship. Bk. v, ch. 1 (Carlyle, tr.)
[source: Stevenson]
General Education:
THEME G: GLOBAL ISSUES
Theme Coordinator: Lal Singh, PLMS 225.
This theme focuses on the enduring global issues of food, environment,
human rights, justice, and social conflict. Exploration of these issues
can be done through careful selection of courses in the theme. Global
food issues focuses on the area of worldwide food production,
distribution, and consumption. It explores crop production systems,
biotechnology/GMO, environment, politics, and economics of food
production and distribution, hunger and poverty as a method of inquiry
into the theme issues. Geo- politics investigates the nature of the
world and its physical, cultural, economic, and political evolution and
studies how the process of global interdependence, in its clash with
local authorities and conditions, forces re-evaluation of the enduring
theme issues.
Foundation Course - to be taken first:
1 course required:
RELS 332 World Religions
& Global Iss 3.0
FS *Eth
1 course selected from:
GEOS 370 Energy in the
Human Environ 3.0
SP *
Prerequisites:
One course from Breadth Area B1.
PSSC 392 World Food and
Fiber Systems 3.0
FS *NW
Capstone Course - to be taken last:
1 course selected from:
ABUS 390 World Food and Hunger
Issues 3.0 FS
*NW
GEOG 303 Geography and World Affairs
3.0 FS *NW
POLS 341 International Relations
3.0 FS *
Seven Principles of Good Practice in Undergraduate Education
1.
Good practice encourages student-faculty contact.
Frequent student-faculty contact in and out of classes is the most
important factor in student motivation and involvement. Faculty
concern helps students get through rough times and keep on
working. Knowing a few faculty members well enhances students'
intellectual commitment and encourages them to think about their own
values and future plans.
2. Good practice encourages cooperation among students.
Learning is enhanced when it is more like a team effort than a solo
race. Good learning, like good work, is collaborative and social,
not competitive and isolated. Working with others often increases
involvement in learning. Sharing one's own ideas and responding
to others' reactions improves thinking and deepens understanding.
3. Good practice encourages active learning.
Learning is not a spectator sport. Students do not learn much
just sitting in classes listening to teachers, memorizing pre-packaged
assignments, and spitting out answers. They must talk about what
they are learning, write about it, relate it to past experiences, and
apply it to their daily lives. They must make what they learn
part of themselves.
4. Good practice gives prompt feedback.
Knowing what you know and don't know focuses learning. Students
need appropriate feedback on performance to benefit from courses.
In getting started, students need help in assessing existing knowledge
and competence. In classes, students need frequent opportunities
to perform and receive suggestions for improvement. At various
points during college, and at the end, students need chances to reflect
on what they have learned, what they still need to know, and how to
assess themselves.
5. Good practice emphasizes time on task.
Time plus energy equals learning. There is no substitute for time
on task. Learning to use one's time well is critical for students
and professionals alike. Students need help in learning effective
time management. Allocating realistic amounts of time means
effective learning for students and effective teaching for
faculty. How an institution defines time expectations for
students, faculty administrators, and other professional staff can
establish the basis for high performance for all.
6. Good practice communicates high expectations.
Expect more and you will get it. High expectations are important
for everyone-for the poorly prepared, for those unwilling to exert
themselves, and for the bright and well motivated. Expecting
students to perform well becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy when
teachers and institutions hold high expectations for themselves and
make extra efforts.
7. Good practice respects diverse talents and ways
of learning.
There are many roads to learning. People bring different talents
and styles of learning to college. Brilliant students in the
seminar room may be all thumbs in the lab or art studio. Students
rich in hands-on experience may not do so well with theory.
Students need to the opportunity to show their talents and learn in
ways that work for them. Then they can be pushed to learning in
new ways that do not come so easily.
General Education Course Requirements
All courses accepted
as components of CSU, Chico’s General Education (GE) program must also
help students use writing to engage in rigorous study of the body of
knowledge essential to the discipline represented by the course
content. Each GE course section must include the following:
• A writing requirement (at least 2500 words,
total), or comparable problem or laboratory set requirement, in the
genres and forms appropriate to the discipline. This requirement
is intended to engage students in a rigorous study of the bodies of
knowledge represented in the course, including the ways in which
writing constructs and communicates knowledge.
• Multiple writing assignments, at least one of which
is graded and returned to students prior to the due date of the later
assignments
• Some significant, written work within the first two
weeks of the semester. returned to students with informative feedback
as soon as possible. This requirement is intended to assess entry-level
knowledge, attitudes, and skills, and to provide feedback on coursework
expectations.
Course Description:
This course is a
geographical survey of several of the world's major regions with
emphasis on those features important to an understanding of cultural
differences and economic and human sustainability. This course presents
fundamental geographic concepts in the context of the world's places
and regions. Special emphasis is placed on factors that link and
isolate peoples of the world.
Course Objectives:
- To increase students
understanding of their local geographical context.
- To develop students'
knowledge of the earth's physical systems and
- To develop students'
knowledge of their connections to, and interdependencies with, other
people and places around the world.
- To develop students'
skills in synthesizing and analyzing information, including
Internet-based information.
- To develop students'
skills in writing and discussing their ideas.
- To help students
read, listen, observe, and reason critically.
Course Format: This is an online readings
course. We never meet. We read, do exercises, take 2 exams
and write a paper. Students may utilize the chat room feature on
the our Vista site. I will not monitor chats and they will not be
graded. Students should utilize the chat room as a support
tool. You can exchange questions, information and helpful hints
in the chat room.
Email: Students
should utilize the email feature on the our Vista site
for all communication with me. Sometimes students ask questions that
are shared by other students. In such cases, I'll post my answer
as an announcement on the Vista site.
Office Hours: I also will use office
hours to answer students’ email inquiries. This will require patience.
Students should not expect immediate responses to emails. I will
respond only during office hours.
Web-site:
I will regularly update the course web-site. Students must
visit the site to be aware of changes and additions.
Readings: A
fundamental element of a liberal education is the development of the
ability to read critically. Hence, your success in this course largely
depends on the amount of time and effort you devote to the assigned
readings.
Question Sets: To ensure that students keep up
with the assigned readings, students must complete question sets that
guide them through assigned textbook readings. You do not turn in
question sets to be graded. You simply complete them to prepare
yourself for the exams. I post question set keys every week or so
that you may check your answers against mine.
Atlas Exercises: Students
will complete several atlas exercises during the course. These
are self-directed exercises that you will not turn in to me.
Similar to questions sets, I post keys every week or so that you may check your answers
against mine.
I use atlas exercise to create exam questions.
Exams: There are 2
exams, a mid-term and a final. They are open book exams that
include information from the readings, question sets and atlas
exercises. Exams contain 25-30 multiple choice
questions. I will make exams available for a 48-hour period.
Students will have ~60 minutes to complete exams.
Make-up Exams: No make-up exams will be given.
Research Project: Students are required to complete
a research project in this course. The research project is an annotated bibliography
of at least 2500 words. Online students will turn in this project
as an email attachment. The attachment must in a MS Word format.
Plagiarism:
Unfortunately,
students have committed plagiarism on their annotated bibliographies
during past semesters. They copied work from an online source and
presented it as their own. I referred these students to judicial
affairs and asked that they receive the most severe penalty. I
will continue to do so.
The University
catalogue
http://www.csuchico.edu/catalog/cat05/
includes an overly general
description of activities that constitute plagiarism. I have
included it below.
"Plagiarism: Copying homework answers from
your text to hand in for a grade; failing to give credit for ideas,
statement of facts, or conclusions derived from another source;
submitting a paper downloaded from the Internet or submitting a
friend's paper as your own; claiming credit for artistic work (such as
a music composition, photo, painting, drawing, sculpture, or design)
done by someone else."
Please
review the detailed explanation of plagiarism found at this site: http://www.collegeboard.com/article/0,3868,2-10-0-10314,00.html. Please use
in-text citations to give credit to your sources. If you
have any questions about plagiarism, please contact me.
Grades:
Academic Policies and Regulations
Final grades are based
on % of 175 total points, earned from the categories below.
A=92-100%; B= 80-91%;
C=68-79%; D=50-67%; and F= less than 50%.
| Exam 1 |
50
points |
| Final
Exam |
50
points |
| Research Project |
75 points |
| Total |
175
points |
Required Materials:
CSU-Chico's bookstore will have the first two books on the list
below. You can also
bargain shop online. I like http://www.abebooks.com/
-
Concepts and Regions in Geography, 1st
or 2nd edition. de Blij, H.J. and P. O.
Muller (2005) John Wiley & Sons: New York. ISBN 0-471-64991-0
-
Goode's World Atlas, 21st edition. Rand McNally.
-
The Lexus and the Olive Tree (2000). Thomas Friedman. Published by Anchor Books. ISBN: 0385499345
- Inexpensive used
copies of this book can be found online or in used bookstes, so I have
not asked the BMU to order this one. Purchase this one online at
abesbooks or some other site. We will not need it until the
4th week of the semester.
-
Reserve readings available on-line.
Online Resources:
Language, Vocabulary
and Esoterica
Magazines and Newspapers
Maps
Population
Religion
Tentative Schedule:
Week 1 (August 27-31) Course requirements; Introduction to Geography
Question Set 1
Answer Key
8/29 Orientation paper due:
Students will
turn in a double-spaced, 250-word essay in which they answer the
questions listed below. Submit your paper in the body of an email,
not as an attachment to the Vista site.
1) Why did you enroll in this course?
2) Why did you choose to complete this theme?
3) What international experience do you have?
4) What do you hope to learn in this course?
5) Which regions most interest you?
6) Which global issues most interest you?
7) Who are you?
Week 2 (Sept. 3-7) Europe
Question
Set 2
Answer Key
Europe Atlas Exercise
Key
Web
Resources:
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/europe/europe_ref01.jpg
Week
3 (Sept 10-14) Europe
Annotated Bibliography information: I have received questions about
topics for this assignment. I allow a wide range of topics
because I want students to research a topic that interests
them. My only restrictions are that the topic must be
focused in a region other than the USA and the topic must be
mappable. Past topics have included: drug trafficking, AIDS
prevention in Africa, Chinese markets for endangered wildlife species,
human trafficking, contemporary slavery, legalization of traditional
coca use...
I encourage you to send me any ideas that you have for the
assignment. I'll let you know if you are on the right track.
Web
Resources:
Roman Empire
European
Union Map
http://www.3dphoto.net/stereo/world/europe/great_britain/gb/great_britain_locator.html
Required
Online Reading:
The two
links below contain
information about immigration to Europe. Read them and consider
the parallels between migration of laborers to the US and EU.
http://www.trinity.edu/jdunn/billysjourney.htm
Europe's
Back Doors.
Required
Online Reading:
The two links below provide
information about the recent controversy between European newspapers
and the Islamic world.
http://pewforum.org/docs/index.php?DocID=60
This
link will inform you about the growing population of Muslims in
the EU. You are not required to read the pdf at this link
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0201/dailyUpdate.html?s=rel?s=widep
This link
will inform you about the current controversy.
Week 4 (Sept 17-21) Middle
America
Question Set 10th
edition
Key
Atlas
exercise
Key
Required
Reading
Friedman
Chapter 1 Questions
Key
Week 5 (Sept. 24-28) Middle
America continued
Required
Online Reading
U.S. Interventions in Latin
America
Maquiladora Life
History Moving North
Maquiladora comes from the Spanish word maquilar meaning to perform a
task for another. In Mexico, the word referred to the portion of grain
collected by millers from grinding other farmers' grains.
Friedman Chapter
3 Questions
Key
Week 6 (Oct.
1-5) South
America
Question
set
Answers
Atlas
exercise
Atlas exercise key
Week
7 (Oct. 8-12) South
America
Hello Onliners, this week's reading is
short. Follow the links below to learn about the role
of coca in Andean South America.
The ODCCP link is a study from 1965 that describes the advantages to
coca-growing in Bolivia. It also includes a map that shows
where Bolivians grew, and continue to grow, coca legally. Be sure
to look at the tax pie charts to understand the importance that coca
production has for Bolivia.
Plan Colombia is a US-Colombia plan that came about during the Clinton
administration. Read this document closely. Consider what
amounts of money are being used for what activities and supplies.
The three bottom links are press abstracts that relect the complexity
of the War on Drugs.
Required
Online Readings:
ODCCP
- Bulletin on Narcotics - 1965 Issue 3 - 002
Plan Colombia
Bolivian Failure
to Curb Cocaine Production Spurs U.S. Aid Cut
Defense Spending Holds
Steady
Bolivian Health
Minister Vows to Press Legalization of Coca
Week
8 (Oct. 15-19)
Exam 1 will be available
October 16-19. The exam will be available
at our Vista site from Tuesday 8 am until Friday 5 pm.
Past exams
Research
Proposal Due: October 19
Proposal
Guidelines
Editing
Guidelines
Week
9 (Oct. 22-26) North
Africa/Southwest Asia
Question set
Key
Atlas exercise
Key
Friedman Questions
Key
Web
Resources:
British Mandate
1920-1946
PASSIA:
Palestinian Academic Society for the Study of International Affairs -
Jerusalem
http://www.mideastweb.org/mrefugees.htm
http://www.islamicity.com/mosque/pillars.shtml
http://www.adherents.com/Religions_By_Adherents.html
Week 10 (Oct. 29- Nov. 2) North
Africa/Southwest Asia continued
Required
Online Reading:
http://www.npr.org/programs/totn/transcripts/2002/sep/020919.conan.html
Web
Resources:
http://www.naqshbandi.org/ottomans/maps/default.htm
http://www.jafi.org.il/education/100/maps/index.html
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~gov46/sykes-picot-1916.gif
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~gov46/uk-mideast-1917-1971.gif
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~gov46/dates-independence.gif
http://www.passia.org/palestine_facts/MAPS/0_pal_facts_MAPS.htm
http://www.mideastweb.org/mrefugees.htm
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/atlas_middle_east/iraq_timeline.jpg
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/middle_east_and_asia/iraq_dissident_areas_1992.jpg
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/middle_east_and_asia/iraq_oilfields_1992.jpg
Week 11 (Nov. 5-9) South
Asia
Example
of annotated bibliography
This link,
http://www.aallnet.org/products/2004-47.pdf, leads to an example of an annotated
bibliography that a student copied during a previous semester.
The primary lesson is do not copy or plagiarize. The secondary
lesson is that, although it is much longer than your assignment, it
provides excellent examples of annotations.
Question set
Key
Atlas
exercise
Key
Web
Resources:
Untitled
Week 12 (Nov.
12-16) South
Asia continued
Required
Online Readings:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6280027.stm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6257057.stm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/6288247.stm
Web
Resources:
Indian Railway,
Railway Network India map, clickable rail network India map, eastern
railway network map, central railway network map, northern railway map,
southern railway map, konkan railway map
Week 13 (Nov. 19-23)
Thanksgiving
Holiday. Enjoy yourselves!
Week
14 (Nov. 26-30): Sub-Saharan
Africa
Question set
Key
Atlas
exercise
Key
Week
15 (Dec. 3-7)
Sub-Saharan
Africa continued
You have completed all of the
questions sets and atlas exercises. This week you should make
final edits and complete your annotated bibliographies. They are
due on Friday, December 7. Be certain to review the assignment
instructions
above and the description about plagiarism. If you have any
questions, contact me.
The instructions for Turnitin.com are at this link. This is a required
part of your
annotated bibliography assignment.
Web Resources:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/3247672.stm
Map - Colonial
Africa in the Twentieth Century
Week
16 (Dec. 10-14)
Review for the exam
Final Exam Week (Dec.
17-21)
The final exam will be available from Tuesday at 8 am until Friday at 5
pm.
Final
Exam
Final exam questions from past
semesters