Classes:
Law and Society
Race, Crime, Law
Susan's World
Previous Weeks - Spring 2007
HOME

Prof. Takata.
Department of Criminal Justice
University of Wisconsin, Parkside
Latest Update: September 29, 2007
Newsflash
Welcome Back!
Dear Habermas Worshop - Wednesday, September 12th at 12 noon in the microcomputing classroom (D1 level of the library)
"Learning is messy! - Yvone Lenard
This local hub site will serve as a forum for messages about:
- Susan's World
- New on the Site
- Site Visits and Field Trips
- To submit a message,
Prof. Takata at takata@uwp.edu
All UWP Classes, Announcements
- Wednesday, September 12th at 12 noon -- Optional Dear Habermas Workshop in the microcomputer classroom in the Library.
All UWP Classes, Fall 2007 Academic Assessment
- Keep in mind:
** the 6Cs: courtesy, competency, consistency, cooperation, communication, and creativity.
We expect work that will produce a professional and competitive product in a real market. We also expect that even our most creative workers will recognize throughout the semester an effective product presentation depends on good work standards from every member of the team. Team morale and expectations have a great deal to do with enforcing works standards collectively. Time to learn that process.
At work, you aren't given tests. Neither are you here. But you are expected to demonstrate your competency and participation. Each class or volunteer participation with us is a contract job to which you commit for the semester. We not only expect the work to be done, but we also expect you to find effective ways to let us know what you are doing, and consequently, that your final work product will be a good one.
If, for whatever reason, your work is not meeting our production standard, we are sure that you will be in touch with us to either seek employee assistance or advice. One hot clue that you may be slipping is if your name appears no where on blogs, shared readings, on small discussion groups, and if we haven't heard from you. ** Bloom and Krathwohl's Taxonomy of Learning: latent learning, recognition, recall, application, analysis, evaluation, and synthesis.
Grades are interactive and interdependent. You are responsible for telling me what you have accomplished, and verifying it either in class, in person, in an email dialogue, or meeting with me. The first eight weeks is worth one-third of your course grade, while the second eight weeks constitutes two-thirds of your course grade. The minimum requirements for a course grade of "C" are: 1) completion of all weekly discussion questions, 2) participatory class attendance (not only attending but participating in class discussions), and 3) at least a "C" average in pop quiz grades (to note "do not count" on a majority of pop quizzes is below average). For an explanation, read and Grades.
Readings for All UWP Classes:
- What Does Teaching Mean? Where Does Teaching Happen?.
- Frequently Asked Questions (and Answers) on How We Teach and Why
- "Who's Habermas? Why Habermas?"
- Letters of Recommendation Index
- Avoiding Plagiarism
All UWP Classes, site visits and field trips:
TBA
Law and Society (CRMJ/SOCA 359)
- Course Syllabus
- NEW Kafka's Before the Law due Friday, September 14th. Questions assigned in class, and are linked here.
- NEW The Teaching/Learning Model due Monday, September 17th
Race, Crime, Law (CRMJ/SOCA 365)
- Course Syllabus
- NEW The Teaching/Learning Model due Monday, September 17th
Past Weekly Hubpages - Fall 2007
Past Weekly My World Pages - Fall 2007