3123 Home Objectives and Format <Back

Prerequisite: POLS 1101.
Outcomes: Students will understand the history and functioning of presidential elections, explore issues involved in these elections from analytical and practical viewpoints, and be aware of other actors that influence, provide resources to, and regulate presidential elections.

The substance of this course consists of information from several sources. In class, we will engage in as much discussion and as little lecture as possible. To that end, you need to do the readings before their assigned date. Be familiar enough with them to discuss and answer questions about them. We will also try to review the 2020 presidential election to get a "real time" view. Therefore, you must also stay informed of the progress of these events. We will follow current events mainly as covered in the Google News/Politics web site.

In addition to the assigned readings, we will review Google News/Politics articles (or articles from other sources) each week. You will present and lead class discussions of these. Together, we will select articles that complement class topics*. So in a real sense, you will help to shape course content! Of course, you all are responsible for all of the assigned articles, text, and any other materials. In presenting articles, I would like you each to assume a particular role (e.g., candidates, party strategists, the press). This helps us gain insights into different perspectives on electoral and partisan issues. A list of roles appears in the POLS 3123 Role Page.

For most weeks, the class meets Monday/Wednesday only. Online discussion replaces Friday classes: We will begin new topics and readings after each Wednesday class. You are required to post comments on that material to our D2L ("eLearning") discussion site. You are required to post at least one substantive response (1. not just "I liked...", or "I didn't like" or similar words; 2. analytical, not judgmental) to discussion/notes I will post on D2L each week and at least one substantive original comment. Treat online discussions as required readings – you are responsible for, and may be tested on them. There may be videos to view or other activities assigned as part of these discussions.

 

  Exams    Written Exercises    Other 90+ = A
Exam #1................................................................
15%
 Bibliography/Outline.............................................
5%
Online Discussions..............................................
10%
80 to 89 = B
Exam #2................................................................
15%
 Project..................................................................
10%
Articles/Role-Playing............................................
5%
70 to 79 = C
Final......................................................................
15%
 Presentation..........................................................
10%
Participation/Attendance......................................
5%
60 to 69 = D
 
 Revision................................................................
10%
 
   Grand Total:
  Totals.....................................................................
45%
................................................................................
35%
................................................................................
20%
100%

There are two 'midterms' and a final. Each is 15% of your grade. They consist of two essay questions. A few days before the exam, I will give you four essay questions. On the day of the exam, I will select two of these questions for you to answer. Please do not miss the exams (you know our schedule now, so plan your schedule well ahead). I will not give makeups unless you 1) notify me or the department in advance (no exceptions); and 2) verify a family/medical emergency in writing. A group project of 18-24+ (depending upon group size) pages (another 10% of your grade) is due in class no later than December 3rd. The exact format and topics will be discussed in class, but you must consult me before proceeding. To prepare you for the project, an annotated bibliography is due by November 5th, and an  annotated outline is due by November 12th. Together, these are worth 5% of your grade. A revision worth 10% of your grade, is due during the last week (see schedule). Do not turn in late papers! If I accept them (and I may not!), you will lose either 5% or 1 point of your paper grade (whichever is greater) for each day late. Your online posts are worth another 10% of your grade. A presentation of your project during the last couple of classes is another 10%. 5% consists of your web article presentations. Finally, 5% consists of your participation in and attendance of class.

While I do not grade on a curve (You earn what you earn, and I hope you all earn “A”s!), the typical class average is around a middle/upper “C” (Despite the often inflated nature of grading, a “C” is averagenot below average; and a “B” is above average). Simply completing the course requirements will most likely earn a “C” (70-79). A “B” (80-89) requires a demonstration of effort beyond just the requirements. An “A” (90-100) requires extraordinary performance. Two final attendance notes: 1. While the UNG attendance policy (see the latest UNG Student Handbook, or UNG Bulletin) applies to this course, and while I will take attendance, I’m only interested in your general attendance. If you’re only absent once or twice, don’t worry. If you’re absent a lot (UNG does not recognize “cuts”), your grade will suffer (note also: late = absent!); 2. Class announcements are considered sufficient notice. So, one way or the other, attendance matters.

Information Literacy (IL): Our class project addresses IL Outcomes #1-4. Using turnitin.com meets #5.

CHEAT = FAIL: Cheating/plagiarizing will result in a 0 for exams/assignments, a 0 for participation/attendance, and forfeiture of all extra credit. I may also pursue academic integrity charges and course failure.
Students are bound by UNG's Integrity Code
I will not lie, cheat, steal, plagiarize,
evade the truth or tolerate those that do
.”
Plagiarism is a UNG academic intetrity
violation and will not be tolerated.
Additional Policies:
http://ung.edu/academic-affairs/policies-and-guidelines/supplemental-syllabus.php
UNG POLITICAL SCIENCE PROJECT DIGNITY DISCLAIMER
Last modified by Carl Cavalli on Tuesday, January 23, 2024