ANT 2413
Section 3100
Introduction to Cultural Anthropology
Summer 1998
Instructor: Michael Pool
Office Hours:
Rio Grande Campus, Annex 250.1 223-3403
Monday 11:00-12:00
Messages: 223-3000 (Rio Grande Campus)
Home: 280-7654 (Do Not call after 10:00 pm)
E-mail: mpool@austin.cc.tx.us
Anthropology Web Page: http://www.austin.cc.tx.us/pool/
Syllabus
Classes start May 26
Anthropology and Culture
May 27
Cultural Anthropology: Preface, Putting the World in
Perspective, Introduction
Part I, and Chapter 1
Video 1: The Nature of Anthropology
Study Guide: Lesson 1
May 28
Cultural Anthropology: Chapter 2
Video 2: The Nature of Culture
Study Guide: Lessons 2
Beginnings of Human Culture
June 1
Cultural Anthropology: Chapter 3
Video 3: How Cultures are Studied
Study Guide: Lesson 3
Language
June 2
Cultural Anthropology: Introduction Part II and Chapter
4
Video 4: Language and Communications
Study Guide: Lesson 4
Psychological Anthropology
June 3
Cultural Anthropology: Chapter 5
Study Guide: Lessons 5 & 6
Video 6: Alejandro Mamani: A Case Study in Psychological Anthropology
Test 1 June 8 (Chapters 1-5)
Subsistence Strategies
June 9
Cultural Anthropology: Chapter 6
Video 7: Patterns of Subsistence: Food Foragers and Pastoralists
Video 8: Patterns of Subsistence: The Food Producers
Study Guide: Lessons 7 & 8
Economic Anthropology
June 10
Cultural Anthropology: Introduction Part III and Chapter
7
Video 10: The Highland Maya: A Case Study in Economic Anthropology
Study Guide: Lessons 9 & 10
Social Organization
June 11
Cultural Anthropology: Chapter 8
Video 11: Sex and Marriage
Study Guide: Lesson 11
June 15
Cultural Anthropology: Chapters 9
Video 13: The Yucatec Maya: A Case Study in Marriage and the Family
Study Guide: Lessons 12 & 13
June 16
Cultural Anthropology: Chapter 10
Video 14: Kinship and Descent, Part I
Video 15: Kinship and Descent, Part II
Study Guide: Lessons 14 & 15
June 15 Extracredit Approval Deadline
June 17
Cultural Anthropology: Introduction Part IV and Chapter
11
Video 17: The Aymara: A Case Study in Social Stratification
Study Guide: Lessons 16 &17
June 19 Last Day to Withdraw
Test 2 June 22 (Chapters 6-11)
Political Organization
June 23
Cultural Anthropology: Chapter 12
Video 18: Political Organization
Video 19: Social Control
Study Guide: Lessons 18 & 19
Religion
June 24
Cultural Anthropology: Chapter 13
Video 21: The Asmat of New Guinea: A Case Study in Religion and
Magic
Study Guide: Lessons 20 &21
Arts
June 25
Cultural Anthropology: Chapter 14
Video 23: New Orleans Black Indians: A Case Study in the Arts
Study Guide: Lessons 22 & 23
Culture Change
June 29
Cultural Anthropology: Chapter 15
Video 25: Cricket the Trobriand Way: A Case Study in Culture
Change
Study Guide: Lessons 24 & 25
June 30
Cultural Anthropology: Chapter 16
Video 26: The Future of Humanity
Study Guide: Lesson 26
June 29 Extracredit Deadline
Test 3 July 2 (Chapters 12-16)
Final Exam July 6
Study Guide Due July 6
Texts
William A. Haviland (1996) Cultural Anthropology, Eighth Edition.
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich College Publishers: Ft. Worth.
Valerie Lynch Lee and Richard T. Searles (1993) Study Guide for
the Telecourse: Faces of Culture, Sixth Edition. Harcourt Brace
College Publishers: Ft. Worth.
Course Description
This course is an examination of the field of cultural anthropology and
its key concepts, and terminology. Related material from physical anthropology,
archaeology, and linguistics will also be presented. The text and the video
series we will use in this class uses the theme of human adaptation to
environmental circumstances as a common thread uniting the apparently disparate
areas of the field.
Course Objectives
-
Understand and appreciate the concept of culture, from the perspective
of anthropologists, as the adaptive mechanism that provides for the survival
of the human species.
-
Recognize underlying similarities as well as the wide range and variability
of human cultures.
-
Recognize and appreciate that there are a number of valid "cultural solutions"
to living on earth.
-
Understand the relationship between culture and the individual.
-
Understand the factors involved in culture change.
-
Gain a broad cross-cultural background against which to view your own culture
as well as contemporary social problems.
-
Know the meanings of basic concepts and terms used by cultural anthropologists.
-
Understand some of the procedures used by anthropologists in studying cultures.
Grading
Tests (20%
each): There are three tests and a comprehensive final exam. Each test
will be objective, consisting of 50 multiple choice questions. One of the
three regular semester tests is optional; the lowest regular semester test
grade will be dropped. If a test is missed, it will count as your optional
test. You are required to provide a scantron sheet (available
at the Campus Store) and a #2 pencil for each test.
Participation (20%): This
part of your grade is based on your attendance and participation in class
discussion. If you attend all the classes but do not ask or answer questions
or take part in the discussion, you will get a B. A higher grade
will be based on the degree to which you participate and are prepared.
Basically, I will increase the attendance grade by a letter grade for those
who participate on a consistent basis. At the end of the semester, I will
review for the class those people getting the participation increase and
solicit input. Mainly I will want the class to point out those individuals
they feel deserve the grade increase that did not get it.
Attendance Grade Guide Lines:
B: 4 or less absences
C: 5-6 absences
D: 7-8 absences
F: >8 absences
Study Guide (20%): Complete the
Vocabulary Check, Completion, and Self-Test sections of the study guide.
Complete the lessons for any videos not viewed in class. As a study aid,
look at the short-answer essay questions and consider how to answer them;
then look at the answer key following them. Hand the Study Guide in at
the end of the semester. Used study guides
require instructor permission.
Chapter Summaries: Write a one page summary
of each chapter and three questions concerning that chapter and you will
receive ½ point of extracredit added to your final grade if it is
handed to me by the beginning of the lecture over that material. I will
accept the chapter summary and questions late up until the test over that
material; you will receive ¼ point added to your final grade. You
will receive no credit after the test. By doing these chapter summaries
and questions, you can receive up to eight points added to your final grade.
Policies
1. Two points will be deducted from your grade for each
calendar day an assignment is late after its due date.
Points will be deducted until a maximum grade of 70
can be earned; points will not be deducted below a grade of 70. After July
6, a score of zero will be recorded. The Study Guide must be handed in
by July 6 or a score of 0 will be recorded.
2. The Study Guide may handed in either by giving it
to me in class or during my office hours, placing it in my mail box after
getting a date stamp from the receptionist, or by routing it to me
from any campus through the ACC mail system after getting a date stamp
from the receptionist to Michael Pool at Rio Grande Campus.
3. It is not my policy to drop students; it is the
student's responsibility to drop the class.
4. Students are responsible for informing me when they
show up for class after roll is called.
5. Incompletes are discouraged and will only be given
for extenuating circumstances. Time conflicts and poor time management
are not acceptable reasons; ACC has a very liberal drop policy you can
use in these circumstances.
6. In cases of scholastic dishonesty (cheating) and
after meeting with the student or notifying the student of the reasons
for believing scholastic dishonesty occurred, a grade of 0 will be recorded
for any work determined by the instructor to result from an act of scholastic
dishonesty. The Dean of Student Services will be notified of the incident
and the academic penalty and will determine if any further disciplinary
penalty will be assessed. The student can accept the penalty or dispute
in writing to the Dean, within five (5) College class days (excluding weekends)
of the student's receipt of written notice of the academic penalty assessed,
either the facts of the offense or the academic penalty assessed. The student
is referred to the ACC Student Handbook for further details.
Extracredit
Book Review
You will receive up to 15 points added to your final grade for writing
a 5 page review of an ethnography that you select and the instructor approves.
An A on the review will get 15 points, a B 10 points, and a C 5 points.
Remember the summer session is short and you have to start within the first
2-3 weeks. You will be quaranteed at least a C if you meet the following
guidelines:
typed, double-spaced with one inch margins, no more than 12 point type
(10 CPI or more)
a minimum of 5 pages (4 1/2 pages not accepted).
received by the due date and not later
an ethnography of a specific group of people anywhere in the world,
but no collections of papers
instructor approval of the book
Tape Viewing Locations
Round Rock Public Library; ACC Libraries/LRS (Cypress
Creek, Eastridge, Northridge, Rio Grande, Riverside, Pinnacle).
If you have any comments or questions about this Web page, please contact
Michael Pool at
512-223-3385
snail mail: 1212 Rio Grande, Austin, TX 78748
Anthropology Program
Last Updated 5-27-98
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