First Year Experience                                    SLS 1501

Fall 2014 Section U19A  for QBIC only

Tuesday:  12:30-1:45PM          GC 280

 

INSTRUCTOR: John Makemson

OFFICE: OE 246/247
PHONE: 305-348-3097
E-MAIL: makemson@fiu.edu

Website: www.fiu.edu/~makemson




  

                             

  PURPOSE

This course will serve as an introduction to FIU and to the overall experience of university life. It will provide an orientation to the University’s policies and procedures and introduce students to the various resources and support services that are available to help promote and support academic success. The MOST IMPORTANT thing you can learn here is HOW to STUDY.  

OBJECTIVES

The main objectives of this course are to get you to become an ACTIVE  LEARNER and an INDEPENDENT STUDENT:

1.  understanding the basic academic requirements, policies and procedures of the university;

2.  managing the university environment in ways that will support completion of an academic degree;

3.  understanding how to use the resources and services available on campus;

4.  developing an understanding of the complex issues and choices confronting the college student;

5.  understanding and managing the fundamentals of academic research; and

6.  developing a sense of connection with the Honors College through exposure to the Honors College community.

RESEARCH

 The course will introduce students to various areas of research including:

1.  What is research and what is it not;

2.  Why engage in research;

3.  How do you develop research questions and hypotheses;

4.  What are the different methodologies used in research (e.g. historical, qualitative, quantitative, etc).

To accommodate and enhance learning in this area, students will receive a comprehensive introduction to the library, particularly its electronic resources, and instruction on accessing and using the various search engines available.

REQUIRED TEXT

 The First Year: Making the Most of College, 8th Edition

 Edited by Charley Andrews and Larry Lunsford

ATTENDANCE/PARTICIPATION (25 points)

Attendance and participation are mandatory; attendance will be taken at the beginning of every class.  All students begin the semester with 25 points for attendance/participation.  One absence will not lower a student's grade.  Each subsequent absence will decrease the student's attendance grade by 5 points.  

 

CAMPUS INVOLVEMENT (15 Points)

Students are to participate in a minimum of three activities during the semester. 

Selected activities should include the following categories: 

 

¨            One social/recreational activity

¨            One FIU Honors College event

¨            One academic or career activity 

 

A one-page paper should summarize the experience and demonstrate the student's reaction to the experience.  Be sure to be specific and provide detail.  Assume I know nothing about the subject and you are educating me.  A one-page paper should be aboutt 300 words and have one-inch margins all around, typed, double-spaced with 12 pt font.  Each paper is worth 5 points. 

 

Late papers will be penalized 1 point per day (not class period), including weekends.  See assignment portion of syllabus for due dates.

 

Quiz (10 Points)

Students will be given a quiz at the beginning of the semester.  The quiz will test their understanding of biology.

 

HOMEWORK (30 points)

Exercises/activities will be assigned and collected regularly.  Each day's assignment is worth 3 points (collectively).  Late assignments will be penalized 1 point per class period.  Incomplete assignments will be penalized 1.5 or all points.

 

Common Reading Paper (15 points)

Choose a topic from No Turning Back and relate that to transitioning from high school to college.



 


ADDITIONAL POLICIES:

Readings: Each day's reading will form the basis for in-class lecture and discussion. Students are expected to have completed all the assigned reading before each class, and will come prepared to thoughtfully listen, speak, and learn.  I will typically call on several of students at the beginning of a class period, perhaps at other points as well, to summarize or react to particular readings assigned.

Civility and Respect:  Hopefully, some of the course material will  generates lively discussions, it is likely that people will sometimes express differing views and opinions.  While it is not necessary to agree with others' views, it is essential that all class members appreciate the importance of listening to and respecting differences of opinion.

Cell Phones:  Cell phones are to be turned off during class.  They are disruptive to both the learning process and to other students in the classroom.  If a student's cell phone goes off that student will be asked to leave the room and be given an absent mark for the day.

Incompletes: Incompletes will be given only in cases of unforeseeable and severe circumstances beyond the student's control, such as documented illness or injury.

Plagiarism: Students engage in plagiarism when they present the opinions or arguments of someone else as their own.  Plagiarism is both dishonest and counter-productive.  It defeats a purpose of education—the improvement of the student's powers of thinking, reasoning, and expression.  Plagiarism occurs when a sequence of ideas is transferred from a source to a paper without a process of digestion, integration, criticism, and inquiry in the writer's mind and without acknowledgment.  Plagiarism may even occur when one expresses another's sequence of ideas, arrangement of material, or pattern of thought in one's own words.    

Students should be aware that it is relatively easy to prove plagiarism.  Web-based search engines make it easier than ever before to detect such activities, and I routinely run suspicious passages through one or more such filters.  If a student is suspected of having plagiarized another’s work he or she may be required to provide the instructor with original notes and outlines for papers in question, as well as photocopies of the sources consulted.

Academic misconduct: Examples of academic misconduct include students who present false Doctors' notes, who pretend that they have a family or medical emergency, or who seriously hinder other students' scholarly activities. 

Any student engaging in either plagiarism or academic misconduct will receive a grade of F in the course and the case will be brought to the appropriate disciplinary body (the processes are set forth in the Student Handbook). 

The University’s policies on  may be found on the FIU web-site at: Academic Misconduct and Code of Academic Integrity

 

 


 

Syllabus

                                                                               
                                                                            Link to Stephen Chew Videos:  www.youtube.com/watch?v=RH95h36NChI


 DAY Topics/Activity     Readings Due
Tues Aug 26 Introduction, Study Misconceptions
No Turning Back
Chapter 1
 
Tues Sept 2
Studying
Stephen Chew Videos

Chapter 3       Study? 3.1+3.2
Tues Sept 9
Making Transitions + Owning the University

Chapter 2


2.1 + 2.2,
Tues Sept 16
 Academic Times
Short Class
Chapters 4 +5

5.1 +5.2 + 5.3
Tues Sept 23
Library Searches
 Chapter  7

7.1
Tues Sept 30 Stress and Relationships
Chapters 6 + 8
8.1 + 8.2
Tues Oct 7
Diversity and Leadership
Short Class
Chapters 9 + 10
9.1 + 10.1 + 10.3
Tues Oct 14
Global and Finances
In Class Experiment
Chapters 11 + 12
11.3 + 12.2
Tues Oct 21
Health: Body and Mind
Chapters 13+14
13.1 +14.1 + 14.2
Tues Oct 28
Careers
Short Class
Chapter 15
MyMajorMatch Results
Tues Nov 4

Election Day

Putting It Altogether
Chapter 16
Professional School or Graduate School Requirements.

Turn in Campus Involvement Paper


 FIU GRADING SCALE

                                            

From  To    Grade
94.5 100 A
90.5  94 A-
87.5 90 B+
84.5  87 B
81.5 84 B-
78.5 81 C+
75.5  78 C
72.5 75 C-
69.5 72 D+
66.5 69 D
63.5  66 D-

63 or fewer points

F