AMERICAN FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
SPRING -FALL SEMESTER
POLS-1113R (ZAP 1568 &1569)
By
Internet
Credit hours: 3
Instructor: Gary Rutledge
Office: 303 (Prep. Hall)
Phone: 918-343-7800
E-mail: rutledge@garyrutledge.com
Website: http://www.garyrutledge.com
IMPORTANT! RETAIN THIS SYLLABUS FOR REFERENCE THROUGHOUT THE SEMESTER.
COURSE
DESCRIPTION
American political system at the national level, process of government,
democratic theory and development of the Constitution, citizen
participation through voting, interest groups and political parties.
| Course
learning objectives
Understand specified meanings of democracy, theoretical background and practices of western democracy. Understand the role of interest groups in political systems. Understand the role of parties in the American political system and describe the American party system. |
Supported Program Goals To
develop a level of competence in the core discipline(s) of the social
sciences to allow for further inquiry and study. |
How Evaluated Through
class discussions, written web assignments, subject quizzes, pre/post
tests, midterm/final papers, midterm/final exams. |
|
Understand
the role of government in the everyday life of the citizen. |
To
prepare students to function successfully in a society that is
heading toward globalization and becoming more culturally diverse |
Through
class discussions, on-line case studies, and written web
assignments. |
|
Understand
controversial issues that have profound implications for the way men
and women perceive themselves. |
To
equip students with the academic skills necessary to successfully
address increasingly complex, multidisciplinary problems in the
social sciences. |
Through
class discussions, on-line case studies, and written web
assignments. |
|
Work
collaboratively with other students. |
To
equip students with the academic skills necessary to successfully
address increasingly complex, multidisciplinary problems in the
social sciences. |
Through
collaborative on-line case studies and on-line threaded discussions. |
|
Express
ideas orally, in writing, and online |
To
equip students with the academic skills necessary to successfully
address increasingly complex, multidisciplinary problems in the
social sciences. |
Through
class discussions, on-line case studies, written web assignments,
on-line threaded discussions. |
PREREQUISITE
College-level Reading and Writing skills will be required for
successful completion of this course. Basic computer skills, such as the
ability to handle e-mail, a search engine, and a word processor will be
essential. The student should be able to create, save, and copy and
paste documents.
TEXT
AND OTHER MATERIALS
Berman, Larry, and Bruce Allen Murphy. Approaching Democracy. 2007, 5th Edition, New
Jersey:
Pearson Education, Inc.
ISBN: 0-13-174401-1
COURSE
OBJECTIVES
At the conclusion of this course, the student will master the following
objectives
1. Develop an understanding of, and appreciation for, our democratic
form of government, and the unique relationship between the Federal,
State, and local governments.
2. Develop a continued interest in governmental matters after completing
this course by maintaining her/his examination of current political
affairs.
3. Develop an understanding of the workings of government agencies.
4. Increase an understanding of the citizen's responsibilities to, and
individual rights under, our form of government.
5. Have an enhanced appreciation for the citizen's obligation in the
process for selecting capable public officials.
6. Improve her/his knowledge of United States foreign affairs and the
political nature of the world.
7. Develop an appreciation of the United States Government through
comparison with the governments of other nations.
8. Better understand the broad application to the U.S. Constitution to
the lives of American Citizens and to other members of the global
community.
INSTRUCTORS WEBSITE
INTERACTIVE WORK SCHEDULE
The heart
of the Website is an interactive Work Schedule and its calendar. The calendar a weekly
schedule of work with appropriate links to learning tools in the Website. The site is also interactive in that students can use
it to communicate privately or openly with other students and the instructor.
Weekly assignments, Quizzes, Case Studies, Web Assignments, and Research Papers are submitted
directly into the Website on or before the due dates shown on the calendar of
the Work Schedule. Threaded discussions for each unit of work should be
posted on my Threaded Discussion Forum and are also due according to the Work Schedule Calendar.
INSTRUCTORS WEBSITE GRADE PAGE
Students with proper ID numbers may view a current summary of
their grades from any computer. Grades should be checked often for
posting accuracy and grade average.
To check your grades:
Go to: www.garyrutledge.com
Click on "Grades"
When master grade page opens, click on the appropriate button for your class.
Scan down class grade page for your ID# and grades
Column headings are abbreviations of the unit assignments and will be in
the same sequence as course calendar.
UNIT/SUBJECT QUIZZES
On-line multiple-choice quizzes are due according to the due date on the
Government Work Schedule for each
unit/subject of work.
WEB ASSIGNMENTS
Short written essay assignments are due according to the due date on
the Government Work Schedule for each
unit/subject of work. These short essay
assignments will be submitted directed to the Gary Rutledge Learning site (GRLS)
with links provided in the GRLS Work Schedule. Web Assignments less than the
required length will have one letter grade deducted.
THREADED DISCUSSIONS
Students should log in to the GRLS Threaded Discussion Forum on my website
for the unit of work appropriate to the
Government Work Schedule calendar and respond to the discussion question for
that unit. Use the "Username" and "Password" assigned to you. You are already
registered with this information. Post your two-page response to the question,
using at least a couple of sources, and a short response to
at least two other student's postings. More responses to other students are
better.
MIDTERM MULTIPLE CHOICE EXAM
A midterm exam of approximately 40 multiple choice questions
will be due according to the due date on the Government Work Schedule.
FINAL ESSAY PAPER
A final paper of at least ten (10) pages will be due according to the due date
on the Government Work Schedule. The subject of the paper will be chosen from
the subjects found
on the GRLS under Final Essay Assignment. Papers less than ten pages will have one letter grade deducted.
Summer classes will not have to submit a Final Paper, so the Threaded
discussion grade will be increased 10 points in value to account for the
lack of a final paper.
FINAL MULTIPLE CHOICE EXAM
A comprehensive final exam of approximately 50 multiple choice questions
will be due according to the due date on the Government Work Schedule. Most of questions will come from
the chapters covered since mid-term; however, some questions will be
scattered over the fist chapters as well.
METHOD OF EVALUATION
The grading scale is 100-90=A, 89-80=B, 79-70=C, 69-0=F. Grades will accumulate from a
combination of written web assignments, threaded discussion, multiple choice chapter quizzes, on-line
case studies, multiple choice midterm, written midterm web assignment, multiple
choice final exam, written final web assignment, and in some cases outside class projects for extra credit.
EXTRA CREDIT
If a student has completed all assigned work that student may contact the instructor to
contract for extra credit work. No more than five points (one-half of one letter grade) of
a students total grade can come from extra credit work. Discuss all questions and concerns
with the instructor as soon as possible.
LATE ASSIGNMENTS
A deduction of one letter grade may be assessed to any work submitted late. Late
work
will be accepted only at the discretion of the instructor on a case by
case basis.
PLAGIARISM
Plagiarism is the
representation of the words or ideas of another as one’s own, including:
direct quotation without both attribution and indication that the
material is being directly quoted; e.g. quotation marks; paraphrase
without attribution; paraphrase with or without attribution where the
wording of the original remains substantially intact and is represented
as the author’s own; expression in one’s own words, but without
attribution, of ideas, arguments, lines of reasoning, facts, processes,
or other products of the intellect where such material is learned from
the work of another and is not part of the general fund of common
knowledge.
AMERICANS WITH
DISABILITIES ACT
Students needing more information about Student Disability Services should contact the office of Student Development at 918-343-7707.
WITHDRAWAL
STATEMENT
CHANGE OF
STUDENT INFORMATION
CHANGE OF
SYLLABUS INFORMATION