Los Angeles City College – Sp ‘19

Political Science 1 – US (and Cal.) Government – Prof. Joe Meyer

 Mon & Wed 9:35 – Sec 15899

*AND Ralph Bunche Honors Sec 27920

*For Ralph Bunche Honors Program Students:

You do the same assignments, etc as on this syllabus, on the same time schedule. Send all work to me via email. There will not be a separate Canvas shell. I will email you the quiz questions upon request. All Honors Students must meet with the professor, individually to discuss an expanded Course Project and other raised expectations for student performance

This is the Class Home Page AND Syllabus.

 

Helpful Hint - Read This Entire Web Page (and all links).

This class is 15 weeks. It moves very fast - do not fall behind or you will fail!  This class is not easier than a "normal" on campus class...

 It is much more work, at an accelerated pace.

And you DO IT ALONE!!!

Is this all too much for you? Maybe this class is NOT FOR YOU?   

THINK and be honest with yourself.

Table of Contents:

1.   Textbooks, Class Rules & Expectations, SLO Rubric

 

2.   How to Reach Me

 

3.   Schedule (Due Dates)

 

4.   Grading & Assignments Explanations

 

5.   LACC & Related info

 

6.   Week 1 (ONE) Checklist and "Student Statement"

 

 

 

 

 

1. Textbooks, Class Rules & Expectations, SLO Rubric…

GET YOUR FREE E-BOOK NOW and start reading:

Text: "American Government,” contributing editors Krutz, G and Waskiewicz, S. University of Rice, publisher. 2017.

For the free e-book through Staxx for this class: Click Here.

Learn To Use APA.

You MUST use APA citation format for the Course Project and the California State Government Essay: click here for a great page on APA style citations.

Here is the official APA website: www.apastyle.org

All Course Projects must have an APA style references. You are expected to do RESEARCH for your Course Project. You are expected to have citations in your Course Projects using the APA style citation format. Many assignments require citations in APA format.

*For ALL assignments: DO NOT use Headers, etc

 

 

 

 

 

 

Course Objectives:  Students will develop an understanding of and be able to discuss the following concepts: power, federalism, limited government, civil liberties, the pluralist and elite theories of U.S. government, the legislative process, the electoral process, interest groups, the independent judiciary, political parties, domestic and foreign policy and the role of the media in politics. Students will be able to write college level essays on all these topics. Students will be expected to analyze their own political beliefs and others'. Students will also learn to spot "ugly English."

Course Learning Outcomes & Rubric:

Students will (outcome) To the following standard (criteria) As measured by the following method (assessment)

Sp. '18 SLO: Determine the impact of the news media on American politics and state and local politics.

Prompt: “Give an example of the news media’s  impact on US and/or California politics. Include strong thesis and explain the relevance of your example.”

Rubric: (1) Quality of example (2) Quality of explanation 

 


F”    0
No thesis

D”     1
Poor thesis

C”   2
Adequate thesis

B”    3
Strong thesis

A”    4
Exemplary thesis

0
No examples

1
Poor example

2
Adequate example

3
Strong example

4
Exemplary example

 

 

 

 

 

 

2.  How to Reach Me…

Campus Office: FH 219 - LACC ext. 2562

On Campus Office Hours:    Mon. & Wed. 11 – 11:30am AND Tu. & Th. 10 – 11am

Virtual Office Hours, I will return your text as soon as I can, instantly if possible. The rest of the time I will get back to you within 24 hours (not Friday - Sunday).

The BEST way is to text me at (323) 920-5308 (it's google voice - text only please). During office hours, I'll get right back to you, any other time of the week (Mon. - Thurs.), I'll try to get back to you with in the day.

Text me at (323) 920-5308. TEXT ONLY - I will do pick up or listen to voice messages on this number. I will respond with 24 to 48 hours (Mon. - Thurs.).

                                      Please! No Drunk Texting (No drunk texting ever!)

PLEASE include your name and section number in all texts and emails, or I will not respond.

Or send me an email (meyerjn@lacitycollege.edu), or send me a message on CANVAS.

Or call and leave a message at (323) 953-4000 x2562 Non emergency calls only - I check it through our email system.

OR Stop by and visit sometime!

Please: Do not communicate with me using Facebook or Linked-in or any other social media as these are NOT appropriate ways for us to communicate in this course. Please leave me my virtual privacy.

If you wish to do so, you may follow me on Instagram, under jopeyer. Please do not feel you should.

 

3. Schedule (Due Dates)…

Schedule: The week ends 11:59 Sunday. All work is due by end of week unless otherwise stated below.

 

You can do work early, but you CANNOT do it late!!!!

By the end of week 1 - if you have not done the student statement - you WILL be excluded from the class!

to view the Key Terms, Concepts and "some things to think about" for each chapter... click here

My online classes have access to several videos - click here - to view them (optional).

 

Week (dates)

Reading (Chps from "We The People')& Lecture Topic

Work Due

week 1

2/4

2/6

 

"Intro to Political Science"

*Student Self Assessment & Ugly English Assignment Explained - Orwell Article .... Click here for Orwell’s “Politics and the English Language”

Take the Student Self Assessment bring it to class on 8/30*

Student Statement DUE

week 2

2/11

2/13

 

No Reading;  Your Globe and You”

Ch 1 ..... "US Political Culture"

 

Course Project "1st Thesis" DUE

week 3

2/18

2/20

 

NO CLASS – Pres.’ Day

Ch 2 ... Why Back then never was"

 

QUIZ #1 DUE

week 4

2/25

2/27

 

No Reading, LIBRARY DAY - Meet outside MLK Library

Ch 3 ... "How's your relationship?" (with the Federal Government)

QUIZ #2 DUE

week 5

3/4

3/6

 

No Reading: "Critical Thinking and YOU"

Chs 4 & 5.... "Civil Rights & Civil Liberties and Are You Rich?"

 

QUIZ #3 DUE

week 6

3/11

3/13

  Ugly English Assign. - Instant Grade-ification Class

Ch 6 ... "Methodology"

  QUIZ #4 DUE

Critical Thinking Project DUE

week 7

3/18

3/20

Ch 7 "Campaigns, Voting and elections…  How to get elected" Create "Your Candidate"

Your Candidate's Ad - Instant Grade-ification in Class

  QUIZ #5  DUE

Course Project "Working References" DUE

week 8

3/25

3/27

 

Should We Run It? Print it out - BRING IT TO CLASS or have access to it.

Ch 8 "The Media - Setting the Agenda"

Mid Term Essay Exam Due.

 

 Spring Break 4/1 – 4/7

Why not read Ch. 14 on State and Local Gov  early for background for your Course Project?

 

week 9

4/8

4/10

 

Ch 9... "Where's the party at?" BRING your PARTY ID PROJECT to Class!    Party ID Project DUE on Canvas *and bring to class on 10/23

Guest Speaker

Party ID Project DUE on Canvas

QUIZ #6 DUE

Course Project "Working Thesis" DUE

week 10

4/15

4/17

 

California State Senate Simulation Game

Ch 10... "Interest Groups" BRING in Political Contribution Project

Political Contribution Project DUE on Canvas * and bring to class on 4/24

week 11

4/22

4/24

Ch 11... "...and three or more is a Congress"

Who are your Senators and Congressmen? Find Out Before Class!

  QUIZ #7 DUE

week 12

4/29

5/1

 

Ch 12... "He (or maybe She) is just the president"

Crisis in Cuba - Should We Invade? Print it - bring it to class (Also bring a map of Cuba).

  QUIZ #8 DUE

 

 

week 13

5/6

5/8

Ch 13... "...and justice for all."

Simulation Game: What is Justice?

  QUIZ #9 DUE

week 14

5/13

5/15

 * out of order (Read Ch 14 early for your Course Project)

*Ch 15... "The Bureaucratic Theory"

Final Exam Prep

 

Course Project DUE

 

week 15

5/20

5/22

Course Project Poster Day Poster Due in Class

SLOs, final business...

 

QUIZ #10 DUE

 

Final Exam Week - See Final Exam Schedule

 

When the assignment is closed on CANVAS - you are too late!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

4. Grading & Assignments Explanations…

No Late work will be accepted. No Late work will be graded. You will earn 0 points for all late work. ALL WORK is posted on Canvas

 

Grading By Points:

 

Student Statement (5) & Course Project "1st Thesis" (5)

Class Participation

10

30

10 Quizzes) (10 each)

100

Course Project

100

Course Project "Working References"

20

Course Project "Working Thesis"

Course Project Poster & Presentation

20

20

Ugly English Example and Translation

20

Critical Thinking Project

20

Political Party ID Project

Candidate’s Ad

20

20

Political Contribution Project

20

Mid-Term Exam Paper

50

Final Exam (take home and in-class)

50

Total Possible Points

500

 

This class is transferable to UC and CSU system.

This is a college level class. We have no time for your drama, games, disruptions, nor for that matter, anything that distracts from the class. You are expected be an adult.

Please do not involve me (nor the class) in the drama that is your life!

NO EXCUSES! Here is a list of real excuses sent to me from my online students. SPARE ME YOUR LAME EXCUSES!

As the great poetess said: "Be grow or be gone."

For my grading rubric on the Course Project, mid Term Exam Essay and the rest of the assignments, click here .

Approximate Points-to-Letter Grade scale:

A

500 - 450

B

449 - 400

C

399 - 350

D

349 - 300

F

Below 300

 

 

I will not grant an incomplete. So please do not ask!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Work associated with the Course Project:

PLEASE - Do Not use headers, etc. (on any work for this class)

For your Course Project you will need to READ any California Government Text. Buy it cheap, online, read it in a few days... Use it for background information (DO NOT CITE any textbooks, ever). They are all about 100 pages or less and you will NEED the background that a California Governmental text book will provide to do a good job on your Course Project.

The three assignments due before the Course Project is due are to help you prepare and build a great paper which is your Course Project.

Course Project "1st Thesis" in a sentence or two, you should be able to respond to one of the four questions provided below. It should be clear, concise and have a point worth making. It should also be clear which of the four questions you are responding to. If you make a good faith attempt it can't really be wrong. Keep in mind this thesis will probably change... maybe it should.

Course Project "Working References" should be at least ten (10) college level sources you will be using in your course project paper. Must be in APA format.

Course Project "Working Thesis" will be one sentence that, at least at the time this assignment is due, is currently the thesis statement of your Course Project Paper.

Course Project Poster & Presentation where you make a Poster that helps as a visual aide to talk about your Course Project for two minutes (on Course Project Day).

Your Course Project In a well organized and well written (at least) ten page paper, with APA citations, you will show research and make an argument in response to one of the following four questions about California state and local government policy:

1.   What is the ONE (1) MOST important problem facing California?  State specifically what must be done by the State of California (or a local government in California) to "fix" or improve this one issue. Give specific examples of this issue or problem and say what MUST BE DONE! Focus on one aspect of the solution to the problem, no matter how small. What state policy would address this issue positively? What can be done to improve the situation? What can be done (or not done) to make things better for this issue?... Or even simply to stop it from getting worse? Of course you should use other's ideas, just cite them properly. Be specific. Be Bold. But Be Realistic.

2.   How can we improve some aspect of the public educational system in California? Be specific.  What is ONE (1) proposal to “fix” some small area or issue within the state's education system? Make an argument for a specific educational policy change that will help improve some specific aspect of our state's educational system. Of course you should use other's ideas, just cite them properly. Be specific. Be Bold. But Be Realistic.

3.   Identify the one (1) most endangered element of our state government design that was inspired by, or is a result of, the progressive reforms.  Be specific as to how it is endangered and what that might mean for California. What MUST be done NOW to preserve, correct or improve upon that progressive reform to strengthen democracy in California? Of course you should use other's ideas, just cite them properly. Be specific. Be Bold. But Be Realistic.

4.   Looking at crime and the criminal justice system of California (state or local), identify one (1) area or problem that can be "fixed" or at least improved, by some specific state or local government policy. Something that is being done that can be improved. Something that isn't being done but should be, or something that is being done that shouldn't be...What must be done NOW to improve some aspect of crime fighting and prevention or the rest of our state criminal justice system or? Of course you should use other's ideas, just cite them properly. Be specific. Be Bold But Be Realistic. Be specific.

The Body of Your Paper should be MORE THAN ten (10) pages AT LEAST! With more than 15 sources, properly used and cited. (Of course the title page and etc does NOT count in the page count).

Other Assignments for this class:

Quizzes These are essays tied to the text book. You can find the words and concepts to answer in the text book but the understanding has to come from you. You are expected to use the vocabulary and concepts in the book to answer the essay questions asked about you, your politics, your beliefs, your knowledge, etc... they will always be open on Canvas when scheduled. Use the vocabulary from the text and lectures. Make the vocabulary words your own words...You need to write MORE than 500 words for each question (about two pages, typed, double spaced, or about three solid college level paragraphs.  DO MORE than the minimum…do less than the minimum and earn far less...

The UGLY ENGLISH EXAMPLE AND TRANSLATION simply involves finding an example of what Orwell calls "ugly English." Then translate your example it into "standard" or "simplified" English.  First, Click Here. Then:  Find an example (a word or phrase) and type it in quotes. Note the source. Provide the simplified "translation" of how the author (or speaker or whatever) could have better made the point. You can use newspapers, magazines, text books, radio or TV broadcasts, even things you hear people. All these are places to find examples of inappropriate jargon, obtuse verbiage, over-used expressions, inappropriate foreign terms and the like. Be creative, this just might be fun! For further information and examples:

The Critical Thinking Op-Ed (Commentary) Project: First, choose the op-ed piece or article you will be analyzing. You can use an opinion piece or article from any newspaper, magazine, web site, etc... It does not have to be about politics, but wouldn't it make more sense if it were? A traditional opinion/editorial is an argument by someone who is clearly identified, paid to write it, and qualified to have an opinion on the subject. DO NOT use editorials (they have no "by line." - they are written by a staff). DO NOT use "letters to the editor." DO NOT USE BLOGS - unless the piece conforms to the standards of a traditional op-ed piece (from 250 - 1500 words, clearly on one topic, expert, etc). The web page explains the eight answers you must provide about the op-ed piece. Just fill in the blanks, with bullet points or brief clauses, do not copy the question - Post answers on Canvas in the assignment section. Click here to learn more about Critical Thinking and the Project

The Party Identification (ID) Project: The Party Identification (ID) Project - click here for details - You are forced to look around your world and find which political party people around you identify with.  Then you share our results on Canvas. Just follow the directions and you will earn the max points!!! You DO NOT have to post the names of the people you asked - just discuss the results.

Your Candidate’s Ad:    This can In class, you will construct a Candidate and a message, after learning your opponent’s strategy you have to choice to stay with your original message or respond… This is done in class.

The Political Contribution Project:  The Political Contribution Project - click here for more details - You have a million dollars to give to either five political groups.  This can be done on the web and just might be fun - check it out.   Post work on Canvas in assignment section - just follow the directions and you'll earn the max points!!

The Mid-Term Essay Exam:  On Canvas, you will post a 5 -8 page paper responding to one of four prompts taken from the “Some Things To Think About” at the bottom of each lecture. Click here for details of Mid-Term Exam Paper

The FINAL EXAM  25 points for (my choice of) One or two of the ESSAYS from the list provided by clicking here. and one or two "short answer" questions (1-3 paragraphs) based on the “Some Things to Think about” questions.  The Final cannot be taken early. No work will be accepted after the final closes. The Final CAN NOT be taken late.. Click Here To See Potential Final Exam LONG Essay Questions.

 

5. LACC & Related info…

Students are responsible to live up to, and adhere to, all rules and regulations listed in the Student Handbook, the College Catalog, the College Schedule of Classes, and the various regulations, requirements and rules of the College and the District.

Students with disabilities or who need any assistance or reasonable accommodation should contact the instructor. Such students are encouraged to contact the Office of Disabled Student Services

Note Well:   Plagiarism is the serious ethical and legal violation of presenting other people's words or ideas as your own. Plagiarism or any other form of cheating can result in a failing grade for the paper, a failing grade for the course, and a formal report to the dean of students. See the student conduct code in the Catalog and Schedule of Classes.  

Students are encouraged to form and work in study groups. However each student must do her or his own work. Students who copy, cheat, plagiarize or in other fashion violate the spirit or letter (or both) of the rules of the College or the District (or both) may be excluded from this class, at a minimum.

Please do not ask for an incomplete. I will not grant it.

Any questions - please email me: meyerjn@lacitycollege.edu

Canvas, email and the internet are NOT PERFECT (me neither, you?). If you think I have made an error or an omission, email me ASAP!

PLEASE - Always include your Full Name & section number in all emails and your name on all texts (ur name on all txts, pls). Or I will not respond.

LACC Addendum Mandatory Information - Spring 2018

Course: POL SCI 001
Title: THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED STATES
Course Description: An introduction to United States and California government and politics, including their constitutions, political institutions
and processes, and political actors. Examination of political behavior, political issues, and public policy.
Units/Transferability: Transferrable to UC and CSU

Grading Scale or Criteria
A - Excellent
B - Good
C - Satisfactory
D - Less than satisfactory
F - Failing
P - Pass; at least equivalent to a “C” grade or better
NP - Not Pass; equal to “D” or “F” grade;

Drop Date and Repeats: For classes from 8/28/17 to 12/17/17, the deadline to drop without a “W” on your transcript is September 10, 2017. Effective July 1, 2012 students are allowed three (3) attempts to pass a single class within the Los Angeles Community
College District. If a student gets a “W” or grade of “D”, “F”, or “NP” in a class, that counts as an attempt. If you think you will not be able to complete this course with a C or better, drop the class.

Attendance Policy: Students who are registered and miss the first class meeting may lose their right to a place in the class. Whenever students are absent more hours than the number of hours the class meets per week, the instructor may exclude them
from class. If the instructor determines that there are no mitigating circumstances that may justify the absences, the instructor may exclude a student from the class. Students are responsible for officially dropping a class that they stop
attending.

Financial Aid: If you need help paying for books and other college expenses, call the Financial Aid Office at (323) 953-4000 ext.2010, http://www.lacitycollege.edu/stusvcs/finaid/.

Accommodations: Students with a verified disability who may need authorized accommodation(s) for this class are encouraged to notify the instructor and the Office of Special Services (323-953-4000, ext.2270) as soon as possible, and at least two weeks before any exam or quiz. All information will remain confidential.

Student Code of Conduct: Violations of academic integrity include, but are not limited to, the following actions: cheating on an exam, plagiarism, working together on an assignment, paper or project when the instructor has specifically stated students should not do
so, submitting the same term paper to more than one instructor, or allowing another individual to assume one’s identity for the purpose of enhancing one’s grade (see LACCD Board Rule 9803.28). Penalties may include a grade of zero or
"F" on an exam or paper, or even suspension from the College.

 

6. Week 1 (ONE) Checklist and "Student Statement"…

Week 1 Checklist:

1. Register for the class. Download the free E-text book.

2. Get on Canvas and read the Class Home Page/Syllabus and READ IT. Begin doing all the things for the checklist n or before the first day of class. The class schedule will NOT change for you. You must adapt to it.

3. This is a large class so please be courteous and give me time to grade things...

4. Read the LACC student handbook especially about cheating and doing your own work.

5. After you have done all of the above and can honestly attest to everything in the student statement (Below) - copy it and paste it into the proper place in Canvas. Make sure you put your FULL NAME and Section Number) where it belongs (2 places) and - DO NOT email it to me ... just post it on Canvas.. Do both of these and stay in the class, Fail to do both and be dropped after week 1.

"Student Statement" for Political Science 1, ONLINE:

. I, ________________________________(insert your name and section #), swear and attest to the following:

. 1.) That I have read the ENTIRE Class Home Page/Syllabus and all the links.

. 2.) I am able to access Canvas. I have verified my email address.

. 3.) I have read the student code of conduct (in the student handbook) and understand that I can work with others but I MUST DO MY OWN WORK! No one will do any of the work in the class for me. I will not cheat, or in any way, violate the letter, nor spirit, of the district and college policies. I understand that plagiarism is a serious offense which will result in receiving 0 points for the work plagiarized, and contacting the Dean of Student Services for possible college action

. 4.) I will not make any anonymous postings. I will be courteous and appropriate in all my emails and postings and texts.

I _____________________________________(your name and section number) do so declare and affirm!"

Some words from the past:

“We live in an age of great events and little men, and if we are not to become the slaves of our own systems or sink oppressed among the mechanism we ourselves created, it will only be by the bold efforts of originality, by repeated experiments, and by the dispassionate consideration of the results of sustained and unflinching thought."

Nov., 12, 1901. Sir Winston Churchill.

jopeyer.com - meyerjn@lacitycollege.edu – text only (323) 920-5308