Week 1: Introduction to the course

Overview

Your syllabus is a core document because it outlines the following information that you will need to be successful in this course.

  • The purpose of the course
  • Learning objectives
  • Format (i.e., the length of the course, weekly sessions, etc.)
  • Readings
  • Assignments and deadlines
  • Grades

Many students do not read their syllabi carefully and, as a result, miss some of the important information that they need to understand the nature and requirements of the courses that they take.

We will review the syllabus and discuss the core content in this module. By reading the syllabus in this first class, you will be better prepared to engage with and learn the course content.


Readings

Imagine |  Question | Search |  Synthesize: Critical foundations in undergraduate research. (2022). Syllabus.


Before class activities

 Key questions to ask while reading and watching

  1. What is a syllabus?
  2. How can a syllabus be used throughout a course for academic success?
  3. What are key components of a syllabus?

 

  “Pile of words”: Group and label key concepts

Organize the words below into two lists of similar terms and label each list (include a definition for each label).

Remember: You may already understand some of these ideas relatively well and others may be new to you. Look up (e.g., in a dictionary or encyclopedia) the unfamiliar concepts in order to create your lists.

Make note of your reasons for grouping the ideas together as you will share them in class. These are self-paced individual activities, for which there are no right or wrong answers. The instructor will not grade this work.

 

 

   Predict a learning outcome


After class activities

Read the syllabus after class and summarize key points.

  • Key deadlines
  • Assignments
  • Academic integrity

Note the readings for the upcoming week and make sure you have access to all the assigned materials.

Respond to this statement: do you agree or disagree and why?

“The syllabus is not only [a] document but a rule book, canvas, and plan, and perhaps most of all a model for imagining a sphere of operations for a course’s ideas” (Germano & Nicholls, 2020, p. 8)

License

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Critical foundations in undergraduate research Copyright © 2022 by Martha Attridge Bufton is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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