Syllabus for Psych 459 (WI) (Thursdays) Fall 2004 G21
Instructor:
Dr. Leon James, Professor of Psychology, University of Hawaii
Telephone contact and messages (call during normal office hours): 261-2382
e-mail: leon@hawaii.edu
Course Description:
Theistic Psychology -- Rational vs. Mystical Spirituality
Examines whether psychology can remain a science while adopting dualist
concepts. Students publish their reports on the Web, give oral
presentations in class, and participate in email exchanges. Includes computer
lab where students can do their Web work and can receive help in Web publishing.
This is a WI course and requires more writing than the average class. Students
will publish a minimum of two reports (total 25 typed pages), and will make the requested changes when
the instructor reads the drafts. Students also read each other's reports online
and make appropriate suggestions.
Required Readings:
Testimony to the Invisible: Essays on Swedenborg. Edited by James Lawrance (1995)
A Thoughtful Soul: Reflections From Swedenborg. Translated by George Dole (1995)
Theistic Psychology. By Leon James (2003). Online book at: www.soc.hawaii.edu/leonj/theistic
GRADES: APPROXIMATE VALUE OF ACTIVITIES |
|
40 points |
Three class oral presentations on assigned readings and dates |
60 points |
Appearance, content, and quality of your Web site containing your Home Page and two required reports totaling approximately 25 typed pages. |
|
A+ =95 points;
A =94-90; A- =89-85; B+ =84-80; B =79-75; B- =74-70; |
|
Attendance is taken at the start of each class.
Absence Penalty: - 3 points per absence.
Late Work Penalty: -
3 points per week late (maximum = -9 points per report).
Due Dates are given in the instructions for Report 1 and Report 2, see links
on the Class Home Page:
www.soc.hawaii.edu/leonj/leonj/leonpsy21/classhome-g21.htm
Grading Policy: (1) If technical reasons prevent you from uploading any required work on time, you must submit a printed version of it to the instructor to avoid a late penalty. Always keep a back up copy of your files on a separate disk or CD besides your hard drive.
(2) You will receive email from the instructor with your grade for each oral and for each report, along with recommendations on how to improve them. You can apply for re-grading of the two reports after you made the recommended revisions. Send your request to Dr. James by email leon@hawaii.edu To be valid, your request must consist of these separate lines: (a) your first and last Name, and the Pseudonym on your reports, if any; (b) class (409a, 409b, 459); (c) the Web address of the report you are requesting for re-grading; (d) grade received for the report being re-graded; (e) list or describe what improvements you've made that were recommended. Note: Unless your email request contains points (a) through (e) above, your request cannot be considered.
(3) For publishing your work on the Web, you are allowed to use a Pseudonym that is registered with the Instructor by email. To be valid, your request must consist of these separate lines: (a) your first and last Name; (b) the Pseudonym you will use for your Web published reports and your folder name; (c) class (409a, 409b, 459). Also, you can delete your own published files during the semester, or request they be removed from the Web after the semester, and at any other time in the future (just email the instructor: leon@hawaii.edu).
(4) If you take more than one course with Dr. James, consult him in class for an alternative to report 1, which is similar in the three courses. You must not do Report 1 twice. One alternative is to do one of the three reports for G20 instead.
Class Structure: Every class is made up of three portions. First Portion: instructor answers your questions about doing the oral presentations and the reports, and discusses the topics of the course. Second Portion: four students give the scheduled oral presentation of 10 minutes (see instructions for oral presentations for details). A general discussion follows. Third Portion: Lab work in Saunders 635, reserved for this class from 2:30 to 3:30.
Computer Lab: Times when the computer lab is reserved for this class: Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays: 2:30 to 3:30 Saunders 635. A personal password is needed to access lab computers. You must register as a Lab User during the first two weeks of the semester at: webdata.soc.hawaii.edu/lab_user (Note that there is an underscore or line in the address between "lab" and "user").
The G21 Class Home Page:
www.soc.hawaii.edu/leonj/leonj/leonpsy21/classhome-g21.htm
The Instructor's Home Page:
www.soc.hawaii.edu/leonj/leonj/leonpsy/leon.html