ASSIGNMENT INSTRUCTIONS FOR ALL COURSES
Hello everyone, and welcome to this philosophy course. This document expands upon the main course requirements in the syllabus, and provides answers to most questions that you might have as the semester proceeds. Please feel free to contact me at any time during the semester through email, which is my preferred method of communication. To get started, please read this document, then proceed to the Module 1 assignments.
COURSE ASSIGNMENTS: Within each module, there are five types of assignments: (1) videos, (2) readings, (3) study questions, (4) discussion board comments, and (5) quizzes. Each of these is described in more detail below. Assignment due dates are posted on Canvas, and will likely change as the semester proceeds based on in-person class progress.
GRADING PROCEDURE: Course grades will be based on total quiz scores. Study questions and discussion posts are prerequisites for the quizzes and will be graded as "0" without a numerical score. Violations of the class internet and AI policy will result in negative scores as a penalty. Final grades will initially be based on a scale of 90%, 80%, 70%, and 60%, but I typically lower these thresholds for midterm and final grades. At any point during the semester, I may reevaluate a student s earlier assignment scores if issues such as dishonesty, failure to follow instructions, or miscalculation become apparent.
INTERNET AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE POLICY: The use of either internet-copied content, or artificial intelligence tools are strictly prohibited for all coursework, including study questions and discussion posts (e.g., Google searches, ChatGPT, Grammarly). Your study question answers and discussion posts must be based solely on the course reading material. Any such instances of internet or AI use will be considered academic dishonesty and will result in the following consequences: (1) negative points for the submission, (2) nullification of the module quiz score; and (3) potential additional penalties as per the UT Martin's academic integrity policy. Internet-copied and AI-generated content is easily identifiable, so you should submit your own original work, even if it contains content inaccuracies, typographical errors, grammatical mistakes, or stylistic imperfections. The presence of these will not adversely affect your assignment score. At any time during the semester, I may discuss your submitted assignments with you to verify your authorship.
VIDEOS: Lecture videos are linked within each Canvas module. These are for the benefit of online students, but also in-person students who miss classroom lectures.
READINGS: All the reading assignments for this course are posted online and on Canvas, free of charge, and most of it comes from book chapters that I have authored or edited.
STUDY QUESTIONS: All the reading material in the course has accompanying study questions that appear at the bottom of each chapter, with 21 questions per module. The first 20 are short comprehension questions, and question 21 is a 100-word short essay question about some point in the assigned readings. All 21 questions must be submitted together through the study question link within each module on Canvas.
Please note that Canvas will not allow you to proceed with your quiz assignments until you first submit your study questions. The point is to force you to do adequate preparation before proceeding. When preparing your study questions, do not simply search within the chapter to find the location to each question, since the result will be an incomplete understanding of the material. Do not copy portions of the reading material into your answers; use your own words. Do not use AI or internet searches to create your answers, or even revise any answers that you write yourself; your answers, they must be based solely on the assigned reading material (see "Artificial Intelligence Policy above). The first twenty study questions are review questions that require only brief answers of one or two sentences each. Please do not submit your study questions without including question 21. I advise answering the study questions while reading through the chapter in its entirety. Record your numbered answers only, and do not reproduce the study questions themselves. Make sure there is a paragraph break between each of your answers. To submit your answers, click on the Study Questions link in each module. You can then either type your answers directly into the study question text box, or first type them into MS Word (or some other word processor) and then copy/paste them into the text box. However, do not upload a text file of your answers as an attachment, since there are frequently technical issues in Canvas that prevent me from retrieving them. Once you begin entering your answers, you can hit the back button on your browser and resume later. However, once you hit the Submit button, you cannot renter.
To be clear, you must include your answer to Question 21 in both your study question submission and in your discussion post. When selecting your topic for Question 21, add variety by avoiding obvious topics that everyone might write on. Please create a new discussion thread for posting it. Begin your critique by stating something like "The topic I've selected to criticize is Plato's view of the Forms". The remaining three comments must be in response to comments posted by other students. Begin these with something like "Great comment, Mary, here's a possible response." Be critical but friendly in your responses, and do not simply agree with the post you are responding to. Please avoid insults and using offensive language. At the same time, when you read other students comments on your posts, be charitable in how you interpret them and do not assume that they are being rude or mean spirited. This is an exercise in learning how to both give and take philosophical criticism. Avoid stating your private views of God and religion, whatever they may be. Philosophy aims to discover truths and present arguments which are universally compelling, regardless of one's personal religious beliefs.
Please note that Canvas will not allow you to take the quiz until you have first posted your study questions, and I will penalize students who try to game the system by posting a bare minimum of study question answers (or the wrong ones) just to make the quiz available. The questions will appear one at a time, randomized, with no backtracking to previously answered questions. The questions are challenging, and your best strategy will be to read the material and take good notes to review prior to taking the exam. See "hints for studying" below for quiz preparation suggestions. Please note that internet rush hour is between 7-11 PM on weekdays, and all day on weekends, so try to avoid taking quizzes during these times if you can.
VIDEO MONITORING FOR QUIZZES. All quizzes are video monitored. You must take the quiz by yourself, with no collusion with others, and your full face must be visible to your camera. To take the quizzes, your computer must have a functioning webcam and microphone, and if yours doesn't you can go to a UTM computer lab, or borrow a friend's computer with a webcam, or buy a USB plugin webcam. All quizzes will be done through a video monitoring system on Canvas called "Proctorio". You must take it using only the Chrome web browser on a Windows, macOS or Chromebook computer (it won't work on an IPad, IPhone or Android cell phones). Also, it only functions on Chrome and Edge web browsers (not Firefox or Safari, which are not Chromium based). To get the Proctorio extension, go to getproctorio.com and follow the download and installation instructions. If you install Proctorio and have operational problems, here are four possible fixes. Problem (1): If you see a large caution icon with an exclamation point, that means you do not have the Proctorio extension installed within Chrome on your computer. If you are using different computers, you need to install the Proctorio extension within Chrome on each one. Problem (2): If you are asked to supply an "access code", you need to re-enable the Proctorio extension, which might have been shut off by another program. If that doesn't work, uninstall then reinstall Proctorio. Problem (3): If your screen freezes either before entering the quiz or while taking it, it might be because of high internet traffic. For best results, see optimal internet hours above in Quizzes section. Problem (4): in rare cases you may login to Canvas and can t see anything at all. This may be the result of an ad blocker extension you installed on your browser, which you should disable. If you still have Proctorio problems, contact the UTM help desk at 731-881-7900.
REVIEWING QUIZZES: Students sometimes ask me if they can access graded quizzes to see specifically what they missed. This is a fair request. Unfortunately, with online quizzes where I cannot monitor students directly, I cannot allow students to have access to the questions, either through e-mail correspondence or through one of Canvas's "view quiz" features. I apologize for that, but I am also cautious with the paper exams in my on-campus classes. Further down in this assignment instructions document, I provide "hints for studying" which might help.
DEADLINES: All assignment deadlines are posted in Canvas. The biggest liability for students taking online courses is failure to complete assignments in a timely fashion. Although I like to think of myself as a sympathetic professor, I insist on assignment punctuality and consequently will not allow assignments or tests to be submitted after the designated due dates except under extenuating circumstances. From my experience, the students who get A's in my online classes are good with time management, even in the face of busy schedules and family tragedies. I recommend that you work ahead on your assignments as a safety buffer for personal events that might interfere. The students who get D's and F's are routinely late with assignments, fail to complete several assignments, and often take the quizzes at the last minute putting down random answers (indicating no study preparation). Students who get B's and C's usually exhibit at least some of the characteristics of the D and F students.
TOLERANCE FOR CONTROVERSY: Please note that this course will cover controversial issues and you will likely be exposed to views that differ from your own. You need to respectfully address others in the class, and not let your emotions take over. A benefit of philosophy courses is that they can foster an attitude of tolerance for controversial subjects. Here are three comments that students have emailed me in connection with this: (1) "The course increased my respect for some of the differing points of view, since many of them were presented in a sensible way that I had not considered as seriously before." (2) "Believe me, the class makes you look at things differently. Issues that I thought I had completely made my mind up on are not as black and white as they once were." (3) "I really thought before I took this class that I had concrete answers for these issues. I caught myself writing some of the discussions and actually arguing against a point I had made."
HINTS FOR STUDYING: Proper studying for the quizzes involves more than simply understanding the material, but rather internalizing the information so that the concepts are retained for the long term. Don t take short cuts, such as casually reading the text only once, or just hunting for answers to the study questions. It may also help if you watch the lecture videos more than once. An effective method of mastering the material is what a former A-level student wrote me about her study habits: I spend on average 7 hours preparing for each chapter module and I get to it immediately, not at the last minute. First, I read through the material one time. Then I read through it again, highlighting as I go. Then I answer the study questions, and I do that with quite a bit of detail so that I can read over them several times before I take the test. Then I outline the material. Before I take the quiz, I reread the highlighted text at least once more, read the study questions and answers at least two or three times more, and review the outline at least two or three times more.
Most importantly, if you don't pre-schedule study time for your courses, all of your good intentions won't help. If your schedule is tight, it becomes a question of priorities and you need to cut out less important things like social media and streaming video. If you have reading difficulties, there are text-to-speech tools that will read aloud the material that you are viewing. Microsoft has a free tool called "Immersive Reader" that comes with Edge, MS Word, and is also included in Canvas. To access, highlight text > right click > click "read aloud". Chrome and Firefox have a free text to speech plugin called "Read Aloud".
HELP DESK: if you are having technical problems with Canvas, Proctorio, or Banner, or have even basic questions about using your computer for this class, you may contact UTM Computer Help desk at (731) 881-7900 or helpdesk@utm.edu. You can also contact the Canvas hotline directly at (844) 348-0034.