包含什麼
15 現場會議
15 上課時間作業
每週 1-2 小時. Each week, students will read an excerpt of a primary source document (400-800 words) and write a 3-5 sentence reaction to it. At the end of class, students will write an outline for an essay. Students will submit a 5 paragraph argumentative essay by the last day of class and give a brief presentation.評估
Students will receive detailed feedback on their final essays, as well as to their weekly responses.我們無法翻譯此文,請刷新頁面並再試一次。
課堂經歷
英語程度 - 未知
美國 8 - 11 年級
Politics are all around us, and it is important to be able to discuss them. The goal of this class is to help students develop opinions based on original source material and learn to discuss them in a respectful and mature way. Students will learn through reading primary source documents and discussing them as a group. Towards the end of class, students will synthesize their thoughts into a written argumentative essay. In this class, students will read the philosophy of different political ideologies and lead discussion on them. Each student will sign up for one week to lead the discussion. On their designated day, they will come to class with several discussion questions as well as some background research about the writer. Students will have a worksheet to fill out as they read if they find it helps to organize their thoughts. I will also offer historical context for each writer to further inform our understanding of their thoughts (for example, Engels writing during the Industrial Revolution, Paine writing during the American Revolution). Students will lead the discussion with their thoughts on the text at hand each week- I will not be lecturing. I will guide the discussion and moderate to ensure that everyone can share their thoughts, but also to encourage students to elaborate on their thoughts and cite examples. Each week, students will also submit a written response (3-5 sentences) of their reactions to the weekly reading. Students must read every week. Students will be responsible for 1 five paragraph essay. They will present it at the end of the semester. This class is modelled after a college/university course and is excellent preparation to that style of learning. Specifically, that means that students are required to read texts before class and come to class ready to discuss them. To help students, who may be new to this style of learning, there is a guided reading guide students may opt to fill out as they read. Readings will be between 400-800 words each week. The goal is for students to develop and defend opinions by interpreting primary sources, as well as effectively communicate them. Discussion will focus on questions like; what does this writer think the function of the state is? How does this writer feel about the concept of a state? Who benefits most under the ideology at hand? What would the ideology look like in the modern day? Does the ideology exist, in whole or in part, in the modern day? Paper topic: Choose one political philosophy and argue in its favor. Use real world examples and cite from at least 2 works we have read in class. Be sure to spend at least one paragraph anticipating and addressing counter arguments. Essays should be at least 5 paragraphs: an introduction, 3 body paragraphs, and a conclusion. Students will be required to hand in an outline. Essays will be given feedback. Grades can be furnished upon request with the following breakdown: 25% class discussion, 25% written responses, 25% discussion lead, 25% final essay. If you would like a grade, you must tell me no later than the 2nd week of class. Readings are typed out, rather than scanned, for ease of students who may need to manipulate the text to accommodate for learning differences. Week 1: Introduction to political philosophy -Guiding Questions What is the function of the state? How should we read primary source documents? Week 2: Mercantilism A Letter Addressed by Louis XIV to the People of Marseilles, Louis XIV and Jean-Baptiste Colbert, 1664 Week 3: Classic Liberalism -John Locke, Two Treatises of Government, 1689 Week 4: The Free Market -Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations, 1776 Week 5: Republicanism -Common Sense, Thomas Paine, 1776 Week 6: Constitutional Monarchy -Immanuel Kant, Perpetual Peace, 1795 Week 7: Anarchy -What is Property? Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, 1840 Week 8: Communism -Anti-Dühring, Frederick Engels, 1877 Week 9: Leninism -The Marxist Theory of the State and the Tasks of the Proletariat in the Revolution, V. I. Lenin, 1918 Week 10: Fascism -The Social and Political Doctrine of Fascism, Benito Mussolini and Giovanni Gentile, 1932 Week 11: Libertarianism -Atlas Shrugged; Ayn Rand, 1957 Week 12: Developing a thesis & Writing an outline HW: Write an outline and hand it in, due before next class. Week 13: Conservatism - Speech to Conservative Party Conference; Margaret Thatcher, 1987 Week 14: Writing an essay and citing sources. HW: Complete essay, due before next class. Week 15: Presentations and closing discussions. In this class, students will... read the assigned document every week. submit a 3-5 sentence response to the document before class. lead the discussion on one document, which student will sign up for before or on the first day of class. write an argumentative essay in favor of one political ideology talked about in class, due on last day of class. give a brief presentation of your essay on last day of class. Any kind of bullying or belittling of others political beliefs will not be tolerated in this class. Students may not share opinions that put down others based on race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, ability, economic or social class. This class is strictly hate free.
學習目標
Students will read and respond to primary source documents.
Students will lead discussion about political theory with respect for different opinions and interpretations.
Students will find similarities and differences in different political beliefs.
Students will refine their beliefs through oral and written communication.
教學大綱
15 課程
超過 15 週課 1:
Introduction to political philosophy
-Guiding Questions
What is the function of the state? How should we read primary source documents?
60 分鐘線上直播課
課 2:
Mercantilism
A Letter Addressed by Louis XIV to the People of Marseilles, Louis XIV and Jean-Baptiste Colbert, 1664
60 分鐘線上直播課
課 3:
Classic Liberalism
-John Locke, Two Treatises of Government, 1689
60 分鐘線上直播課
課 4:
The Free Market
-Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations, 1776
60 分鐘線上直播課
其他詳情
父母的引導和規範
Students will read about political philosophies that many consider to be "fringe" such as communism, anarchism, and libertarianism. We will also discuss colonialism. Students will be encouraged to build their own opinions while maintaining respect for others, particularly respect towards marginalized groups.
No political ideology will be promoted during this class.
供應清單
Students will receive a 16-page Google Document with all the readings required for class, a syllabus, a guided reading sheet, and an essay outline. Students may want to print out the 16-page google doc and guided reading sheet, but don't have to. Students may want to take notes either on paper or digitally. There is a guided discussion sheet that students can use to prepare for their presentation week. Please note that the documents are written out rather than scanned from books. This is so students with learning differences can, for example, change the font to be very big, or use text-to-speech technology.
外部資源
學習者無需使用標準 Outschool 工具以外的任何應用程式或網站。
來源
Primary Source Documents:
A Letter Addressed by Louis XIV to the People of Marseilles, Louis XIV and Jean-Baptiste Colbert, 1664
John Locke, Two Treatises of Government, 1689
Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations, 1776
Common Sense, Thomas Paine, 1776
Immanuel Kant, Perpetual Peace, 1795
What is Property? Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, 1840
Anti-Dühring, Frederick Engels, 1877
The Marxist Theory of the State and the Tasks of the Proletariat in the Revolution, V. I. Lenin, 1918
The Social and Political Doctrine of Fascism, Benito Mussolini and Giovanni Gentile, 1932
Atlas Shrugged; Ayn Rand, 1957
Speech to Conservative Party Conference; Margaret Thatcher, 1987
Secondary Sources:
The Political Economy of Mercantilism by Lars Magnusson, 2005, first edition, London.
Liberalism and Republicanism in the Historical Imagination by Joyce Oldham Appleby, 1992. Harvard University Press.
Big Leagues: Specters of Milton and Republican International Justice between Shakespeare and Marx by Christopher Warren, 2016. Humanity: An International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and Development.
Socialism and Labor Unionism by Anton Pannekoek, 2017. The New Review, vol 1, no. 18, July 1913.
From Politics Past to Politics Future: An Integrated Analysis of Current and Emergent Paradigms by Alan James Mayne. Greenwood Publishing Group, 1999.
教師專業知識和證書
2 個學位
碩士 在 教育 從 CUNY College of Staten Island
學士學位 在 英語 從 CUNY Brooklyn College
I have a Master's Degree in Adolescent Social Studies Education, which specifically trained me to teach teenagers to discuss difficult topics based on primary source documents. While in graduate school, I studied political thought from the Enlightenment through the 20th century. This class is structured like a "lite" version of a university seminar, which I have extensive experience with. Many of my classes currently offered are discussion based. In this class, students will be almost entirely responsible for the discussion, with myself acting as a mediator.
I have experience teaching about political topics to both teenagers on Outschool and in person, and to adults at community centers.
評論
現場團體課程
US$210
用於 15 課程每週1次,共 15 週
60 分鐘
有3 位學習者完成此課程
即時視訊會議
年齡: 13-18
5-13 每班學員人數