Course Syllabus
SYLLABUS
ANTHROPOLOGY 3, FALL 2018
Course Description: This course introduces the student to world prehistory and the discipline of archaeology. The class includes a brief overview of the field of archaeology. The student will become familiar with how archaeology elicits information about the past, including is a brief introduction to the methods of archaeology and the interdisciplinary nature of archaeological research. Most of the course is a broad survey of the biological and cultural evolution of the human species from the earliest signs of "humanness" through the rise of civilization as understood through the hominin paleontological and archaeological records. Examples of the prehistoric human cultures of all seven continents are presented.
Attendance Policy
If you are absent during the first two weeks of the class, without discussing it with the instructor, you will be dropped from the class. However, it is still your responsibility to drop the class if you no longer plan to attend. Please note that regular attendance is expected and required. Out of respect for the instructor and other students, each participant is expected to arrive to class on time.
Exam Make-Up Policy
If you cannot take the midterm on the day it is scheduled due to a documented emergency, you will take a comprehensive exam on the day of the regular final to make up for the missed midterm. No other make-ups are available.
OBJECTIVES--Upon successful completion, the student will be able to:
- Distinguish between artifacts, ecofacts, features and sites.
- Describe the fundamental theoretical foundations of archaeology and the methods used to acquire archaeological data.
- Compare and contrast the characteristics of paleolithic, mesolithic, and neolithic cultures.
- Compare and contrast various explanatory models to account for human cultural change including the development of agriculture and civilization.
OUTCOMES--Upon successful completion of the course, the student will be able to:
- Identify and differentiate between the generally accepted phases of human cultural development.
- Distinguish between data and inference in the presentation of archaeological interpretation.
- Distinguish between testable hypotheses and speculation, science and pseudoscience, in the presentation of archaeology in various media.
TEXTBOOK:
The Human Past: World Prehistory and the Development of Human Societies
Edited by Chris Scarre
2018, Fourth Edition
Thames & Hudson Ltd., London
August 15, 2018
Introduction
The Study of the Human Past: Anthropology and the Practice of Archaeology
Read Chapter 1
August 22, 2018
African Origins—Primate and Hominin Origins
Read Chapter 2
QUIZ 1: 19th Century Developments in Geology, Archaeology, and Social Evolution, pp. 28-30
August 29, 2018
Hominin Dispersals in the Old World
Read Chapter 3
QUIZ 2: Primate Classification and Evolution, pp. 49-51
September 5, 2018
The Rise if Modern Humans
Read Chapter 4
QUIZ 3: The Acheulean, pp. 77-80
September 12, 2018
The World Transformed and Foragers, Collectors, and the Origins of Agriculture in Southwest Asia
Read Chapter 6
QUIZ 4: Hypotheses of the Origins of Homo sapiens, pp. 109-112
September 19, 2018
Last Foragers First Farmers—Beginnings of Complexity
Chapter 6 and 7
Beginnings of Agriculture.
QUIZ 5: Explanations of the Origin of Agriculture, pp. 184-185
September 26, 2018
Review for the Midterm
In-Class Exercise
October 3, 2018
MIDTERM (Chapters 1-6)
Southwest Asian: Evolution of Complexity
First Civilizations
Chapters 6 and 7 (cont.)
Comparison of Old World River Civilizations
Introduction of Chapter 11
In-Class Exercise
October 10, 2018
Developments in Late Pleistocene and Holocene Africa including Egyptian Civilization
Read Chapter 11
QUIZ 6: North Africa and the Sahara: Climatic Change and the Development of Agriculture, pp. 351-354
October 17, 2018
Asia
Read Chapters 8, 15, and 16
QUIZ 7: What are civilizations, cities, and states? How are they defined and why do they occur? -- pp. 189-192
October 24,, 2018
Australia and the Pacific Basin
Read Chapter 9
In-Class Exercise
October 31, 2018
Europe and the Mediterranean
Read Chapters 12 and 14
QUIZ 8: European Mesolithic and the Site of Starr Carr, pp. 391-393
November 7, 2018
Peopling of the New World
The Archaic in the New World
Read Chapters 5 and 10
QUIZ 9: DNA and the Peopling of the New World, pp.153-155
November 14, 2018
New World Agricultural Origins
Read Chapter 10
Complex Societies North of Mesoamerica
Mississippian Chiefdoms, etc.
Read Chapter 19
In-Class Exercise
November 21, 2018
Development of Civilizations in Mesoamerica
Read Chapter 17
In-Class Exercise
November 28, 2018
Emergence of South American Civilizations
Read Chapter 18
QUIZ 10: Andean Animal and Plant Domestication and Other South American Crops, pp. 336-338
December 5, 2018
REVIEW FOR FINAL
Make-up Quiz
December 12, 2018
FINAL
Expectations
It is assumed by the instructor that class participants desire to learn the content of the class. Students are expected to complete all reading assignments and the two written assignments. It is expected that students will take notes and prepare for exams by studying. Students should not be on their cell phones talking or text messaging during class time. If you must take an important cell phone call, please go outside of the classroom.
Exams
There will be two exams, a midterm and a final. If you receive a “D” or an “F” on the midterm exam, please make an appointment to discuss the situation with the instructor immediately after receiving your midterm grade. The exams consist of true and false questions, multiple choice questions, short identification, term definitions, and essay questions.
Quizzes
There will be ten quizzes. They are worth 5 points each. These will be given at the end of class during 10 classes. The subject each quiz covers is specified in the syllabus for each week there is a quiz.
In-Class Exercises
There will be five in-class exercises. These are meant to help you retain important aspects of the material presented in class. These will be turned-in during class. You will receive five points for every exercise you turn in.
Two Take-Home Assignments
There will be two take-home assignments. You will be provided with these assignments. In each case, you will be required to write a brief paper to address the issues outlined in the assignment. Both assignments will be discussed in class when they are provided to you.
Class Grades
The midterm exam is worth 50 points and the final exam is worth 100 points. Each take-home assignment is worth 25 points. The quizzes are worth 5 points each. In class exercises are worth five points each. Class grades will be assigned as follows:
247-275 = A
219-246 = B
191-218 = C
163-190 = D
000-163 = F
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Plagiarism and Academic Dishonesty Policies
For the protection of other students in the State Center Community College District, the Governing Board of this District December suspend or expel, and the Chancellor of this District is authorized to suspend a student whenever it is established to the satisfaction of the Board or the Chancellor, as the case December be, that the student has on college premises used, sold or been in possession of narcotic or other hallucinogenic drugs or substances, or has on college premises inhaled, or breathed the fumes of, or ingested any poison classified as such by Schedule D in Section 4160 of the Business and Professions Code. Academic Freedom General Principles The State Center Community College District is un- equivocally and unalterably committed to the principle of academic freedom in its true sense which includes freedom to study, freedom to learn and freedom to teach and provide educational professional services to students. Academic freedom encompasses the right of an instructor to discuss pertinent subjects within his or her field of professional competency in the classroom, consistent with course objectives, and for counselors, librarians and other academic employees to provide appropriate student services within their fields of professional competency and consistent with sound educational principles. neither District officials nor outside individuals or groups December interfere with or censure an academic employee because of the employee's proper treatment of pertinent subjects, or provision of proper educational professional services to students is precluded by the principle of academic freedom. Faculty must, however, accept the responsibility that accompanies academic freedom. The right to exercise any liberty implies a duty to use it responsibly. Academic freedom does not give faculty freedom to engage in indoctrination. nor can faculty invoke the principle of academic freedom to justify non-professional conduct. An essential point that pertains to academic freedom and that must be considered in relation to subject matter or to professional services to the student is the criterion of suitability. The subject matter, material to be studied, or educational professional services to the student must contribute to the attainment of course objectives or achievement of an educational principle. The special interests of faculty or the opinion of a per- son or persons in a class should not supersede the right of other students to be protected against irrelevant or obscene materials or presentations.
Academic Dishonesty: Students at Fresno City College are entitled to the best education that the college can make available to them, and they, their instructors, and their fellow students share the responsibility to ensure that this education is honestly attained. Because cheating, plagiarism, and collusion in dishonest activities erode the integrity of the college, each student is expected to exert an entirely honest effort in all academic endeavors. Academic dishonesty in any form is a very serious offense and will incur serious consequences. Cheating Cheating is the act or attempted act of taking an examination or performing an assigned, evaluated task in a fraudulent or deceptive manner, such as having improper access to answers, in an attempt to gain an unearned academic advantage. Cheating December include, but is not limited to, copying from another’s work, supplying one’s work to another, giving or receiving copies of examinations without an instructor’s permission, using or displaying notes or devices inappropriate to the conditions of the examination, allowing someone other than the officially enrolled student to represent the student, or failing to disclose research results completely.
Plagiarism: Plagiarism is a specific form of cheating and is the use of another’s words or ideas without identifying them as such or giving credit to the source. Plagiarism December include, but is not limited to, failing to provide complete citations and references for all work that draws on the ideas, words, or work of others, failing to identify the contributors to work done in collaboration, submitting duplicate work to be evaluated in different courses without the knowledge and consent of the instructors involved, or encouraging, permitting, or assisting another to do any act that could subject him or her to discipline. Incidents of cheating and plagiarism December result in a variety of sanctions and penalties that December range from a failing grade on the particular examination, paper, project, or assignment in question to a failing grade in the course, at the discretion of the instructor and depending on the severity and frequency of the incidents.
Course Summary:
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