Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Syllabus

Treks and Texts: Journeys into Nature
HCOL 40023
Tuesdays, 3:00 PM to 4:50 PM
Jarvis Hall 307 [?]

In wildness is the preservation of the world. --Thoreau, "Walking"

This interdisciplinary colloquium will involve both classroom and outdoor experiences.  There will be assignments, discussions, and activities in three primary areas.  From the Humanities, students will closely read and respond to a variety of relevant texts in the genre of Nature Writing.  In the Sciences, they will investigate and discuss current issues of Environmental Studies, particularly those that relate to local natural habitats.  On the Co-Curricular side, they will learn the methods and practices of Outdoors Leadership.  This course intends to immerse students into both natural and textual environments in order to enhance student experiences by offering rich, reciprocal connections between the two.

Much of the colloquium will take place outdoors.  Five times during the semester students will travel to the Fort Worth Nature Center and Refuge for volunteer work, helping to maintain the trail system, and various exhibits.  Four times during the semester, students will take short field trips to parks and natural habitats near TCU (Overton Park and Fort Worth Botanic Garden).  Also offered in the course will be an optional three-day, two-night canoeing excursion during Fall Break, arranged with the help of the Rec Center, an evening ramble on Halloween, and Full Moon Paddle along the Trinity River.

Outcomes:
--an introduction to environmental issues and how these issues have been reflected in literature, film, and popular media
--a familiarity with the genre development of Nature Writing from early exploration accounts to the present
--a familiarity with major texts and writers of the Nature Writing genre and their various cultural contexts
--a familiarity with the characteristic techniques, themes, styles, conventions, and tropes of the Nature Writing genre
--an ability to reflect on personal observations and experiences in natural environments
--a general knowledge of a specific natural environment
--a general understanding of issues and practices in Environmental Studies
--a knowledge of Outdoors Leadership skills
--a writing portfolio of the student’s own nature writings, including a final Nature Essay
--a general understanding of literature as it reflects and impacts society and the individual
--an ability to use writing to gain and express an understanding of discipline-specific content

Week One, 08/22
--Introduction, an overview of the course, its schedule, its requirements, and its outcomes.

Week Two, 08/29
--excursion to the Fort Worth Nature Center and Refuge for volunteer work

Week Three, 09/05
            --excursion to the Fort Worth Botanic Garden
--Meriwether Lewis (from Nature Writing, 95-104)
--“Introduction” and Chapters One and Two from Wilderness and the American Mind (x-xiv, 8-43)

Week Four, 09/12
--excursion to the Fort Worth Nature Center and Refuge for volunteer work

Week Five, 09/19
            --excursion to Overton Park
--discussion of Henry David Thoreau, from Nature Writing, 168-205
--Chapters Three, Four, and Five from Wilderness and the American Mind, 44-95

Week Six, 09/26
--excursion to the Fort Worth Nature Center and Refuge for volunteer work

Week Seven, 10/03
--campus class
--John Muir, Luther Standing Bear, and Aldo Leopold, from Nature Writing, 251-258, 326-331, 376-397
--Chapters Six, Eight, and Eleven from Wilderness and the American Mind, 96-107, 122-140, 182-199

Week Eight, 10/10
            --excursion to Fort Worth Botanic Garden
--Loren Eiseley, Wallace Stegner, Thomas Merton, from Nature Writing, 485-493, 504-514, 545-553
--Chapters Seven, Nine, and Ten from Wilderness and the American Mind, 108-121, 141-181

Week Nine, 10/17
--Fall Break excursion, Canoeing on the Rio Grande in Big Bend  (optional)
           
Week Ten, 10/24
--excursion to the Fort Worth Nature Center and Refuge for volunteer work

Week Eleven, 10/31 (Halloween)
            --Overton Park
            --Edward Abbey, from Nature Writing, 614-627
            --optional night walk                                                                                                                                                                                                         
Week Twelve, 11/07
--excursion to the Fort Worth Nature Center and Refuge for volunteer work   

Week Thirteen, 11/14
            --campus class
--Edward Abbey, from The Best of Edward Abbey, 40-80, 118-130, 272-307, 386-395, 426-432

Week Fourteen, 11/21
--campus class
--Berry, Dillard, and McKibben, from Nature Writing, 718-736, 867-891, 1120-1130
            --first draft of Nature Essay due

Week Fifteen, 11/28
            --campus class
            --instructor and peer review of final Nature Essays

Week Sixteen, 12/05
            --campus class
            --final presentations

Course Requirements:

1) Attendance and Participation.  You are required to take an active part in the colloquium and to contribute to its success.   Outside excursions are required.  Also, in many classes there will be some sort of in-class activity (brief writing assignments or group work), and anyone absent will not receive credit for these activities.  Missing more than three classes during the term will result in failure.

2) Familiarity with the Texts.  A reading knowledge of the texts is essential and expected.  Please read.

3) Fort Worth Nature Center and Refuge Excursions.  Throughout the semester the students will meet at the Fort Worth Nature Center and Refuge for volunteer work.  Students will be divided into 6 teams of 3 students, and each team—accompanied by a FWNCR staff person—will experience different parts of the Nature Center (woods, prairie, and water/shoreline habitats), sharing various assignments and tasks.  Also, each team will take responsibility for a specific stretch of a Nature Center trail, not only to do trail maintenance but also to learn specific environmental information about that stretch of trail.

4) Lead Respondent Assignment: Throughout the semester students will be asked to help lead discussions concerning the assigned reading texts, and these assignments must be undertaken by the Nature Center teams.  Each group will choose a text or group of texts, assigned on specific class days, and will be expected to make a presentation to the class that will encourage insight and discussion.  These presentations may include biographical or historical information about the author, the text’s composition, summaries of the text’s print history and reception, and an analysis of its themes and issues.  More importantly, these presentations should also include a discussion of what the group thinks is relevant in the text and a list of questions for discussion.  These presentations should be informative, creative, and engaging.  A brief handout summarizing key points and pertinent information and listing the discussion questions is required.

5) Nature Journals.  Nature writers often keep meticulous journals, and for this field-intensive colloquium, students will be asked to keep a journal as part of their Frog Folio accounts.  Nature journals not only describe specific physical settings, including flora and fauna, but also on how individuals react to the environments.  Entries should be a minimum of 2 pages in length, and by the end of the semester students will be expected to have written and uploaded 16 journal entries.  These entries should comment on both the field trips and/or the assigned readings.  For the readings, students should honestly describe what their reading experiences were like and remark on what they thought was interesting, provocative, or relevant in the texts. For the excursions, observations of the natural environments are expected, and self-reflections are encouraged.  Student should write about their observations, thoughts, and responses.  Throughout the semester students will receive credit for their journal entries, and at the end of the semester the cumulative holistic quality of their journals will be evaluated and graded.

6) INaturalist.Org Postings.  Throughout the semester students will be required to post a minimum of 4 entries on the INaturalist.Org site, either offering a piece of specific information about the flora and/or fauna in their assigned Nature Center trail stretch, or asking for help identifying a specific flora or fauna from their trail stretches.

7) Nature Essay.  In order to practice their own nature writing, students will be asked to submit a Nature Essay at the end of the semester.  This final essay should be an extension and revision of one of their journal entries, and it should be 6 to 10 pages in length.  These essays must demonstrate several of the stylistic techniques from one or several of the assigned Nature writers, and they must also reflect a strong structure and overall thesis. Specific, closely detailed descriptions of environment[s] should be mixed with self-reflection describing how the students reacted to, and interacted with, their environments.

8) Final Presentation.  For this last assignment, each Nature Center team will give a multimedia presentation based on their trail assignments.  These presentations may include photographs, videos, sketches, art, recordings, music, prose, and poetry that, in some way, examine the unique features and importance of their trail assignments.  Students will be expected to demonstrate what they learned about their assigned environments and from their INaturalist postings.  They may also include final reflections, thoughts, and observations of their experiences throughout the semester.

9) Never Use the Non-Word “Very.”  For the rest of the semester, at least in our class, this four-letter nonword is forbidden.  It is a useless word, and the English vocabulary is rich with specific, vivid qualifiers and descriptors.  “The day was very sunny” is a weak sentence.

While not a “requirement,” there will be an optional canoe trip on the Rio Grande during Fall Break.  In order to experience a truly unique natural environment maintained by the National Park Service (NPS), students are encouraged to participate in this excursion.

Final Grade:

Nature Journals                               20% (16% for the holistic journal, 4% for entries)
Lead Respondent Assignments    20%
Nature Essays                                  20%
Final Presentations                         20%
INaturalist Entries                           10%
Attendance/Participation              10%

Required Texts:
Nature Writing: The Tradition in English, Finch and Elder, W.W. Norton
Wilderness and the American Mind, Roderick Nash, Yale University Press
Writing About Nature, John A. Murray, University of New Mexico Press (Optional)
The Best of Edward Abbey, Sierra Club Books

Dan Williams
TCU Press (3000 Sandage) and 3018D Scharbauer
817-257-5907 (office)
817-239-1376 (cell)
Office hours: By appointment.  Please verify where I am holding office hours before trying to locate me.  I am most often found at TCU Press, located at 3000 Sandage on the far eastern edge of campus.

TCU Mission: To educate individuals to think and act as ethical leaders and responsible citizens in the global community.
Honors Pledge: “As a member of the John V. Roach Honors College, I pledge to dedicate myself to intellectual inquiry, life-long learning, and critical thinking, to demonstrate personal and academic integrity, and to engage others in earnest and respectful discussion with an open mind.”

**Statement of Disability Services at TCU

Disabilities Statement: Texas Christian University complies with the Americans with Disabilities Act and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 regarding students with disabilities.  Eligible students seeking accommodations should contact the Coordinator of Student Disabilities Services in the Center for Academic Services located in Sadler Hall, 1010.  Accommodations are not retroactive, therefore, students should contact the Coordinator as soon as possible in the term for which they are seeking accommodations. Further information can be obtained from the Center for Academic Services, TCU Box 297710, Fort Worth, TX 76129, or at (817) 257-6567.

[Note:  The following two paragraphs are recommended, but are not required.]
Adequate time must be allowed to arrange accommodations and accommodations are not retroactive; therefore, students should contact the Coordinator as soon as possible in the academic term for which they are seeking accommodations.  Each eligible student is responsible for presenting relevant, verifiable, professional documentation and/or assessment reports to the Coordinator.  Guidelines for documentation may be found at http://www.acs.tcu.edu/disability_documentation.asp.

Students with emergency medical information or needing special arrangements in case a building must be evacuated should discuss this information with their instructor/professor as soon as possible.

**Academic Misconduct

Academic Misconduct (Sec. 3.4 from the Student Handbook): Any act that violates the academic integrity of the institution is considered academic misconduct. The procedures used to resolve suspected acts of academic misconduct are available in the offices of Academic Deans and the Office of Campus Life and are listed in detail in the Undergraduate Catalog. Specific examples include, but are not limited to:
  • Cheating: Copying from another student’s test paper, laboratory report, other report, or computer files and listings; using, during any academic exercise, material and/or devices not authorized by the person in charge of the test; collaborating with or seeking aid from another student during a test or laboratory without permission; knowingly using, buying, selling, stealing, transporting, or soliciting in its entirety or in part, the contents of a test or other assignment unauthorized for release; substituting for another student or permitting another student to substitute for oneself.
  • Plagiarism: The appropriation, theft, purchase or obtaining by any means another’s work, and the unacknowledged submission or incorporation of that work as one’s own offered for credit. Appropriation includes the quoting or paraphrasing of another’s work without giving credit therefore. [If you are using Turnitin, place information about your course ID/password or TCU Online integration. If you want to use Turnitin as a spot check please indicate that you may use Turnitin for plagiarism detection.]
  • Collusion: The unauthorized collaboration with another in preparing work offered for credit.

Netiquette: Communication Courtesy Code

All members of the class are expected to follow rules of common courtesy in all email messages, discussions, and chats.  If I deem any of them to be inappropriate or offensive, I will forward the message to the Chair of the department and appropriate action will be taken, not excluding expulsion from the course. The same rules apply online as they do in person. Be respectful of other students. Foul discourse will not be tolerated. Please take a moment and read the following link concerning "netiquette."
Participating in the virtual realm, including social media sites and shared-access sites sometimes used for educational collaborations, should be done with honor and integrity:



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Syllabus

Treks and Texts: Journeys into Nature HCOL 40023 Tuesdays, 3:00 PM to 4:50 PM Jarvis Hall 307 [?] In wildness is the preservation...