AP/MODR1760 6.0 C: Reasoning About Morality and Values
Offered by: MODR
Session
Summer 2023
Status
Cancelled: Section
Term
SU
Format
LECT
Calendar Description / Prerequisite / Co-Requisite
This is a skills-based course focusing on critical thinking, critical writing, and logical and linguistic analysis. The course uses examples drawn from areas in the humanities where value judgements are made. Different sections will stress different topics in ethics, aesthetics, religion or law. Course credit exclusions: AP/MODR 1730 6.00, AP/MODR 1770 6.00.
Course Start Up
Course Websites hosted on York's "eClass" are accessible to students during the first week of the term. It takes two business days from the time of your enrolment to access your course website. Course materials begin to be released on the course website during the first week. To log in to your eClass course visit the York U eClass Portal and login with your Student Passport York Account. If you are creating and participating in Zoom meetings you may also go directly to the York U Zoom Portal.
For further course Start Up details, review the Getting Started webpage.
For IT support, students may contact University Information Technology Client Services via askit@yorku.ca or (416) 736-5800. Please also visit Students Getting Started UIT or the Getting Help - UIT webpages.
Course Instructor Contact: Philip MacEwen (pmacewen@yorku.ca)
Office hours:
In-person and virtual office hours will be held immediately after class each Tuesday and Thursday.
In-person office hours will be held in DB 1004 (Tuesdays) and DB 0007 (Thursdays).
Organization of the course
MODR 1760 6.0C is 1) an introduction to critical thinking 2) with a focus on a range of topics of moral concern. The critical skills include logical analysis, conceptual analysis, fallacy analysis, language analysis, and writing analysis. Using these critical skills, topics we will study include artificial intelligence (AI), climate change, educational issues, health care issues, nationalism and globalism, war and the threat of nuclear war, and many others.
Technical requirements for taking the course:
MODR 1760 6.0C, Reasoning about Morality and Values, is an in-class course.
To maximize flexibility, in-class lectures and tutorials will also be recorded via Zoom and posted on the course website.
The complete written text of the in-class lectures will also be posted on the course website.
If students want to take all/some of the course on-line, they will need a computer and/or smart device with stable, high-speed Internet connection and Zoom access.
Here are some useful links for student computing information, resources and help:
Zoom@YorkU User Reference Guide
Computing for Students Website
Student Guide to eLearning at York University
To determine Internet connection and speed, there are online tests, such as Speedtest, that can be run.]
There are no hard-copy tests/readings for MODR 1760 6.0C.
All the required course text/readings will be posted on the course website.
Any optional readings will be on-line resources with URL’s posted on the course website.
The Course Outline will also be posted on the course website.
There will be five short, small-group writing assignments, each worth 20% of the final grade (5 x 20%=100%).
Submitted assignments will be assessed according to the following criteria, each worth 33.33% of the grade: 1) content, i.e., what the submissions say; 2) organization, i.e., where the submissions say what they say, and style, i.e., how the submissions say what they say.
No grade will be assigned for “attendance” or “participation.” However, students are encouraged to interact with course materials through in-class discussion and tutorials and/or discussion forums, chat rooms, and other venues.
Times and locations:
MODR 1760 6.0C will meet twice each week.
It will meet in-class on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 11:30 am - 2:30 pm in DB 1004 (Tuesdays) and DB 0007 (Thursdays). DB=Victor Phillip Dahdaleh Building.
The course will meet remotely via Zoom at the same time.
If students are not able to attend in-class or meet remotely via Zoom at this time, the lectures can be accessed on the course website at any time after they have been downloaded from the iCloud.
The learning objectives of MODR 1760.06C are twofold: 1) to gain facility with a variety of critical skills students will need to be successful in any academic or professional career and 2) to use these skills to study a variety of topics of moral concern.
Course policies:
The written lectures and tutorials for MODR 1760 6.0C, as well as the topics and matrices for the five short small-group writing assignments, will be posted on the course website before the course begins.
That way, students will be able to work ahead in the course, should they wish to do so.
They will also know in advance what the five writing assignments are with detailed instructions on how to write them.
During the first week of the course, each student will be assigned to a small writing group (2-5 members) and provided with contact information for the other members of that group.
Please reach out to the members of your small writing group and get to know how they can contribute to the five required assignments.
Assignments should be submitted to the Course Director no later than the deadlines indicated in the Course Outline.
Each participating member of each writing group will receive the same grade for the same assignment.
Participating members are those whose names and student numbers appear on the cover page of each assignment as submitted to the Course Director by the writing group to which they belong.
All assignments submitted to the Course Director must be copied at the time of submission to the participating members of your writing group. That way, participating members will know if and when assignments have been sent to the Course Director.
Assignments which are not copied to the participating members of your group will be returned to the sender without comments and without a grade.
Members of writing groups who do not participate in any or all of the five short writing assignments for the course will receive a grade of “0” for the relevant assignment/s.
- Academic Honesty
- Student Rights and Responsibilities
- Religious Observance
- Grading Scheme and Feedback
- 20% Rule
No examinations or tests collectively worth more than 20% of the final grade in a course will be given during the final 14 calendar days of classes in a term. The exceptions to the rule are classes which regularly meet Friday evenings or on Saturday and/or Sunday at any time, and courses offered in the compressed summer terms. - Academic Accommodation for Students with Disabilities