Registration and Course Planning
TUT 100.32 - Virtue in Animal and Machine - Professor Weinman
- Summary:
- You will answer a series of questions about potential
courses, charting a course for the next three semesters (and possibly
beyond).
- Purpose:
- To get you thinking about the purpose and process of
course planning.
- Expected Time:
- 2-5 hours
- Due:
- By our scheduled meeting on Monday
Course planning at Grinnell is sometimes a more complex task than
you might expect. In part, this complexity is due to different departments'
perspectives on how one should progress through a major. In part,
this complexity is due to a variety of prerequisite structures. In
part, this complexity is due to the wide variety of courses we make
available. In part, this complexity is due to the limitations in numbers
of sections we can offer at a College of Grinnell's size.
You will need to do the following exercises to prepare for our thirty-minute
course planning and registration meeting at your scheduled time on
Monday.
Background
The following resources may be useful to you when you begin to complete
your assignment:
- College Catalog
- (for
finding interesting courses and their pre-requisites)
- Departmental Advising and Registration Suggestions
- (for
important departmental info and sample schedules for fullfilling major
requirements
- Current Course Information
- (for
verifying what is open and has changed since the hard-copy sheet was
printed)
Part A: Thinking Broadly
Record (typing preferred) your answers to all of the following.
- Begin writing a two or three paragraph essay, "Beginning my Liberal
Education." The first paragraph should present a brief and concise
definition of what a liberal arts education means to you.
Keep in mind Cronon's essay and the documents that describe the liberal
arts at Grinnell College. The goal of this paragraph is not to mimic
or simply accept Grinnell's definition as your own. Instead, I am
interested in what you think a liberal arts education means generally
or for you. I will keep a copy of your statement in your advising
folder. Further paragraphs will be explained below.
- Pick between two and four potential majors that you might choose at
Grinnell.
- For one of those majors, map out a four-year plan that ensures that
you meet all of the requirements of the major. That is, identify the
semesters in which you would take the required courses and any of
their pre-requisites, in case they are not explicitly required.
- Find three upper-level (200-level and above) courses you think you
might like to take before you graduate from Grinnell. I prefer that
you pick one from each division. For example, you might pick CSC205,
Computational Linguistics, from Computer Science (Science Division),
ENG204, The Craft of Argument, from English (Humanities Division),
and ECN338, Applied Game Theory, from Economics (Social Studies Division).
- Determine how you will meet the prerequisites for those courses. For
example, in order to take Computational Linguistics (an alternate-year
course) in fall of your second year, you'll need to take LIN114 and
CSC151 before the course is offered. In this particular case, you
should think about taking both courses by this spring.
Part B: Thinking About Fall 2010
Record (typing preferred) your answers to all of the following.
- Pick one language course that you would like to take this semester.
Include the course number and title.
I recommend that students continue their study of foreign language
in their first semester, since we often forget other languages quickly.
If students have not previously studied other languages or would like
to learn a new language, I consider that an appropriate alternate.
I recommend starting that learning early in your career so that you
have time to explore the language sufficiently.
This is especially important if you are interested in studying abroad.
- Pick one mathematics or statistics course that you would like to take
this semester. Include the course number and title.
I recommend that students continue their study of Mathematics in their
first semester, since we often forget mathematical methods quickly.
The math curriculum is also designed for people to start in the fall.
Many majors benefit from mathematical knowledge.
- Pick at least five other courses that you would like to take this
semester. Include the registration numbers, course numbers, and titles.
I recommend that two of these choices relate to the potential majors
you listed above.
- Create a sample schedule that has the language course, the mathematics
course, and one of the other courses. (Your tutorial is also obviously
a part of your schedule.)
If you strongly prefer not to take math or a language, your sample
schedule need not include that course. However, you must include an
additional one-paragraph rationale for the exception in your essay.
- Prepare at least one alternative schedule, in case you don't get your
first choices.
Math and language often tend to take all comers, so the primary course
to worry about is the open course. Of course, math and language may
also ask you to take courses in different times than you prefer.
Part C: Thinking Broadly, Revisited
Record (typing preferred) your answers to all of the following.
- Assume that you get all the courses you indicated in B.4
above. Sketch a plan of courses for next semester and the subsequent
fall, giving you a three-semester prospective plan.
In this plan, you should list four courses for each semester. You
should make sure that you take the introductory course for each prospective
major somewhere in these first three semesters. You should also try
to meet each of Grinnell's Elements of the Liberal Arts within this
time frame.
These are semesters we will partner as advisor and advisee, leading
up to your declaration of a major. Think about the array of courses
you definitely want to incorporate or prepare for, to support interests
or prepare for majors. This should be fun! Imagine your first
two years at Grinnell. This is not a commitment, but an
opportunity to record what your goals and hopes are right now.
- We will discuss your course choices for this fall in detail during
our thirty minute conference on Monday. To prepare for our discussion,
please conclude your "Beginning my Liberal Education" essay
with an additional paragraph that explains
- what you want to accomplish this first semester, and
- how each of the seven courses you have identified contribute to those
goals.
Remember that if you have elected not to include a math/statistics
or language course in your schedule, you will also need to add your
one-paragraph rationale.
Acknowledgments
Adapted from Samuel A. Rebelsky, "Miscellaneous Assignment
2: Course Planning" (2010) and Karla Erickson, "First 2 Assignments"
(2010). Used by permission.