Reminder: You must have a compelling reason to dispute your score.
If you would like general feedback, please let me know via email and I will respond within the next few days.
Average: 84-85
Mode: 85-86
A few folks have still not submitted a hard copy to me (or anything for that matter). Please submit you final exam to Turnitin ASAP to avoid losing more points.
Intro to American Politics Spring 2016 MW
Thursday, May 12, 2016
Re: Final Exam Feedback
Believe it or not, I finished grading. Working on inputting
scores into my gradebook. Expect to see them posted here shortly.
When the grades are posted here on the course blog, please
do not immediately email me for feedback or “what could I have done differently/better.” I have some
general comments below for everyone.
Re: grade disputes. I will ONLY entertain grade disputes if
you submit to me in writing (via email) why you feel the grade does not reflect
what you did. It needs to be clear and demonstrate that you can connect your
essay back to the question you chose to answer. As such, you need to reference you own essay. I
will not have much time between now and next week to go back-and-forth with you
about your score.Once I submit them to MyECC, that's it.
Many of you did not fully address the questions. As I mentioned in class, you needed to address each component of the question. Essays that went beyond the questions while still answering the core components were generally better that those that went beyond w/out addressing core components of the questions. I personally never grade people down for their opinion, but I don't give people better scores for writing really good essays that don't actually focus on the prompt.
Make sure on future exams in other courses you provide
FACTUAL EVIDENCE about your opinion. For instance, there is a stark difference
between saying "I think Trump will make people vote because he would make
a bad president" and "I think the rise of Trump will cause more
people to vote because Trump's campaign has sparked an interest in many folks
who are typically apathetic or disillusioned with the political process--and
generating interest is a key reason people choose to vote."
Since so many of you did your essay on voting: you needed to
bring in Direct Democracy; many lost points simply for ignoring that. Also, if
you neglected to discuss voting cues, implicitly or explicitly, you missed some
points.
In general, I was happy with the lack of outside sources
(many of you integrated statistics or factual evidence in a meaningful way).
That said, many folks seemed to have forgotten about their
lecture notes. The textbook does a fine job of providing you the answers to the
questions, but stronger essays did a great job blending the two together. The
best essays brought both into a dialog with the “state of the world outside”
(perhaps by analyzing the current election or reviewing the types of news
coverage on TV vs the Internet).
Not too many “kitchen sink” essays. A KS essay is one that
throws everything-but-the-kitchen-sink into their paper without actually doing
anything with that info. Some essays actually rec’d higher scores despite not
including every little key term, because what they did include was coherent and
supported their argument and analysis in a persuasive and compelling manner. “Showing”
is good, but you also need to “tell” the reader why you are bringing something
into your paper.
Minimum pages means minimum pages. You lost points if your essay was sparse because the directions asked you to write a certain number of pages.
Minimum pages means minimum pages. You lost points if your essay was sparse because the directions asked you to write a certain number of pages.
Some tips for writing
social science essays:
Avoid speculation without supporting evidence.
Avoid saying something is “natural” (in social science,
nothing is natural…the only scholars that are allowed to say this are those who
published centuries ago, like Madison).
Avoid giving readers “facts” that are not actually facts but
just what YOU think is true (especially if the reader is a professor).
Avoid generalizations (“everyone” “all people” “the isn’t a
single person who doesn’t”).
Avoid inserting your opinion until the end of the paper, and
do so in a critical fashion (again: see the Trump example up top).
I will update this post as I have more general feedback.
PS -- when calculating your overall grade in the course, I decided to keep my word and keep your top 8 quiz scores.
Wednesday, May 4, 2016
FINAL EXAM Due Wednesday 5/11 by 9:00 AM
>>LINK: FINAL EXAM POLI-1 MW<<
Due Wednesday 5/11 by 9:00 AM in class (hard copy) & on Turnitin.com
Papers will lose 1/3 of a grade for each day late beginning at 9:11 AM
Absolute last day to submit late papers is 5/17.
Papers not submitted to Turnitin.com will earn automatic zeroes.
You are responsible for all information contained on the final exam instruction packet.
Turnitin.com
OWL Online Writing Lab at Purdue University
Due Wednesday 5/11 by 9:00 AM in class (hard copy) & on Turnitin.com
Papers will lose 1/3 of a grade for each day late beginning at 9:11 AM
Absolute last day to submit late papers is 5/17.
Papers not submitted to Turnitin.com will earn automatic zeroes.
You are responsible for all information contained on the final exam instruction packet.
Turnitin.com
OWL Online Writing Lab at Purdue University
Monday, May 2, 2016
"Bonus" HW assignment DUE Friday 5/6 @ 11:59 PM via Email
[Optional] HW Interest Group Lobbying
Due Friday 5/6 @ 11:59 PM via email
zgass@elcamino.edu [only acceptable email address]
*This is an optional homework assignment. Completing it adds more points to the HW Category pool, but does not replace any missing assignments. In other words, it can boost your average score for that category, but not in the way that Extra Credit does.*
Directions:
Read the "You Decide" feature on page 358 of the textbook and watch the "60 Minutes" segment on Jack Abramoff [link below]. Then answer the questions:
LINK: YouTube - "Jack Abramoff: The lobbyist's playbook"
Return to chapter 10 and read the "You Decide" feature on page 358, and answer the following questions:
1. To what extent do you think current congressional rules limiting the size of gifts that members of Congress can receive from lobbyists have curbed illegal behavior by interest groups?
2. Are these rules aimed at exceptional cases or average interest groups?
After watching the "60 Minutes" segment, answer the following questions:
3. When people think of interest groups, they often picture lobbyists making policy with politicians behind closed doors -- as suggested by Jack Abramoff's scandal. In light of the "60 Minutes" interview, does this depiction of lobbying seem accurate? What kinds of things did Abramoff and others do to capture politician's attention?
4. Should we do more or less to regulate the process?
Copy paste link to video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CHiicN0Kg10
Tuesday, April 26, 2016
Quiz Chapter 10 - Interest Groups DUE Monday May 2
Due: Monday May 2 at Start of Class
This is the last quiz for the course. If you have taken every quiz or are satisfied with your quiz scores, you might be able to skip this quiz. If you have a pile of zeroes, it goes without saying you ought to take this quiz.
Results: Quiz 11 Voting & Elections
Curved the scores again. 14 points for 16 questions. I'll take a look at some of the questions and we can discuss tomorrow.
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