Anth1001 2015 Sem-1 Crawley
Anth1001 2015 Sem-1 Crawley
Anth1001 2015 Sem-1 Crawley
Social Sciences
Unit Outline
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the course material itself
The University of Western Australia 2001
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Unit details
Unit title
Unit code
Availability
Location
Credit points
Mode
Multimode
Contact details
Faculty
School
School website
Unit coordinator
Email
Telephone
Consultation hours
Lecturers
Tutors
Faculty of Arts
Social Sciences
http://www.ss.arts.uwa.edu.au/
Dr Richard Davis
richard.davis@uwa.edu.au
6488 2847
Monday 1-2, Tuesday 12-1
Name
Position
Richard Davis
Debra McDougall
Martin Forsey
Katie Glaskin
Assistant Professor
Associate Professor
Associate Professor
Associate Professor
richard.davis@uwa.edu.au
6488 2847
debra.mcdougall@uwa.edu.au 6488 2869
martin.forsey@uwa.edu.au
6488 3880
katie.glaskin@uwa.edu.au
Name
Sean Martin-Iverson
Mitchell Low
Debra McDougall
Farida Iqbal
Richard Davis
Yann Toussaint
sean.martin-iverson@uwa.edu.au
mitchell.low@uwa.edu.au
debra.mcdougall@uwa.edu.au
farida.iqbal.mail@gmail.com
richard.davis@uwa.edu.au
yann.toussaint@uwa.edu.au
Telephone Number
Unit rules
Incompatibility
Unit description
We live in a multicultural world where there are many ways of 'being human'. At the same time, all people share some experiences in
commonall learn, share and communicate beliefs, create and maintain social relationships, adapt to local environments, and make a
living through particular modes of production. This unit explores the world's rich diversity of human experience and practice, looking at
cross-cultural examples of it in domains such as religion, identity, subsistence, social inequality and communication. It also considers
the variety of ways that anthropologists and sociologists conduct their research.
Learning outcomes
Students are able to (1) define and apply key concepts from the disciplines of Anthropology and Sociology including culture, society,
identity ethnocentrism, cultural relativism, the sociological imagination and social research; (2) outline and compare how anthropology
and sociology are used to explain human behaviour across time and across the world; (3) evaluate the advantages and disadvantages
of diverse anthropological and sociological concepts and theories for enhancing the understanding of social and cultural life; (4) apply
theoretical and conceptual tools to specific case study examples of social and cultural life; (5) discuss the utility of the concept human
universals; and (6) write, verbally articulate and present clear, coherent, well-documented arguments, drawing on both theory and
empirical or ethnographic material relevant to this unit.
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Unit structure
This unit takes place over twelve teaching weeks. Each two weeks comprises a Module organised around a theme. In week one of
each Module there is a lecture at the Octagon Theatre. In week two of each Module there is NOT a lecture at the Octagon theatre.
Instead, there is an online lecture made available on your unit website at http://www.lms.uwa.edu.au/. Altogether, there are twelve
lectures in this unit, six in the Octagon theatre and six online. The six Module themes are Humanity, Person, Society and Culture,
Anthropological Knowledge and Ethics, Gender, Race and Ethnicity.
Starting in Week 2, you will attend a tutorial each teaching week for 11 weeks.
Octagon Theatre Lectures: Tuesdays, Weeks 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11 in the Octagon Theatre, 11:00 12.45
Online Learning, Tuesdays, Weeks 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12 at http://www.lms.uwa.edu.au/
See dates below. Dates are for the beginning Monday of each week
Week 1 Module One/A, February 23 - Octagon
Humanity A (Assistant Professor Richard Davis)
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3. Tutorials: Starting in week 2, there are 11 weeks of tutorials spread through the semester. It is the responsibility of students to note
the dates of their tutorials and of tutorial-free weeks. Tutorial attendance is a course requirement. Students who are regularly absent
from tutorials without a satisfactory excuse may forfeit their right to sit the final examination. Students who attend all tutorials will receive
a mark of at least 50%. Higher marks are given on the basis of a students participation in the group discussion. In their remarks,
students should aim to demonstrate that they have read and thought about the tutorial material. Students are urged to take turns in any
discussion, allowing fellow students the opportunity to speak.
ACE/AISE/CARS
Academic Conduct Essentials (AACE1000/AACE7000)
Academic Conduct Essentials (ACE) is a compulsory online module for all students about ethical scholarship and the expectations of
correct academic conduct that UWA has of its students. All students at any level undergraduate, postgraduate, onshore, offshore
who are enrolled into a UWA course, are required to complete an online module which introduces you to the basic issues of ethical
scholarship and the expectations of correct academic conduct that UWA has of its students. The unit is called Academic Conduct
Essentials, or ACE for short, and is available through the Learning Management System (LMS) using your Pheme account. Those
students required to complete ACE are automatically enrolled in the unit. Information about ACE is available in the UWA Handbook.
Assessment
Assessment overview
Typically this unit is assessed in the following way(s): (1) online quiz; (2) written work; (3) participation and oral presentation; and (4)
examination. Further information is available in the unit outline.
Student Office.
Tutorials
Tutorials start in Week 2 and are held each teaching week until Week 12 of the unit. It is the student's responsibility to make sure they
get to their tutorial on time. If students are unable to make their tutorial they cannot attend another tutorial to make up their missed
tutorial. If they attend another tutorial, no mark will be recorded for their attendance or participation. If students miss a tutorial they can
ask for special consideration to be applied to the missed tutorial. To do this they must hand in a written explanation of why they were
late for the exact date and time of their tutorial and attach supporting evidence (such as a medical certificate). The tutor will assess
their request and, if accepted, their tutorial mark for the unit will be adjusted to take account of their missed tutorial.
Assessment mechanism
# Component
1 Tutorial
participation
15%
1-4
2 Fortnightly
25%
Multiple Choice
1-4
3 Small
Observational
Report
10%
1-4
4 Large Essay
25%
1-4
5 Exam
25%
TBA
1-4
Assessment items
Item Title
Description
Tutorials
Small
Observational
Report
Fortnightly
Multiple Choice
Test
Prepared discussion
An 500 word report
Essay
Exam
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