ANTH 112 & ANTH 326: Syllabus

ANTH 112 Introductory Anthropology (Section 05)
ANTH 326  Ethnographic Research (Section 01)
1:00-2:50pm TR

This course was developed to link cultures through the practical aspects of undertaking ethnographic research. As a means of accomplishing this, students majoring or minoring in anthropology are brought together with international academic programme students. One objective is to learn more about one’s own culture with the assistance of students from different ethno-cultural backgrounds who can offer another perspective. Another is to broaden intercultural learning experiences and, hopefully, develop friendships among those outside one’s typical area programme. Lastly, specifically directed at the international students, is to improve English language skills with primarily English-speaking Canadian students.

This course is experimental and continues to evolve. For this reason, it will not be typical of other courses taught. Students should expect some flexibility in the scheduling. The course is taught simultaneously as ANTH 326 and ANTH 112. Students will receive the appropriate credit for the course in which s/he is registered (ANTH 326, or ANTH 112). The class will not always meet as a group; in general, we will meet every Tuesday as a whole. The second class (Thursday) of the week will be devoted to providing the international students with the essentials of introductory anthropology (ANTH 112). This is reflected in the readings and lecture topics. Nevertheless, all students should be prepared to meet on either day.

NOTE: A time block of 2-hours has been scheduled to allow for 30-minutes of each class to be used to meet and work on class projects (lecture time is 80-minutes).

To help everyone to get know one another better, we will have a potluck dinner at the beginning of the semester. If students are interested, we will also hold one at the end.

The format of instruction is a combination of lecture and seminar-style discussion. BE PREPARED TO PARTICIPATE! For this reason, students are expected to keep up with their readings; read in advance. The grade for ANTH 326 will be based on participation and attendance (15%), one midterm (20%), journal/fieldnotes (10%), two assignments (10% each), and an ethnographic research project (35%). The requirements are the same for ANTH 112, except that the final research project will be worth 25%, and with an additional quiz (10%). As the students in this course are at two different levels of study, their evaluation will be based accordingly.

Missing an exam or not submitting an assignment will result in an “F”; your final grade is based on completing all course work.

Required texts:
Anderson, Barbara Gallatin. 1990. First Fieldwork: The Misadventures of an Anthropologist. Prospect Heights, IL: Waveland Press. [TO BE READ FOR ANTH 326 MIDTERM]

Angrosino, Michael V. 2005. Projects in Ethnographic Research. Long Grove, IL: Waveland Press.

Bohannan, Paul and Dirk van der Elst. 1998. Asking and Listening: Ethnography as Personal Adaptation. Prospect Heights, IL: Waveland Press.

Haviland, William A., Harald E.L. Prins, Dana Walrath and Bunny McBride.  2014. Anthropology: The Human Challenge. 14th Edition. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth/CENGAGE Learning. (ON RESERVE, two copies: XS 7049) [ANTH 112 only]

Murchison, Julian M. 2010. Ethnography Essentials: Designing, Conducting, and Presenting your Research. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
http://www.VIU.eblib.com/EBLWeb/patron?target=patron&extendedid=P_477815_0&

Optional text:
Kutsche, Paul. 1998. Field Ethnography: A Manual for Doing Cultural Anthropology. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall.

Please read assigned chapters prior to the week’s class to facilitate discussion.

Lectures and Readings
DATE TOPIC
Jan 5 Introduction: Structure of course
326 READ: Bohannan, chs.1-4; Angrosino, ch.1
7 What is anthropology? What is culture?
112 READ: Haviland, pp.3-15; 330-40
12 Who is the Other? [class discussion]
326 READ: Bohannan, chs.5-11; Murchison, ch.1
14 Communication
112 READ: Haviland, pp.343-44; 375-78, 383-90
19 What is Canadian Culture? Research Brainstorming [class discussion]
326 READ: Bohannan, chs.12-17, 24-26; Murchison, ch.2
21 Becoming You [human]
112 READ: Haviland, pp.405-16
26 Interviewing
326 READ: Angrosino, ch.5; Murchison, ch.7
28 How We Live—Subsistence
112 READ: Haviland, pp. 357-60; 429-44
Feb 2 Designing Research
326 READ: Murchsion, ch.3
4 Who Gets What and Why: Distribution and Exchange
112 READ: Haviland, pp.355-56; 456-64
9 Ethics & Informed Consent [ANTH 112 & 326]
326 READ: Angrosino, ch.2; Murchison, ch.4; AAA Statements on Ethics & VIU Research Involving Human Subjects (see links Ethics & Human Subjects)
112 READ: Haviland, pp.19-21; 369-371
11 TCPS Tutorial [ANTH 112 & 326]
Assignment #1 DUE: February 11
16 Research Proposals
DUE: TCPS certificate (e-copy)
18 Midterm Exam: February 18 [ANTH 112 & 326]
Journals DUE: February 19 by 3:00pm
DUE: February 19, Research proposal and consent forms for term project
23,25 Study Week–No Classes
Mar 1 Participant Observation
326 READ: Angrosino, ch.4; Murchison, ch.6
3 Who’s Kin?
112 READ: Haviland, pp.356-57; 497-504
8 Going into the Field
326 READ: Angrosino, ch.3; Murchison, ch.5
10 Who’s Who in the Family: Kinship Terminology
112 READ: Haviland, pp.16-19; 361-66; 510-15
15 Evaluating, Feedback, Adjusting
326 READ: Murchison, ch.8
17 Marriage
112 READ: Haviland, pp.472-81
Assignment #2 DUE: March 17
22 Emic versus Etic [only ANTH 326]
326 READ: Murchison, ch.13
24 Who to Marry?
112 READ: Haviland, pp.481-87
29 Problems & Problem-solving [class discussion]
326 READ: Angrosino, ch.7; Murchison, ch.12
31 Family and Household
112 READ: Haviland, pp.487-94
QUIZ: March 31
Apr 5 Writing Ethnography – Presentations
7 Writing Ethnography – Presentations
Journal DUE: April 7 by 5:00pm
Potluck?

NOTE:

  • Use of technology: Cell phones, iPods and other electronic devices must be turned off in class and laptops are permitted during class ONLY for note taking. Recording is only permitted by request as authorised by Disability Services. Please contact Disability Services if you are in need of academic support and accommodation.
  • If there are exceptional and/or extenuating circumstances, such as illness or a death in the family, that prevents you from being present for an exam, or submitting an assignment, etc., please notify me as soon as possible so that other arrangements can be made. (See VIU Calendar, General Regulations.)
  • Should you need counselling at any time during the semester, contact Student Affairs. Drop-in counselling is available. If immediate support is needed after hours, call the Crisis & Information Line: 1-888-494-3888. As well, there is a Walk-in Counselling Clinic, Brooks Landing (203-2000 Island Highway North), Nanaimo: 250-739-5710
  • Withdrawing from any VIU course MUST be done formally, that is, by applying at the Registration Centre.
  • All in-coming mail is spam-filtered. Identify the course name in the “Subject” box when emailing your instructor. If I do not respond within a reasonable period of time, check that I have indeed received your message. Also, add your instructor to your “accepted” email address file.

Final grade assignment:
Grades will be assigned according to the following scale:

90-100 A+ 64-67 C+
85-89 A 60-63 C
80-84 A- 55-59 C-
76-79 B+ 50-54 D
72-75 B <49 F
68-71 B-

Last updated 2016-02-04