Christianity in the Modern World

IST2009-1

Christianity in the Modern World:

Colonialism and Christianity in the Americas, Asia, and Africa

Tuesdays 1:00p.m. - 4:30p.m.

Instructor:

Dr. Tink Tinker (ttinker@iliff.edu)
Andriette Jordan-Fields ( afields@iliff.edu )

TA: Teresa Crist ( tcrist@iliff.edu )

Course Synopsis

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Course Overview

 

Course Objectives

Course Objectives:

This seminar examines Christianity as a social movement in the period of european modernity. It will explore historically the interrelationship between Christianity and cultures in the Americas, Asia, and Africa in order that we might begin to:

 

Requirements:

Completion of assigned readings before class the day they are listed. Class sessions will presuppose student reading of assignments ahead of time and may include discussion of the readings. Lectures that are given will provide context, interpretation, integration and/or present material not in the readings. The written assignments will test the depth and completeness of your readings. Class attendance and participation is essential—and a professional obligation. Classroom discussions are particularly important. In the block schedule, every class missed is ten percent of the total class. Please come to class, and please come well read and prepared to take part in vital discussions. (See the note below on excessive absences.)

Several times during the course you will be asked to complete a written assignment and post it onto our online class CANVAS site. These may be one of two types of assignments: research postings related to specific topics drawing on on-line and out of class resources and “analytical” postings that ask you to dig more deeply into assigned literatures. These assignments are outlined more fully in the pertinent syllabus locations. Each assignment will be graded on a 10-point scale (see end of syllabus for grading-point rubric) and the several weeks will be averaged for an overall “posting” grade. You must post your answers to CANVAS by Sunday night at midnight previous to class. Your analytical postings should be concise and well-written, analytical and embodied responses to the content of the current week’s assigned materials. Guiding questions will be provided. Some weeks you will have to answer more than one analytical question. Some weeks may be a combination of analytical and research postings. Regardless of the mixture of postings, each separate answer (for analytical and research postings) will be graded on a 10-point scale. The mere expression of personal opinion is unacceptable without coherent argumentation (based on the readings) to support one’s opinion. Critical argumentation must be founded on the assigned literatures, citing text wherever appropriate. You should not quote readings at length, but make appropriate parenthetical textual citations to demonstrate the material to which you are referring. Refer to the text, make an argument.

Posting length : Students are responsible for answering all of the questions for posting. However many given questions there on any given week, we expect the total word count for all answers to total not more than 500 or 1000 words (as indicated for each posting).

Posting evaluation criteria : See end of syllabus for a detailed grading rubric.

Responsibility for evaluating the postings : will rotate among the instructors and teaching assistant every week throughout the quarter. The initials of the respondent will appear at the end of the posted response. Only you and the members of the teaching team will be able to view your posting on CANVAS.

Late postings : will be penalized one full point per day. Further, you must communicate with your instructors and TA (all of them, since the evaluation will be rotating every week and you may not know which one will be grading you from week to week) that the posting will be late, and when you intend to post within the coming week.

Write a final integrative posting of 6-8 pages. Length: double-spaced, typed, 2500-2800 words. This short, analytic paper should address how I/we have come to grips with the content of this course, related again to the questions framed by the work you have done in your previous postings. You may use themes from your writings and integrate them into the paper, but you should not quote yourself at length. This is not a mere reflection essay. Build your reflection with careful analytical argumentation and on an analysis of actual text from the course. A letter grade will be assigned. A more detailed description of the assignment will be distributed mid-way through the quarter . Due by noon on Friday, November 18 th . Please submit all the final papers by email in a format that is MSWord compatible. The final paper should be uploaded as a Word document to CANVAS.

A general word about assignments :

There will be no examinations in this course. However, since the quarter system is notorious for the term being over before students [or faculty] realize it, it is crucial to plan your reading and writing carefully. There will be a penalty for a late final paper and, in accord with the faculty’s more stringent policy on Incompletes, no Incompletes will be given except in the case of a bona fide emergency.

Required Texts:

Many other course materials will be listed in the syllabus and posted on CANVAS.

Degree Learning Goals: Please take some time to look over the Professional Degree Learning Goals (MDiv, MASC, MAPSC) and the Academic Degree Learning Goals (MTS, MA).

Incompletes:  If incompletes are allowed in this course, see the Master's Student Handbook for Policies and Procedures.

Pass/Fail:  Masters students wishing to take the class pass/fail should discuss this with the instructor by the second class session.

Academic Integrity and Community Covenant:  All students are expected to abide by Iliff’s statement on Academic Integrity, as published in the Masters Student Handbook, or the Joint PhD Statement on Academic Honesty, as published in the Joint PhD Student Handbook, as appropriate.  All participants in this class are expected to be familiar with Iliff’s Community Covenant.

Accommodations:  Iliff engages in a collaborative effort with students with disabilities to reasonably accommodate student needs.   Students are encouraged to contact their assigned advisor to initiate the process of requesting accommodations.  The advising center can be contacted at advising@iliff.edu or by phone at 303-765-1146. 

Writing Lab:  Grammar and organization are important for all written assignments.  Additional help is available from the Iliff Writing Lab, which is available for students of any level who need help beginning an assignment, organizing thoughts, or reviewing a final draft. 

Inclusive Language:  It is expected that all course participants will use inclusive language in speaking and writing, and will use terms that do not create barriers to classroom community. 

Standard Syllabus Annotations

Criteria / Points for Grading Postings and Final Paper

Every research posting, analytical posting, and the final paper will be graded in relation to four overall criteria: Thesis, Textual Evidence, Writing, and Reflection.

Thesis (Make a claim that answers the question)

2.5 points - Thesis is evident, is clearly and concisely stated, and meaningful. (When provided, guiding question is answered)

1.5 points – Attempt at formulating thesis is evident, lacks clarity / only partially answers guiding question

0 points – No thesis / failed to respond to guiding question

Textual Evidence (Integration of material)

2.5 points - Variety of course materials are used and appropriately cited. Evidence that material was understood and applied appropriately. Connections between different materials are made, using texts in conversation with each other and in relation to the thesis.

1.5 points – Some course materials are used. Some course materials are misunderstood. At times, material is incompletely cited or inappropriately used (original material does not support thesis or claim made).

0 points – No or little material used or no appropriate citation. Material misunderstood.

Writing (Organization and Clarity)

2.5 points – Well organized, coherent and structured. Writing strategy to develop arguments evident (chronological, spatial, or comparison / contrast). Organization supports overall goal for the paper. Writing remains focused on central point, appropriate transitions assist reading, conclusion serves thesis and goal for the paper. Writing style is appropriate to intended purpose, shows variety of sentence patterns and rhetorical effectiveness, avoiding jargon and discriminating language.

1.5 points – Organized and structured, appropriate style and word choices. At times lacks cohesion or relevancy to main goal of paper unclear.

0 points – Lacks structure and organization. Uses inappropriate language. Lacks focus.

Reflection (Depth and Quality)

2.5 points – Thesis is developed throughout the paper with well-chosen, appropriate argumentation. Arguments are used to show rather than tell, assertions are well defended and logical. Personal reflection shows understanding of complexity and context of issue discussed as it relates to embodied context of student.

1.5 points – Most arguments support thesis, at times claims miss supportive evidence or lack clarity. Reflection at times appears to miss contextual connections or complexity of issue, remains abstract.

0 points – Arguments do not support thesis or lack evidentiary nature. Issue is discussed without attention to complexity and context or personal context of student.

This is a living document, subject to changes during the course!

DateDayDetails
Sep 13, 2016TueWeek 1~ September 13th Introduction to the Course:Teaching Team and Theoretical Perspectives Christianity and Colonialism as Historical Correlatives due by 07:00PM
Sep 19, 2016MonWeek 02 ~ September 20th Puritanism and Indian Missions/New Englanddue by 05:59AM
Sep 26, 2016MonWeek 03 ~ September 27th Religious Freedom and Indian Removaldue by 05:59AM
Oct 03, 2016MonWeek 04 ~ October 4th Worldview/Ideology: Eurochristian Culture and Colonialism due by 05:59AM
Oct 10, 2016MonWeek 05 ~ October 11th Indian Reform and the Southwestdue by 05:59AM
Oct 17, 2016MonWeek 06 ~ October 18th Slavery and African in Americadue by 05:59AM
Oct 24, 2016MonWeek 07 ~ October 25th 19th Century: Social Gospel: Gender Construction and Colonizationdue by 05:59AM
Oct 31, 2016MonWeek 08 ~ November 1st Africa, Missionaries, Colonialism and Indigenous Christianitydue by 05:59AM
Nov 07, 2016MonWeek 09 ~ November 8th Latin America: The Philippines due by 06:59AM
Nov 18, 2016FriWeek 10 ~ November 15th Where Do WE Go From Here?due by 06:59PM