
R 204:Western Religions, Fall 1998
ATTENDANCE AND MAKE UP POLICY
FOR
PROFESSOR DALE CANNON
- Regular attendance is an essential part of the learning experience in R204, so plan
accordingly.
- Attendance will be taken in each class session.
- In R204 there are no "excused absences," even in an emergency. Up to a certain
limit, absences can be made up, however.
- Absences which are not made up will have a direct bearing on your grade. 2 to 3 such
absences for any one of the three sections of the course will lower the grade for the
course 1/3 grade point; 4-5 by 2/3 grade point; 6 or more by 1 grade point. Only 6
absences for any one of the three sections of the course can be made up. Any more will
have a direct effect on your grade which cannot be made up. (In situations of genuine
emergency over which the student has no control, petition for modification of this rule
can be made.)
- Absences for any one section of the course are to be made up by viewing for each
class session missed one of several videotapes available in the Media Lab (in the
South end of tthe basement level of the Instructional Technology Center, main building) and
writing a one page typed summary of the video, on which you clearly indicate the date of
the absence being made up and the title of the video. For the list of available
videotapes on Western Religions, click here. The
list is also available in the Lab. The tape chosen to serve as an absence make up must
be on the relevant tradition covered in the class session missed. You should not
choose a videotape shown in class unless you are making up for an absence on the day it
was shown.
- Absences for the first section of the course are to be made up by one week after the
first exam; for the second section, by one week after the second exam; for the third
section, by Monday of final exam week.
- This policy is based on research which establishes that students of average or below
average ability do significantly better when attendance is required. It is also based on
the fact that understanding of the content of any given class session in R204 is very
often directly dependent upon understanding what has been covered in the immediately
preceding class sessions.
- Some of you may wonder why attendance is required if the main substance of the lectures
is available for reading outside of class -- indeed, required reading before class. At one
time, students in R204 had to take down the content of those lectures during the class
session. Many students were not particularly good note takers and those that were had
difficulty really paying attention to what was being said due to concentrating on getting
it down accurately. The lectures have been made available for students to purchase in
order (1) to insure accurate notes, (2) to free students up to pay closer attention to
what is said in sessions and to reflect upon it, and (3) to have students more informed
and better prepared to take in and respond to the course content in any given class.
Return to R204 Syllabus
Direct
suggestions, comments, and questions about this page to Dale
Cannon. Last Modified 9/20/98
Western Oregon University