Anthropology 207-001: General Archaeology
Dr. Nora Reber MWF 1-1:50 PM
SBS 205 Spring 2009
X-7734 SBS 220
Office Hours: M 3:15-4:45, T 10-12, W 9-10 rebere@uncw.edu
And by appointment http://www.uncwil.edu/people/rebere
Course
Description: This class is an
introduction to general archaeology.
General archaeology covers the history of modern humans on the planet
for the past 30,000 years or so. This
class will not, therefore, attempt to cover all of this period. Instead, we will focus on domestication and
the effect of farming around the world, which has the effect of covering
archaeological cultures from the New and Old Worlds, with some emphasis on
North America and
Evaluation: Grading in this class will be based on in-class and take-home written assignments (20%), a term paper of 5-10 pages (20%), a midterm (20%), a final (30%), and a class participation/attendance grade (10%).
Grading is on a modified bell curve, meaning that my classes
will always average between a C+ and a B, unless an
exceptionally brilliant class shows up.
Above average grades will, obviously, do better; below average will do
worse. 99.9% of all failures are from a
failure to show up and learn anything.
Attendance: In
general, you should give Dr. Reber a valid or creative excuse before an absence. More than three absences without a good
excuse will lead to progressive reductions of the class
participation/attendance grade.
Makeup Work: Assignments not turned in on time due to an excused absence may be turned in for full credit for up to two weeks after the original absence. After that, 10% of the points are deducted per week. Assignments not turned in on time due to an unexcused absence may be turned in for half credit up to two weeks after the original absence, and after that 10% of the points are deducted per week. An excused late assignment turned in four weeks late is worth 80% of the original point total. An unexcused assignment turned in four weeks late is worth 30% of the original point total. Simply put—MAKE UP ASSIGNMENTS WITHIN TWO WEEKS!! Excused long absences due to illness, family problems or other disasters should be negotiated with Dr. Reber—notify her by e-mail as soon as you know you have a serious problem.
Exams: A midterm and final exam are given in this
class, which together make up 50 % of the grade. The midterm exam will be held on Friday,
March 6 with a review session on Wednesday, March 4. Material covered until Monday, March 2 will
be covered on the midterm. The final
will be held on Monday, May 4 at 11:30 AM-2:30 PM. Two-thirds of the final will cover the 2nd
half of the class. The remaining 1/3
will cover essential concepts from the first half of the class. The review session for the final will be April
27, the last day of class. Do not
attempt to take the final at any time other than that assigned unless you have
a very good reason.
Written Assignments: A term paper has been assigned for this class on a topic of your choice. It should be 5-10 pages long, typed, double-spaced, in 10-12 point font and with 1-inch margins, with at least 4 sources, one of which should be from the last 10 years. Topics should be chosen in consultation with Dr. Reber, and are due on Friday, February 6. Over the course of the semester, we will schedule dates to turn in the thesis statement, and the paper outline; everyone will have a meeting with me about your paper during the semester. The papers are due on Wednesday, April 6, but turning in the paper early is deeply appreciated, and is worth a bonus to the class participation grades. I will comment on drafts turned in to me before Wednesday, March 30—this is a very good thing to do.
Citation for the term paper should be in MLA or American Antiquity format—American Antiquity is a typical archaeological format. Late term papers will be marked off 10% for every two days late, although extensions can be negotiated ahead of time for good reasons. If you negotiate an extension after the due date, it will be marked off until the day on which you got your extension. Talk to me!
If your computer crashes, or a print-out is not possible, you may turn the paper into me on disk; please do not turn them in electronically without warning me in advance, as my e-mail account tends to explode under pressure.
One-page written assignments will be given as in-class exercises or as homework throughout the semester.
Web Page: The class web page is linked to Dr. Reber’s personal web page, http://www.uncwil.edu/people/rebere. The syllabus, course assignments, related
links, and text of assignments will be posted on this site, as well as a brief
schedule of readings and class topics coming up. Occasional web bonus points will be posted on
the web page that will not be mentioned in class. The finer points of the class schedule will
ALWAYS be posted, and may be viewed as official; Dr. Reber posts dates and
information on the web so that she doesn’t have to remember it—always check the
web first!
Odds, Ends, and Pet Peeves: Please turn off cell phones in class!!
Please back your papers up to disk, CD, or flash memory when writing them.
Point totals will be handed back to students twice during the semester—at the midterm and before the final. Anyone wanting point totals at any other times should ask Dr. Reber. Grades and point totals may be sent via e-mail if you give permission. Please keep in mind that basic mathematics applies to the grades—even if you turn in late assignments for 50%, you will need a B in other categories to get a C in the class. Since 10 bonus points are offered per semester, point grubbing is, well, pointless and will be ignored.
Plagiarism is defined as using someone else’s work without citing it, and can be divided into direct copying, mosaic copying, and insufficient attribution. It hurts three groups of people: the person plagiarized, as their work has been stolen; classmates, since it unfairly sets the curve and unrealistically raises the performance bar; and the plagiarist, since you can’t get a decent education stealing other people’s work. It is grounds for a minimum penalty of failure on the assignment and a long discussion with Dr. Reber about exactly why it is a bad idea. The potential maximum penalties are decided by the Judicial Board or Dean of Students. Don’t do it!!