week4 discussion world culture

 

Each week we will be looking at a set period from our past.  Although these are our ancestors, it will seem like we are studying a distant planet, inhabited by people with the strangest of habits.  Fortunately, these subjects of our observation give us abundant clues about who they are.  Their art, their writing, their technology, the way they do business, the way they govern 
themselves all feed into a picture we will attempt to paint for ourselves each week.  Understanding who they were will help us understand who we are.

Each week you will be given three or four questions pertaining to important topics covered in the materials provided in the question itself, the textbook, the lectures, the other materials provided, and my comments in my Live Session. You choose the one question you like and post a response of 125 words or more.  You also need to respond to another post from one of your fellow students.  This second post should be at least 60 or so words long and should not just agree with or repeat what has been said. 

Please always use an example that has not already been used in the discussion if possible.  

  1. Last week we saw three revolutions succeed and yet, the advances were rolled back in many ways and places.  Napoleon, while a son of the French Revolution, became a dictator.  Using either Spain or Haiti as an example, explain why and how the ideas of the French Revolution did not extend to those countries.  Did the American and Haitian Revolutions succeed and the French Revolution fail?
  2. Your book does a good job of explaining the “Romantic Imagination”.  What is the “Romantic Imagination”?  Use a Romantic painter as an example and compare how that painter fitss the definition of “Romantic” as compared to an example of a Romantic poet of your choice.
  3. Your book says,” In great symphonies like the Eroica and the Fifth, he (Beethoven) defined the Romantic style in music.”    How do you define “the Romantic Style of music”?  How is it different from Classical music and how does Beethoven’s music compare with later Romantic composers?
  4. How did the Industrial Revolution change cities?  What impact did it have on the life of people who already lived in a city that added factories?  What impact did the Industrial Revolution have on the life of those who moved to the cities to work in these factories?  How did artists react to the changes?
  5. Romantic painting could be very different depending on where the art was being done.  Yet, painters during this time shared a passion for the natural world, for drama, for ancient things.  Compare the work of John Constable and J.M.W. Turner with the French realists Delacroix and Gericault.  How are the similar?  Are the French realists still Romantics?
  • How to Improve Your Score with Discussion Boards

With the first week of Discussion Boards behind of us, it is a good time to pause and reflect before moving forward. If the score is the only thing you look at and moved on, you are doing yourself a disservice. Read the feedback and consider why you lost points, to prevent the same thing happening week after week.

Here are a few common mistakes to avoid:

  • Not writing enough. This is a writing class. You are expected to read and listen to the materials, analyze and write an understandable response that covers the subject and answers the questions. Use complete sentences, as these are not short-answer questions. You might need to do a bit of extra research.
  • Cite your sources at the end of the initial post. Never cut-and-paste materials from sources. We want to see your thoughts and not those of others. If you summarize someone elses thoughts or you use a direct quote, cite them. With assignments of this length, do not use long quotes. A short phrase is the maximum.
  • If your response to your classmates is Great post! I agree with you!  are all you write, then you will not get points. Read their posts and find something they say that you can comment on. You can agree or disagree but provide evidence to prove your claims. The length here is important as well. Say something interesting that relates to the subject. Again, if you use outside sources, cite them.
  • Make sure your comments are organized, relate to the subject and make sense.
  • Check grammar, spelling, sentence structure, etc. As a college student, mistakes in these areas should not be present in your writing. When they are present, go back and review and learn why you made the mistake, so that you will not make them next time.
  • When you have completed your post, before you post it, re-read and edit it. You send your best work to be graded. Grading should not be an editing service, but a confirmation of your hard work. You are not done and should not post until you have edited your work for errors.

As a southerner, I often tell myselfSelf, you cannot write the way you speak. Use your formal voice, with correct grammar and diction. To be honest, I was born a redneck, but I work hard to keep it under wraps in my writing. Writing well will become one of the greatest skills you can develop, but it takes constant work.

Try to check and respond to your classmates throughout the week. Read my responses to your classmates as well. You will find that the give and take of the responses will add much to your understanding.

Hopefully, these thoughts will help. Go through this process each week after grades are posted. It is always about continual improvement. I often say that for any of us, there is no finish line in writing. We will work to improve throughout our lives. Dr. Mike

The template has been moved to the Announcements. It is an optional way to make progress on Assignment 3 not a discussion question.  Sorry for any confusion.