English 005: From Pucks to Parliament


2 September 2009

English 005 Syllabus from 2008

English 005 TAP:

From Pucks to Parliament: Exploring Canadian Culture

From Canadian music (Arcade Fire, Neil Young, Nelly Furtado, Joni Mitchell, the Barenaked Ladies, Leonard Cohen, and Avril Lavigne to name a few), to Canadians in film and television (actors like Jim Carrey, Mike Myers, Seth Rogen, Kiefer Sutherland, William Shatner and Keanu Reeves; directors such as James Cameron, Atom Egoyan, and David Cronenberg; and newscasters such as John Roberts and the late Peter Jennings), to Canadian literature (authors such as Margaret Atwood, Alice Munro, Rohinton Mistry and Michael Ondaatje), Americans hear, see, and read work by Canadians on a daily basis.

And yet, if you ask the average American about Canada, you’ll find that most know very little about this mysterious land north of the US, labeled on most American maps as nothing more than “Canada.” In this course’s exploration of Canadian culture, we’ll “travel” from coast to coast to coast in our quest to learn more about the people, culture, politics, and history of Canada, the United States’ largest trading partner and one of its most important allies. Throughout our journey, we’ll be paying particular attention to Canadian literature, music, television, and movies.

As this is an English course, there will be a strong emphasis on Canadian literature; the books we read will help to give you a sense of the broad diversity of the country’s peoples, history, and regions as well as of the richness of its literature. This will also be a technology-driven, writing intensive course that will see you writing, blogging, and even podcasting about your new discoveries about Canada. The course will include a mandatory class trip to Ottawa, Canada’s capital, during which we will visit Parliament, the National Gallery and Museum of Civilisation, and, yes, even attend a hockey game.

This class will be a Residential TAP course and some of you will live in Living/Learning’s Global Village Residential Learning Community as part of "Canada House." This will allow for a number of extra-curricular activities outside of class time and will enhance the course experience significantly.
Those not living in the Global Village will still be required to participate in extra-curricular events connected to Canada House.

For the duration of the course, each student will also be loaned an iPod loaded with Canadian music, audio books, and lectures connected to the topics we will be studying.


Technology

One of the exciting things about this course is that it will be breaking new ground at UVM. For the duration of the Fall semester, you will all be loaned Apple 20 G color iPods and Griffin iTalk microphones to use in this course and, if you wish, for other classes. This project will allow us to test this technology as a teaching tool that, hopefully, UVM will be able to deploy on a wider scale in coming years for courses that would most benefit from access to audio materials. Texts we will be using the iPods to access will include a wide variety of Canadian music, readings or lectures from important writers and thinkers, and excerpts from Canadian radio with a particular focus on comedy programs like The Dead Dog Cafe Comedy Hour, the Vinyl Cafe, and the Vestibules. You will also be watching some Canadian TV.

When you receive your iPod it will already be preloaded with a great deal of content. Take time to explore as much music and other content as you can. Every week, or close to it, there will be listening assignments and, on at least a couple of occasions including our trip to Ottawa, audio recording assignments. Treat these assignments as you would any readings for the course. They will be part of your overall exploration of Canadian culture. The audio files I want you to listen to each week will likely be conveniently arranged as "playlists" on your iPod.

There will be several classes over the course of the term where we will focus on how to use the technology, so don't be alarmed if you've never used an iPod before or don't yet know a lot about blogging, or even computers.

The course blog is located at
http://pwmartin.blog.uvm.edu/005 You are required to read the content on the blog regularly. There will also be assigned online discussion topics and opportunities for you to blog further about content connected to the course. To create your own personal blog, visit http://www.uvm.edu/blogging to sign up for your own blog on the UVM system.

An important note about the content I am distributing to you on the iPods:
You are not allowed to share any of the music you are being lent nor are you permitted to make permanent copies of it.
Once the course is over, you are obligated to delete any copyrighted material used for the course from your computers. This course-use of the copyrighted material is permitted under the provisions of the Technology, Education and Copyright Harmonization (TEACH) Act enacted in 2002 as an amendment to the Copyright Act of 1976. (See http://www.usg.edu/legal/copyright/teach_act.phtml for further information).

Field Trip!

One of the great things about being so close to Canada is that it's easy for us to zip across the border to study first hand our neighbors to the north. Reserve October 23-25 for our class field trip to Ottawa, Canada's capital. If you need a note for any other instructors to explain your absence from their classes on those days, I will be happy to provide that. The trip is mandatory for this TAP class. Around 100 students in total will head to Ottawa early Thursday morning and, over the course of two and a half days, we will do everything from touring Canada's Parliament and the Museum of Civilization to seeing a hockey game (the Ottawa 67s). The full itinerary will be announced closer to the trip.

The fee for students in our English 005 TAP class is $190 ($240 for other students), which includes all transportation, admission fees, two nights in a nice hotel in downtown Ottawa, and likely a dinner on Thursday night.

For crossing the border, make sure that you have either a passport or BOTH an official photo ID (i.e. a driver's license) AND a birth certificate/proof of citizenship. Students without the proper documentation will not be allowed on the bus.

Required Texts:

Books:
Thomas King, The Truth About Stories (purchase the book and also listen on our iPods to the lecture series)

Michael Ondaatje (ed.), From Ink Lake: Canadian Stories (purchase directly from Professor Martin for $20)

Alistair MacLeod, No Great Mischief

Other photocopied readings

A journal or notebook devoted solely to in-class writing

(Unless otherwise indicated, I encourage you to purchase books from the campus bookstore. The Truth About Stories, for instance, is normally unavailable in the United States and the UVM bookstore has gone to great efforts to track it down for us.)

Audio:
Content distributed on the iPods

Assignments

  • Blog postings 20%
  • Group presentation 10% (week of October 6)
  • Midterm exam 20% (October 17)
  • Podcast 15% (due Nov. 7)
  • Term paper/Final project 25% (due Dec. 10)
  • Participation and attendance 10%


N.B. Late assignments will be penalized one grade increment per day past the assigned deadline, unless accompanied by a doctor's note outlining medical reasons for the delay.


Tentative Schedule

Sept. 3: Introduction


Sept. 5: Canadian geography; why study Canada? (iPod distribution) Listen to: Week 1 playlist


Sept. 8: Atlantic Canada: stories in From Ink Lake by Alistair MacLeod (1-8, 682-704), No Great Mischief; Listen to Week 2 playlist


Sept. 10: No Great Mischief


Sept. 12: No Great Mischief, Alistair MacLeod visit (3:00 PM Grace Coolidge Room, Waterman - attendance is mandatory)

SATURDAY SEPT 13th: Alistair MacLeod appearance at the Burlington Book Festival (please try to attend)


Sept. 15: No Great Mischief (add/drop deadline) Listen to Week 3 playlist


Sept. 17: [Blogging workshop]


Sept. 19: [Blogging workshop]


Sept. 22: Canadian history Listen to Week 4 playlist


Sept. 24: Canadian history (visit to class from Professor Massell)


Sept. 26: Québec history and culture, stories by Jacques Ferron (115-26), Mordecai Richler (151-74)


Sept. 29: Québec history and culture, cont.: stories by Madeleine Ferron (203-206) and Marie-Claire Blais (326-31) Listen to Week 5 playlist


Oct. 1: The Canadian Political system; Canadian news sources; Watch one entire episode of The National


Oct. 3: Talking to Americans; watch prior to class (part 1, part 2, part 3, part 4, part 5)

Oct. 6: The Canadian election (group assignment) Listen to Week 6 playlist

Oct. 8: The Canadian election (group assignment)

Oct. 10: The Canadian election (group assignment)

Oct. 13: Canadian Thanksgiving (readings from The Vinyl Cafe) Listen to Week 7 playlist

Oct. 15: Election results discussion; Discussion of podcast assignment

Oct. 17: MIDTERM EXAM

Oct. 20: Podcast workshop

Oct. 22: Hockey and Canadian culture; Richard Harrison (photocopy and audio); Roch Carrier (audio) Listen to Week 8 playlist

Oct. 24: OTTAWA TRIP (no class)

Oct. 27: Ottawa discussion Listen to Week 9 playlist

Oct. 29: Podcast production workshop

Oct. 31: Multiculturalism and Canadian culture: readings by Mistry, Brand, and Austin Clarke; (last day to withdraw from classes)

Nov. 3: Advising workshop Listen to Week 10 playlist

Nov. 5: Advising appointments

Nov. 7: Advising appointments (Podcast assigment due)

Nov. 10: Canada at war; Listen to Week 11 playlist

Nov. 12: First Nations: Thomas King, The Truth About Stories (FINISH READING BY TODAY)

Nov. 14: The Truth About Stories

Nov. 17: Canadian literature from Ontario: readings TBA; Listen to Week 12 playlist

Nov. 19: Canadian literature

Nov. 21: Canadian music: bring a list of your top 5 Canadian songs from the iPods

Nov. 24 - 28: Break for American Thanksgiving

Dec. 1: The prairies! Readings by Stegner, Vanderhaeghe, Wiebe, and Gabrielle Roy; Listen to Week 13 playlist

Dec. 3: The prairies continued...

Dec. 5: British Columbia: readings by Kogawa, Hodgins, and Wilson

Dec. 8: Canadian comedy Listen to Week 14 playlist

Dec. 10: Last day of class


UVM's policy on religious holidays:

Religious Holidays: Students have the right to practice the religion of their choice. Each semester students should submit in writing to their instructors by the end of the second full week of classes their documented religious holiday schedule for the semester. Faculty must permit students who miss work for the purpose of religious observance to make up this work.

Academic integrity

Offenses against the Code of Academic Integrity are deemed serious and insult the integrity of the entire academic community. Any suspected violations of the code are taken very seriously and will be forwarded to the Center for Student Ethics & Standards for further investigation.

Introductions

Using your first name only, tell us a bit about yourself. Where are you from? What brought you to this class? What do you know about Canada? How was your first week of classes?

Do you have any questions about the class that I didn't answer today?