
R 201:EASTERN
RELIGIONS
Winter 2003
JOURNAL REQUIREMENT
FOR PROFESSOR
DALE CANNON
THE
ASSIGNMENT
PURPOSE
OF THE ASSIGNMENT
SPECIFIC
DIRECTIONS FOR THE JOURNAL
"JOURNAL
SUMMARIES"
DUE
DATE
JOURNAL
GRADING
SUGGESTED
JOURNAL QUESTIONS FOR FIRST SECTION OF COURSE
THE ASSIGNMENT
You are required to keep a journal of your
personal responses to and personal reflections on your growing empathetic
acquaintance with the religious traditions we are studying. Plan
to write at least 3 entries per week, one or more for each class session.
PURPOSE OF THE ASSIGNMENT
The purpose of this assignment is to provide occasion in the context
of the course for you to make connections between the material and ideas
that we will be studying and your own personal life and ideas about religion.
It is also meant to be a more open-ended, creative assignment to balance
the more focused and constrained exams and research project or book review.
The journal entries need not themselves be empathetically objective--especially
not if that would not be true to your own thoughts and feelings.
However, they should reflect your serious efforts at trying to be empathetically
objective and what you are learning through those attempts.
In any case, you should avoid reacting negatively toward a particular belief
or practice until you have done your level best to understand it empathetically
from an insider's perspective. This does not require sympathy or
agreement with the belief or practice, nor that it is even "right" for
the insider. However, it does require making the effort to go beyond
how it appears on the surface to your own outsider perspective, making
the effort to learn the insider's perspective, and taking it thoughtfully
into account. You are particularly encouraged to imagine as one of
your readers a person who is a sincere believer of the tradition about
which you are writing. In other words, be honest but also considerate
of those persons. Imagine how they might respond to what you write.
In any case, your journal entries should express a serious and honest
attempt to come to terms for yourself with what you are learning, while
allowing the expressions of the traditions we are studying to be themselves--especially
in their difference from what you may have previously thought about them--seeking
as well as you can to understand them with empathetic objectivity.
Journal entries should not simply be a summary of lecture content or
of the content of a reading assignment. They should always be a personal
reflection on or response to that content.
SPECIFIC DIRECTIONS FOR THE JOURNAL
-
You should aim at 3 or more entries per week, at
least one per class session.
-
Journal entries need not be typed. They may be handwritten
in a spiral notebook or in some other possible format. They may be done
on computer. They should, in any case, be legible.
-
Entries may be in response to class sessions, reading assignments (including
assignments from Porterfield, The Power of Religion), exam study
sessions, research project, Field Trip, something in the news that relates
to the course, a personal encounter that relates to the course, etc. In
any case, most of the entries should relate to the course content rather
than be tangential to that content. They should not primarily be
summaries of that content, however. Should you go on the Field Trip, in
order to obtain extra credit you are expected to write about your experience
of the trip and your responses to things seen and heard on the trip.
-
Suggested journal questions may be found at the end
of each of the four sections of the R201 Lectures (2003). They pertain
to both the lecture content and the assigned reading selections.
-
An example journal for the course is available on
library reserve in the binder entitled "Example Student Papers and Journals
for R201."
"JOURNAL SUMMARIES"
-
The journal assignment is to culminate in a "summary" of your journal entries
for the Introduction to the Study of Religion and for each of the three
other sections of the course -- thus, four "summaries.".
-
Possibilities for "summaries" are very open-ended.
-
The simplest "summary" would be simply a sampling of your best entries
for that section of the course.
-
It could be a conventional summary of the entirety of your journal entries
for that section of the course.
-
It could be an overall reflection on your personal experience of that section
of the course (and of your journaling for that section).
-
Alternative possibilities include: something done in a visual artistic
medium, a collage of photographs, a fictional dialogue, etc.
-
The 'summaries' of your journal need not be in conventional written form.
If they are in conventional written form, they should be typed and be approximately
2 typewritten pages for each of the three sections of the course. Written
journal "summaries" should be neatly produced and be free of spelling and
grammatical errors.
-
Examples of "Journal Summaries" are available on
library reserve in the binder entitled "Example Student Papers and Journals
for R201."
DUE DATE
-
Your complete Journal and a "Journal Summary" for
each of the four sections of the course must be turned in Fri. Mar 14.
When you hand them in, you are to indicate in writing which of the two
grading options you choose: either Grade Option A or Grade Option
B (see below for explanation).
JOURNAL GRADING
-
The contribution of your Journal and "Journal Summaries" to your overall
grade is in large measure up to you. Which alternative you choose -- Grade
Option A or Grade Option B -- must be communicated in writing with what
you hand in on Mar 14. If nothing is communicated in writing to me at that
time, I will presume that you choose Grade Option A.
-
If you choose Grade Option A, you may have this assignment count for 25%
of your grade, with 25% for each of the other three major assignments (the
two exams and the term paper).
-
Alternatively, if you choose Grade Option B, you may have your grade be
based on 33 &1/3% for each of the other three major assignments (the
two exams and the term paper), with your still required journal and "journal
summaries" weighing solely in a positive way (the extent depending on their
quality) to raise your grade in near borderline situations.
-
In the event that no Journal and "Journal Summaries" are turned in or if
no serious effort is expended to fulfill the purpose of the journal, the
grade option will default to Grade Option A, regardless of your expressed
preference for Option B.
-
Evaluation of the Journal and "Journal Summaries" will be based on their
thoughtfulness (creativity is encouraged), the seriousness with which you
have honestly sought to come to terms for yourself with what we are covering,
and the sincerity of your efforts in the course to develop empathetically
objective understandings. While these are difficult factors to evaluate,
every effort will be made not to have the specific content of feelings
and opinions expressed influence the grade.
SUGGESTED JOURNAL QUESTIONS TO GET YOU STARTED
FOR THE
FIRST SECTION OF
THE COURSE
-
Now that you see all that the course will involve and require, how do you
feel about it?
-
How do you feel about studying other religions in an empathetic way? Is
that something you find threatening to your own faith? Why or why not?
-
How do you feel about the prospect of studying your own tradition (or the
one you are most familiar with) as one among many others with no special
privilege? What are your fears, if any? What are your hopes, if any?
-
The instructor distinguishes between perspective on the one hand and bias
or prejudice on the other. Do you understand the difference and what it
implies? Do you agree?
-
The course particularly focuses on developing your capacity for empathy
-- stepping into the shoes of the other person in order to see what things
look like from her or his perspective, which cannot be seen from your own.
What do you think about that prospect? Do you have doubts that it is possible
for anyone? For yourself? For what reasons do you doubt it?
-
The instructor says that people have difficulty imagining whether something
like an empathetically ofjective understanding of another religion is possible
until they have experienced such an understanding for themselves or have
seen someone actually achieve it. Could your doubt that it is possible
be due to such a lack of experience?
-
The instructor speaks of the "threshold effect" -- the change in appearance
(and meaning) of religious symbols and activities as one crosses their
threshold and enters the unique perspective of the tradition to which they
belong (as in an act of empathetic imagination). Could it be that what
seems to you to be the strangeness and pointlessness of practices, symbols,
and beliefs in certain religious traditions may be due more to your own
limited, external perspective than to what they are for insiders?
-
What do you think of the appropriateness and significance of religious
studies courses in the context of public education when they are taught
in a way that is truly empathetic and objective?
-
What do you think of the instructor's definition of religion? Is it as
neutral as he maintains? Does it seem to identify the heart or essence
of what religion in general is about, or no?
-
While emphasizing generic similarities between religions and ways of being
religious, the instructor seeks to emphasize also the differences between
religions and ways of being religious. Is this a balance you think you
will be able, with guidance, to walk also? Or do you find yourself impatient
to resolve quickly the qustion: Are religions ultimately all the same?
Or are religions ultimately unreconcilale in their differences?
-
Are you prepared to allow that wisdom, insight, and virtue may exist in
religious traditions for which you now have no particular understanding
or sympathy? Are you prepared to allow that both virtue and vice are possible
in the practice of any religious tradition?
-
What do you think of the idea that religion at its best is not a way of
avoiding life's problems but rather provides a way of taking them on in
a way that reaffirms life's ultimate meaningfulness and a way of appropriately
coping with the problem if not solving it.
-
What do you think of the idea that there are different generic ways of
being religious, different ways of approach to what is taken to be the
ultimate reality, to be found in any religious tradition (broadly conceived)?
I.e., that each tradition isn't limited to only one such way? Which of
these ways, if any, are you more drawn to? Which, if any, are you less
drawn to or not at all drawn to?
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