SYLLABUS FOR Adolescent Development

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SYLLABUS FOR Adolescent Development Term: FALL 2015 Course Number: MAT506 T-2 Instructor Mr. John Potocki Cell Phone 312-405-8133 E-mail: jpotocki.ccsj.edu or apotocki@aol.com/ Office Hours: TBA or by appointment Instructor Educational Background: M.A. Administration Governors State University, Illinois State Certificate in Behavior Disorders, M.A. Interpersonal Communication Governors State University, B.S.E. in Education Northern Illinois University, A.A. General Wilson Junior College. Mount Carmel High School Chicago. Professional: I have served the educational community as; Principal, Assistant Principal, Director, Dean of Students, Coach and Teacher with the Chicago Board Of Education for 34 years. I have also served as assistant football coach at the University of Chicago but have since retired from both. Currently I am an Administrator with Illinois School District 215. past 16 years I have been an instructor at CCSJ in the Education Department. Course Time: 09/29/15, 10/01/15, 10/06/15, 10/08/15, 10/13/15 & 10/15/15 05:00PM until 09:00P.M. Course Description: teacher candidate will examine major theories and findings concerning human development through the adolescent years and their implications for the professional educator. Topics include physical development, moral development, early experience and developmental issues relating to education. Field experience required. Prerequisites: EDU, 100, 200 and 300 Learning Outcomes/ Competencies: Students in this course will: -Explore and understand the various theories of development and how they impact learning. -Be able to create appropriate learning experiences based on a child s developmental stage. -Explore and understand the different concepts of intelligence and the role it plays in learning. -Explore and understand the influences that environment and genetics play in development of a child. -Be able to compare and contrast the cognitive, social and behavioral differences between boys and girls. -Understand the role that family and peer relationships play in child development. -Understand adolescence emerging in adulthood during this century Textbooks: Arnett, Jeffrey Jensen. (2004). Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood. Upper Saddle River, N.J.; Pearson Education, IND. Course Requirements/Assignments: teacher candidate is responsible for the readings in the text before each meeting. He/She will be asked to explain portions of chapter and fellow students will note and write bullets. (Important points) All students will submit 80 bullets in Blackboard as an assignment. re will be two papers. One paper (8-10 pages typed) on some aspect of this course to be approved by the instructor. It will submitted in blackboard as an assignment. It must be detailed. second paper will be a summery of the social aspects that are included in the film,

FIVE GIRLS. This film will be discussed in class and the challenges the students face will be included in a paper. It will be submitted in blackboard. (3-5 pages) Observations in a classroom and age appropriate students will also required. (Questions answered in blackboard). Ten hours of observation. Assessment: Bullets 20% Presentation 40% Papers 40% Class Policy for Assignments: Major reduction in grade for any late or missing assignments Grading Scale: Grade Points A 100-92 4 A- 91-90 4 B+ 89-88 3 B 87-82 3 B- 81-80 3 C+ 79-78 2 C 77-72 2 C- 71-70 2 D+ 69-68 1 D 67-62 1 D- 61-60 1 F 59 and below Class Policy on Attendance: Students are expected to be present and on time for all classes. Hands on experience and class interaction are invaluable. This cannot be made up because of the times the class is meeting. Class Policy on Electronic Devices: Please turn off all phones during class Course Outline: Class Dates: Topics/Assignments: 09/29/15 Syllabus-Lecture-Discussion--Film-Assignments/ Pick working groups/assignments for chapter 1, 2&3, discussions Gangs. 10/01/15 Class Discussion-Lecture-Film, Assignments, Student Presentations Chapters 1, 2, &3, Discussion & Test Creation, Addictions. 10/06/15 Class Discussion-Lecture--Film, Assignments, Student Presentations, Chapters 4,5 & 6 Research paper discussion 10/08/15 Class Discussion-Lecture- Film, Assignments, Student Presentations, Chapter 7,8,&9 Classroom Observations, Group Test Creations 10/13/15 Class Discussion-Lecture- Film, Assignments, Observations, Student Presentations, Chap. 10 &11

10/15/15 Class Discussion, Lecture- Research Paper Discussion and Presentation- Student Presentations, Chapter 12 & 13 Recap of course, Assessments Research Paper: You will write a 5 to 8 page research paper, (not including the title page, and reference page), double spaced, and using APA format. You will also include a minimum of 5 references from educational, scholarly, current, periodicals. Your topic will be focused on the current educational trends within your content area. Your paper will consist of the following: TITLE PAGE Centered: Topic, your name, course #, date, my name, and use Headers for your running header and page numbers. INTRODUCTION - State your thesis and the purpose of your research paper clearly. What is the chief reason you are writing the paper? State also how you plan to approach your topic. Is this a factual report, a book review, a comparison, or an analysis of a problem? Explain briefly the major points you plan to cover in your paper and why readers should be interested in your topic. BODY - This is where you present your arguments to support your thesis statement. Remember the Rule of 3, i.e. find 3 supporting arguments for each position you take. Begin with a strong argument, then use a stronger one, and end with the strongest argument for your final point. CONCLUSION - Restate or reword your thesis. Summarize your arguments. Explain why you have come to this particular conclusion. REFERENCE PAGE List all of your resources in alphabetical order with the author s last name, first name initial, and (year). Book title. Publisher. RUBRICS Research Paper Rubric 10 8 Exceeds 7-5 Meets 4 2 Does Not Meet 1 No Evidence Category Exceeds Meets Does Not No Title Page Standards Centered Your name, course #, date, my name, used a running header, and Standards Evidence of 5-3 items. Meet Evidence of 2 or less Evidence Absent

Introduction Body Organizational Structural Development Conclusion Mechanics/ Usage Citation page numbers at the top. introduction is engaging, states the main topic and previews the structure of the paper. Each paragraph has thoughtful supporting detail sentences that develop the main idea. Demonstrated logical sequencing of ideas through welldeveloped paragraphs; transitions are used to enhance organization. conclusion is engaging and restates the introduction. No errors in punctuation, capitalization, spelling, and word usage. All in-text citations are done correctly with no errors using APA introduction states the main topic and previews the structure of the paper. Each paragraph has sufficient supporting detail sentences that develop the main idea. Paragraph development present but not perfected, lacked transitions. conclusion restates the introduction. Almost no errors in punctuation, capitalization, spelling, and word usage. Some in-text citations are done correctly using another re is no clear introduction or main topic and the structure of the paper is missing. Each paragraph fails to develop the main idea. Lacks structure and organization. conclusion does not adequately restate the introduction. Many errors in all mechanics and usage. Few in-text citations are done correctly, Inconsistencies exist. partially stated. very under developed. obvious organization. incomplete and unfocused. So many errors that it is distracting. no clue as to cite text.

Reference Page format. Done in the correct format with no errors using APA format. format. Done in the correct format with a few errors. Done in correct format with many errors. no clue as to any format. Total: /80 Chapter Presentations Teacher Candidate: 5-4 - Master 3-2 Proficient 2-1 Standard 1-0 Initial TC = Teacher Candidate Content TC understands key concept TC provides information beyond text TC articulates major objectives TC provides examples and can make connection to real life TC provide brief interactive activity to demonstrate topic Notes: M P S I Presentation TC shows effective use of Power Point TC shows effective use of supplemental material TC uses well chosen vocabulary to support ideas and concepts TC uses professional voice tone, volume and control TC conveys enthusiasm for the topic TC maintains eye contact with students TC presents for a time period of 20 minutes Notes: Feedback TC is able to facilitate professional discussion

TC is able to respond to questions appropriately TC ask questions to stimulate critical thinking TC provide feedback for time period of 3-5 minutes Total /80 Class Participation: (per instructor) Center for Academic Excellence: Tutoring assistance is free to all students of Calumet College of St. Joseph. Call the Center for Academic Excellence (CAE), to make an appointment at 473-4287. Center has experienced and well-trained tutors in most subject areas to help students who are struggling in a course or who are doing well and would like to do better. Regular weekly tutoring sessions are likely to improve your grade. Related INSTAS Principles: Principle 2: teacher understands how children learn and develop, and can provide learning opportunities that support their intellectual, social and personal development. Principle 3: teacher understands how students differ in their approaches to learning and create instructional opportunities that are adapted to diverse learners Principle 4: teacher understands and uses a variety of instructional strategies to encourage student s development of critical thinking, problem solving and performance skills. CORE OBJECCTIVES INTASC NBPTS UNDERSTANDING HOW STUDENT S LEARN 2 1 DIVERSITY, RESPECT, APPRECIATION, EQUITY 3 1 HOW TO TEACH (INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGIES) 4 3, 4 PLAGIARISM: If an instructor or other Calumet College of St. Joseph personnel find that a student has plagiarized or been involved in another form of academic dishonesty, the instructor or other personnel may elect to bring the matter up for judicial review. maximum penalty for any form of academic dishonesty is dismissal from the College. procedures for judicial review are listed under the section of CCSJ handbook that addresses student grievances. PLEASE NOTE: Calumet College of St. Joseph subscribes to Turnitin.com and all papers can and may be submitted for checks on plagiarism from the Internet/Electronic sources/databases. Citation Guidelines: Calumet College of St. Joseph adheres to citation guidelines as prescribed by the particular discipline (i.e., MLA, APA, and Chicago Manual of Style or Turabian.). All of these guidelines are available in the Calumet College of St. Joseph library or bookstore. se texts outline how to cite references from a variety of sources, including electronic media. Withdrawal from Classes Policy: After the last day for class changes has passed (see College calendar), students may withdraw from a course in which they are registered with permission from the faculty member conducting the course. A written request detailing the reason(s) for the withdrawal must be filed with the Registrar. Registrar must receive written request for withdrawal by the last day of classes prior to the final examination dates specified in the catalogue. Written requests may be mailed to the Registrar or faxed to the College fax number 219-473-4259. Students are to make note of the refund schedule when withdrawing from courses. request is forwarded to the faculty member, who makes the final determination to accept or deny the request. If the request is honored, the student will receive notification of official withdrawal; if denied, the notification will indicate why the withdrawal is disallowed.

An official withdrawal is recorded as a "W" grade on the student's transcript. Dropping a course without written permission automatically incurs an "F" grade for the course (see Refund Schedule).