Course Form (revised 8-2009) I. Summary of Proposed Changes Dept / Program Anthropology Course Title Quantiative Ethnographic Methods Prefix and Course # ANTH448 Short Title (max. 26 characters incl. spaces) Quant Ethnographic Methods Summarize the change(s) proposed New course II. Endorsement/Approvals Complete the form and obtain signatures before submitting to Faculty Senate Office Please type / print name Signature Requestor: Kimber Haddix McKay Phone/ email : 4106 Program Chair/Director: John Douglas Other affected programs None Dean: Date Chris Comer III: To Add a New Course Syllabus and assessment information is required (paste syllabus into section V or attach). Course should have internal coherence and clear focus. NO Common Course Numbering Review: Does an equivalent course exist elsewhere YES x in the MUS? Do the proposed abbreviation, number, title and credits align with existing course(s)? Please indicate equivalent course/campus http://msudw.msu.montana.edu:9030/wfez/owa/musxfer.p_CCN_MAIN Exact entry to appear in the next catalog (Specify course abbreviation, level, number, title, credits, repeatability (if applicable), frequency of offering, prerequisites, and a brief description.) UG ANTH 448 Quantiative Ethnographic Methods, 3 cr. Offered autumn odd-numbered years. This course is designed to enhance student understanding of field methods that generate quantitative data describing human behavior. The toolkit of a student completing this course will include knowledge of basic methods that will get you from observing behavior to discussing your research and findings in a professional manner in oral or written formats. Justification: How does the course fit with the existing curriculum? Why is it needed? This course adds to the methods offerings in our department. No other such course exists. Supplements the qualitative methods course currently offered (Ethnographic Methods). Are there curricular adjustments to accommodate teaching this course? No Complete for UG courses. (UG courses should be assigned a 400 number). Describe graduate increment (Reference guidelines: http://www.umt.edu/facultysenate/Grad/UG.htm) Graduate students will produce the methods section of their thesis or grant proposal in this class. Fees may be requested only for courses meeting specific conditions determined by the Board of Regents. Please indicate whether this course will be considered for a fee. If YES, what is the proposed amount of the fee? Justification: IV. To Delete or Change an Existing Course – check X all that apply Deletion Title Course Number Change From: Level U, UG, G YES NO x From: To: Description Change Change in Credits From: To: Prerequisites 1. Current course information at it appears in catalog (http://www.umt.edu/catalog) To: Repeatability Cross Listing (primary program initiates form) Is there a fee associated with the course? 2. Full and exact entry (as proposed) 3. If cross-listed course: secondary program & course number 4. Is this a course with MUS Common Course Numbering? If yes, then will this change eliminate the course’s common course status? Please explain below. 5. Graduate increment if level of course is changed to UG. Reference guidelines at: http://www.umt.edu/facultysenate/Grad/UG.htm (syllabus required in section V) 6. Other programs affected by the change 7. Justification for proposed change Have you reviewed the graduate increment guidelines? Please check (X) space provided. V. Syllabus/Assessment Information Required for new courses and course change from U to UG. Paste syllabus in field below or attach and send digital copy with form. Quantitative Ethnographic Methods Anthropology 448 Weds 1:00 – 4:00pm Fall 2009 kimber.mckay@mso.umt.edu Kimber Haddix McKay, Professor 213 Social Sciences Office hours: T/R 1:30-3:00 Community Mapping and Ranking Exercises Course Description: Anthropology 448 is a course designed to enhance student understanding of field methods that generate quantitative data describing human behavior. The toolkit of a student completing this course will include knowledge of basic methods that will get you from observing behavior to discussing your research and findings in a professional manner in oral or written formats. You will learn how to derive questions from existing literature, how to aim for specific professional outcomes such as the generation of a professional talk, poster, or paper, and the steps required along the way to get you to those outcomes. Survey design, identification of critical variables to define, predicting required analyses of those variables, identifying the statistical tests you will have to use, and making sure your data are measured appropriately for those tests will be taught in this class. The class will include components on fieldnote organization, designing and managing databases, measuring socio-economic status in non-market settings, conducting censuses, recording genealogies, mapping communities, anthropometric methods, basic GIS methods and applications, standard participatory rural appraisal tools including mapping, pile sorting, ranking exercises, tools to help recall of past events in non literate societies, organizing community meetings, and triangulating data sources, survey of available statistical and database management software. Texts: Bernard, R. Social Science Research Methods, Sage Press, 2000. Bernard, R. Handbook of Methods in Cultural Anthropology, 1998 Eres: Supplementary readings for Anthropology 447 Requirements: Class participation (and thus attendance) is mandatory. I expect you to have read the assigned readings prior to the class for which they are assigned, and to be prepared to discuss them with your peers. Making a few notes to yourself before class about points you find interesting in the readings will help tremendously. Several times during the semester, your participation and preparation for class will be evaluated with discussions, problem solving activities, or data collecting or analysis. Keep in mind that if you miss a class, you may not make up missed class work or attendance, which ultimately lowers your grade. There will be three non-cumulative midterm exams and a cumulative final exam. These will be take-home in format, 7+ pages in length, and will be reviewed in class by your peers. Based on self- and peer-review in class, you will revise your essay before turning in the final draft. Your exams will be evaluated on the following basis: o Extent of documentation of your argument, proper citation of sources (using a citation format consistent with a professional academic journal of your choosing). o Quality of your thesis statement and relevance to the assigned question. o Clarity of the argument you present supporting your thesis statement. o Relevance of your argument to assigned readings, methodological needs in anthropological research, and your assessment of the utility and usage of particular methods in the readings you cite. Your final grade will be calculated on the basis of attendance, class participation in discussions, your presentation of at least one assignment of extra material that you find via google scholar, jstor or another relevant academic search engine, and your grades on three of the four exams. If you are satisfied with your grades on the three midterms, you can skip the final exam. Distribution of course grade: Three exams Attendance, participation, in-class assignments Total 75% 25% 100% Additional information: o Please feel free to come to my office hours, or to catch me before or after class with questions. You can also schedule an appointment to meet outside of office hours. o Make up exams – only with a documented health issue or with prior permission. If you cannot come to an exam, you must tell me before on or on the day of the exam that you will be absent. Make ups will be scheduled at my convenience within one week of the scheduled exam. o Reserve readings are available online through Eres at Mansfield Library, under my name with the access code ANTH447. o If you’re taking this class pass/no pass, a pass > 69%. Schedule: Week/Date 1 Topic Reading/Notes Introduction TBA 2 Posing the right questions TBA 3 Cross sectional, longitudinal, retrospective & prospective projects TBA 4 Identifying independent and dependent variables, predicting analyses and statistical tests required, survey design TBA First exam due for review in class 5 Organizing your fieldnotes before they are written, management of databases in the field TBA Turn revised first exam in to KHM 6 Measuring SES TBA 7 Anthropometry TBA 8 Anthropometry TBA 9 PRA – Participatory Rural Appraisal TBA 10 PRA – Participatory Rural Appraisal Second exam due for review in class TBA 11 Censuses and Genealogies Turn revised second exam in to KHM TBA 12 Mapping villages and fields TBA 13 GIS TBA 14 Database management and stats software packages 15 TBA Third exam due for review in class Evaluations 16 Monday: Optional in class final exam 10:10-12:10 Turn revised third exam in to KHM VI Department Summary (Required if several forms are submitted) In a separate document list course number, title, and proposed change for all proposals. VII Copies and Electronic Submission. After approval, submit original, one copy, summary of proposals and electronic file to the Faculty Senate Office, UH 221, camie.foos@mso.umt.edu.