Dallas Baptist University SOCI 3308 01 Internship in Sociology II Summer II2009
Prof.
Jean Humphreys Phone:214-333-5262Fax: 214-333-6819E-mail: We are asked to use the class email in Blackboard. If you have an emergency
use: jean@dbu.edu. Always write your name and SOCI INTERN in the subject line so your
email will be opened. Office Hours: As needed
Course Description: A supervised field placement with a
Christian or secular social agency. This course provides the student with an opportunity
of integrating theory and classroom learning with actual field experience in the light of
a Christian worldview, in order to become more effective servant leaders. The placement
may be at the individual, family, group, or community levels in diverse setting.
Learner-Centered Outcomes and Objectives:
·The student will review
representative material in order to acquaint the student with various methods of social
work and ministry.
·The student will examine
some of the ethical issues relating to social work and ministry today.
·The student will receive
professional training through experiential learning.
·The
student will be able to participate in intern experiences in order to become more
effective servant leaders.
Texts and Readings: Three Cups of Tea by Greg
Mortenson
Course Outline: Please refer to Tentative Schedule of
Assignments for the Course Outline information.
Requirements for Credit:
The student's final semester grade will be
determined as follows, with the exception that not completing the time or having
a negative written evaluation of your internship from your supervisor will adversely
affect the grade.
Students introduction and name of agency
5
Written job
description
5
Book Review
15
Attendance at
evaluation session
10
Written
evaluation of site supervisor
40
Summary report
15
Time Sheet
10
Total Points
100
The student's final semester grade will be determined as follows:
A
94-100
C
74-77
A-
90-93
C-
70-73
B+
88-89
D+
68-69
B
84-87
D
64-67
B-
80-83
D-
60-63
C+
78-79
F
<60
Attendance Policy: According to DBU academic policy, attendance
in class is considered a necessary factor in the learning process. Therefore, absences for
all reasons must be kept to a minimum and should not exceed 25 percent of the total class
time. Students are held responsible for all academic work required or performed during
their absence regardless of the reasons for those absences. Students who register late are
responsible for work missed. The policy concerning class attendance for individual
courses, seminars, or other guided learning experiences will be determined by the faculty
members in charge of such course, seminar, or learning experience.
Attendance in this internship will consist
of your assignments, time sheet, and participating in the evaluation session.
Learner-Centered
Assessment of Outcomes:
The student will post a class introduction and the name and address of
the organization where they are working to Course Material, Discussion Board, as indicated
on the schedule.
Written job description of your
position and schedule of the dates and times you will be working is due as
scheduled, in the Course Material, Assignment. This description will also include
the complete name and address of the agency as well as the name and phone number of your
supervisor.
The student will complete a
review of Three Cups of Tea
by Greg Mortenson. Due as scheduled in Course Material, Turn it In.
The student will schedule
periodic conferences with the professor as needed to review progress of internship as well
as discuss any problem areas and consider further learning experiences. These may be by
phone, email, or face-to-face. These may take place at the internship site.
The student will spend a total
of sixty hours for this three hour class. An accurate written record of duties performed
and a time sheet of hours served should be kept. This will be due at the evaluation
session in a form designed by the student or provided by the site.
The student will prepare a 3-5
page summary report evaluating the strengths and weaknesses of your internship and making
recommendations for improving the program in which you participated. Include in this
summary an evaluation of how your involvement with social work and ministries has affected
the degree in you are a servant leader. Due as scheduled in Course Material.
The student
will participate in an evaluation session on the Discussion Board.
The student will secure a
written evaluation of your semester or term practicum from your supervisor. These may
either be the evaluation form available in the Course Material, or another form of the
supervisor's design.
Grading: The GPA grading
system adopted by DBU for courses is:
A+
4.00
B+ 3.33
C+ 2.33
D+ 1.33
A
4.00
B 3.00
C 2.00
D 1.00
A-
3.67
B- 2.67
C- 1.67
D- 0.67
F 0.00 ** No
grades of D are awarded for graduate courses
Method of Instruction: The student will
complete a review of Three Cups of Tea by Greg Mortenson. The student will spend a minimum
of sixty credit in supervised activities. The student will schedule periodic conferences
with the professor to review progress of internship as well as discuss any problem areas
and consider further learning experiences, via email, phone, or face-to-face as needed.
There will be a online Discussion board in order to evaluate your experiences in this
internship.
Tentative Schedule of Assignments:
July 10
Students introduction and name of agency due by
11:00 PM in Course Material, Discussion Board.
July 12
Written job description of your position due by 11:00
PM, in Course Material, Assignment.
July 27
Book review due by 11:00 PM, in Course Material, Turn
in In.
July 27
Summary report due, in Course Material, Assignment
July 25 - 30
July 30
Evaluation session , in Discussion Board
Time sheet due, via email
Written evaluation of your
practicum from your supervisor due
These may be mailed,
faxed (214/333-6819) or sent by email.
Financial Aid: Students who are receiving federal, state,
or institutional financial aid who withdraw or add hours during the semester may have
their financial aid adjusted because of the withdraw or addition. This change in schedule
may affect the aid they are receiving during the current semester, and could affect their
eligibility for aid in future semesters.
Disabilities: The student has the responsibility of
informing the Dean of
Students, at (214) 333-5134, of any disabling condition for which the student
will request course modifications. Dallas Baptist University provides academic adjustments
and auxiliary aid to individuals with disabilities, as defined under law, who are
otherwise qualified to meet the institution's academic requirements. It is the student's
choice and responsibility to initiate any request for accommodations. Required
documentation must be provided before the university can make accommodations.
University Honor Code/Academic Appeal and Academic
Misconduct Procedure: The faculty member endorses the University Honor Code and abides by
the University's Academic
Appeal and Academic Misconduct Procedure as stated in the Student Handbook and the Schedule of Classes.
Final
Course Grades: Final course grades provided to a student by
a faculty member may not be relied upon as official. Students may access their official
final grades online through the WebAdvisor System. The Registrar's Office will only mail
grades to a student upon request. The Dallas Baptist University undergraduate and graduate
catalogs state that "All accounts must be paid in full before a student can...receive
transcripts..." According to FERPA, faculty may not provide final grade information
to students via telephone, email, posting or any other source which might compromise
student confidentiality.
Children
in Classes and Unaccompanied Children: Minor children of Dallas
Baptist University students are not permitted to attend class with their parents.
Furthermore, minor children may not be unaccompanied at any location or property where
Dallas Baptist University classes are taught. If a minor child is brought to the DBU
campus or any location where DBU classes are taught, the child must be accompanied by an
adult at all times. For their safety and welfare, unaccompanied children on the DBU campus
will be escorted to the Campus Security Office and the parents or guardians will be
summoned to pick them up immediately.
Cell Phone Policy: Classroom disruption by cell phones or other
electronic devices is prohibited. All cell phones and similar electronic devices must
remain turned off and out of sight for the duration of class. Electronic devices utilized
in a learning context, such as laptops and language interpreters, may be permitted at the
professor's discretion. A student may face a zero and/or failure in the class if an
electronic device is used for cheating during a test. Cheating at Dallas Baptist
University is not tolerated and may result in expulsion.
Graduating
Students Grades: It is the responsibility of the student to
notify the instructor if graduating this semester. Final exams for graduating students
will be given: 04/30/08. Final grades for graduates are due in the Registrar's Office by
noon on the Monday before Commencement: 05/11/08. These grades are final. The instructor
will not submit late grades for graduates nor change grades once they are submitted.
Other
Important Information: Currently, on the homepage of DBU's
Website, we find one of the key verses for our University, "For I know the plans
I have for you," declares the Lord, "plans to prosper you and not to harm you,
plans to give you hope and a future." Jeremiah 29:11
Today I
want you to think about what your future is and reflect on the first portion of this
chapter. Jeremiah 29 was written to the exiles who were carried from Jerusalem to
Babylon. As Christians in a fallen world, we often feel like exiles in a strange land but
what are we to do in this world, how are we to prosper, how is our world to prosper?
Jeremiah tells of God's command to the Israelites:
"5
Build houses and settle down; plant gardens and eat what they produce. 6 Marry and have
sons and daughters; find wives for your sons and give your daughters in marriage, so that
they too may have sons and daughters. Increase in number there; do not decrease. 7 Also,
seek the peace and prosperity of the city to which I have carried you into exile. Pray to
the LORD for it, because if it prospers, you too will prosper."
In this
internship we will establish this relationship with the world in which we live. We are to
live in this world and to "...seek the peace and prosperity of the city to which I
have carried you into exile." What a wonderful opportunity to seek the peace and
prosperity of this world as a college student! This is such an encouraging
chapter and such a balanced word. We are to seek the peace and prosperity. We
are to change the world. Remember "Pray to the LORD for it, because if it
prospers, you too will prosper."
For
further thought: a challenging classic which addresses some of this balance is An Ethic for Christians and Other Aliens in
a Strange Land by William Stringfellow.