Syllabus

                       (November 9, 2007)

 

 

                   GEOGRAPHY 310 - SPRING 2008

 

    MARYLAND AND ADJACENT AREAS FROM A GEOGRAPHIC PERSPECTIVE

 

                   MWF 11:00 A.M. - 11:50 A.M.

 

                    (LeFrak Hall - Room 2166)

 

 

I.   Introduction  -  What I hope you will take  away  from  this

     course:

 

     A.   An introduction to the physical geography of the  Mary-

          land region and how it has developed since the last ice

          age.

 

     B.   An  introduction  to the human/cultural   geography  of

          Maryland from pre-European contact to the present.

 

     C.   An  introduction to what is geography if this  is  your

          first  course in it (Geography 100 is our  introductory

          course but is not a pre-requisite for Geography 310).

 

II.  Course `Outline':

 

     A.   The pre-colonial Chesapeake Bay area.

 

     B.   The colonial Chesapeake Bay area (1607/1634 - 1776):

 

     C.   The Revolution. The emphasis here will be on the effect

          of  the Revolution on the `geography' of  Maryland  and

          its surroundings and not on the war itself.

 

     D.   Ante-bellum Maryland.

 

     E.   Maryland in the Civil War.

 

     F.   Maryland to the 20th Century.

 

     G.   Maryland in the 20th Century.

 

III. Course Requirements:

 

     A.   Two  short papers. One dealing with a strictly  `physi-

          cal' aspect(s) of Maryland the other with a  `cultural'

          (or  human) aspect of Maryland. Each paper is to  be  a

          minimum of 5 full pages not counting cover pages,  ill-

          ustrations  or  bibliography page.  These  papers  will

          constitute  50% of your class grade. They will  be  due

          Wednesday, March the 12th.  

 

          Each paper must use at least four college-level  refer-

          ence sources (peer-reviewed books or journal articles -

          to  be  discussed in class) which must be  cited  (with

          page numbers) within the body of your paper as well  as

          listed  in  a bibliography at the back.  Material  from 

          encyclopedias  is not acceptable.

 

     B.   A final test covering the entire course. Students  will

          not  be asked to identify any of the houses, art,  etc.

          shown as slides during the course. The final will  con-

          stitute the other half of the class grade.

 

          -    The  handwriting on tests must be legible and  the

               grammar  and  spelling  sufficiently  good  to  be

               easily  read  or  the  question(s)  will  not   be

               considered  answered which will lead to a loss  of

               points    -

 

     C.   You  must watch the video Vanishing Lands which can  be

          viewed in the Non-Print Room of Hornbake Library.

 

     D.   There  is one required textbook. It, and the  suggested

          readings, will be discussed in class. Some reading will

          be required to write the class papers.

 

     E.   Both  papers must be turned in and the final  taken  in

          order to receive a passing grade. Because of the  large

          upward  curve built into this class, letter grades  are

          used to determine the class grade.

 

          1.   All papers must have sufficiently good grammer and

               spelling to be easily understood or they will  not

               be graded;

          2    All  Geography majors and minors and Environmental

               Studies Majors receiving an A or A+ will be expec-

               ted to resubmit a copy of their papers for  review

               by the Harper and Regional Writing Awards program;

          3.   All  papers  will be  checked  electronically  for

               plagiarism.

 

     F.   Attendance  at lectures is mandatory. Missing  five  or

          more  classes  without a University  acceptable  excuse

          will result in the loss of one class grade.

 

     G.   Plus  and  minus class grades will reflect  maximum  or

          minimum efforts for a particular grade. What constitut-

          es  these will be explained in writing on  your  papers

          when  they  are returned. For the final the  upper  and

          lower  ends of the numeric range will be a plus or  mi-

          nus. For instance, a 90% will be an A-, a 99% an A+. As

          an example, an A- on both papers and an A on the  final

          will  result in a class grade of A-. Please remember  E

          above. A C (2.0) is needed to pass the class.

 

     H.   Academic honesty is necessary for the process of learn-

          ing  to  function properly and any lack of it  will  be

          punished  in this class. Plagiarism,  falsifying  cita-

          tions  and cheating on the final are three examples  of

          academic dishonesty.

 

 

IV.  Office hours - 11:00 - 1:00 MW and 11:00 - 12:00 F.

 

     My office is room 2121 in LeFrak Hall, My office phone  num-

     ber  is 405-4112, my home phone number is 681-7934 which  is

     local  to  the  school. My  e-mail  address  is  aeney@mail.

     umd.edu. Please feel free to call me at home. 

 

V.   The  final  will  be held on Saturday, May 17th, from  8:00-    

     10:00.

 

VI.  Bibliography:

 

     Environmental  Horton,  Tom and William M. Eichbaum  (1991).

     Issues;        TURNING the TIDE: SAVING THE CHEASAPEAKE BAY.

 

                    Teal,  John  & Mildred (c.  1985).  Life  and

                    Death of a Salt Marsh. 

 

     Geography;     Briggs,  David  and  Peter  Smithson  (1986).

                    Fundamentals of Physical Geography.

 

                    DiLisio, James E. (1983). MARYLAND. *    

 

                    Getis,  Arthur,  et.al.  (2001)  The   United

                    States and Canada: The Land and the People.

 

                    Mitchell, Robert D. and Paul A. Groves,  eds.

                    (1998). North America.

 

                    Mitchell,  Robert  D. and  Edward  K.  Muller

                    (editors)  (1979). Geographical  Perspectives

                    on Maryland's Past, No. 4.

 

                    Zelinsky, Wilbur (1973). The Cultural Geogra-

                    phy of the United States.

                   

     History;       Brugger, Robert J. (1989). MARYLAND A  Middle

                    Temperament: 1634-1980.

 

                    Walsh,  Richard and William Lloyd  Fox  (edi-

                    tors) (1983). MARYLAND A HISTORY.

 

 

*    Required

 

 

     The university has a nationally recognized Honor Code admin-

istered  by the Student Honor Council. The Student Honor  Council

proposed  and the University Senate approved an Honor Pledge.  It

reads:

   

     "I pledge on my honor that I have not given or received

     any unauthorized assistance on this assignment/examina-

     tion."

 

     Unless  you  are specifically advised to the  contrary,  the

Pledge  statement should be handwritten and signed on  the  front

cover  of  all papers,  projects, or other  academic  assignments

submitted  for  evaluation in this course. Students who  fail  to

write  and sign the Pledge will be asked to confer with  the  in-

structor. For more information see page 21 of the normal schedule

of classes.

 

 

     If you have a documented disability and wish to discuss ways

to deal with it in this class please contact me as soon as possi-

ble.

 

 

 

         

Allen B. Eney, November 9, 2007