ARTS1240 Environment and Society Assessment 代写
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ARTS1240 Environment and Society Assessment 代写
ARTS1240 – – Environment and Society
Assessment 1 – – Essay 1 1
Value: 35%
Length: 1,500 words
Due: 4pm, Friday 7 April @4pm (Week 6)
Environmental history provides an invaluable lens on our contemporary environmental
crisis. Discuss with reference to one specific environmental issue.
This question is concerned with the significance of historical perspectives to our understanding of
environmental issues.
To answer this question well you will need to say a little about the relevant field: environmental
history (what is it? Where does it come from?). You will also need to introduce your chosen
environmental issue (e.g. climate change, drought, extinction). Both of these things should be done
very briefly. The bulk of your short essay should be focused on bringing these two topics together:
How does an historical approach help us to understand this particular environmental issue more
fully? Does it challenge dominant cultural assumptions? Does it ask us to develop new policies or
approaches?
You should try to provide specific examples and flesh them out. For example, you might argue that
environmental history helps us to approach bushfires in a specific way: it presents us with possible
practical lessons that have worked (or failed in the past), it challenges our assumptions about the
landscape we live in and what kinds of settlement patterns are appropriate (e.g. the Griffiths
reading in week 2).
Of course, you’re also free to disagree with the proposition in the question: perhaps environmental
history doesn’t offer an invaluable lens? Or perhaps it is helpful in some ways and not in others?
Suggested Texts
The sources below only offer a starting point for research. You are expected to go beyond them –
and the set readings in this course – to find other interesting examples and arguments. In
answering this question you will need to have a look at:
1.) Some basic texts on what environmental history is, and how it might be helpful in
understanding environmental issues. Some of these sources are listed below.
2.) You will likely also need to consult a few basic sources on your chosen environmental issue(s):
bushfire, climate change, etc.
3.) Finally, you will want to try to find at least a few sources where people are applying history in a
relevant way: a historian writing about bushfire (Tom Griffiths, Stephen Pyne), or about floods
and water management (Heather Goodall, Emily O’Gorman), or biodiversity loss (Libby Robin,
Peter Alagona). There are far too many relevant sources here for me to list them all. Instead,
you will need to:
a. Use relevant databases: try Google Scholar and the general resources listed here:
http://subjectguides.library.unsw.edu.au/content.php?pid=25625&sid=371123. Use
searches like: [“climate change” “environmental history”]
b. Visit the websites of relevant academic journals and search through them for the
particular environmental issue you are looking at. A few key journals are: Environmental
History; Environment and History; Environmental Philosophy; Ethics and the
Environment, Environmental Ethics. You might also try more general journals that will
include some history and philosophy, but other things too: Environmental Humanities;
Environment and Society; Conservation and Society (all available through the Library
catalogue).
c. Look at the slides from lectures 2 for some interesting examples and additional texts.
Some Starting Texts
Brown, S, Dovers, S, Frawley, J, Gaynor, A, Goodall, H, Karskens, G & Mullins, S 2008, 'Can
Environmental History Save the World?', History Australia, vol. 5, no. 1.
Cronon W 1993, ‘The Uses of Environmental History’, Environmental History Review, vol. 17, no. 3, pp. 1-
22.
Griffiths, T 2007, 'The Humanities and an Environmentally Sustainable Australia', Ecological Humanities,
Australian Humanities Review, vol. 43.
Griffiths, Tom (2010) “We have still not lived long enough” Humanities Australia, vol. 1, pp. 23-32
Robin, L 2011, 'The Rise of the Idea of Biodiversity: Crises, Responses and Expertise', Quaderni,
vol. 76, no. Autumn, pp. 25-37.
Papers by Steven Dovers (ANU) on history and policy – have a look at his webpage, and other
relevant people (above and below) for a list of publications.
Some historians who work on various relevant topics
Bushfire: Tom Griffiths, Stephen Pyne
Floods and water management: Heather Goodall, Emily O’Gorman
Biodiversity loss / Introduced species: Libby Robin, Peter Alagona, Jodi Frawley, Iain McCalman
Forestry and deforestation: Paul Munro, Paul Robbins
Agriculture: Cameron Muir, George Main, Libby Robin
ARTS1240 Course Outline
Page 1 of 15
CRICOS Provider Code 00098G
School of Humanities and Languages
ARTS1240
Environment and Society
Semester 1, 2017
1. Course Staff and Contact Details
2. Course Details
3. Course Schedule
4. Course Resources
5. Learning and Teaching Rationale and Strategies
6. Course Assessment
7. Attendance and Absence
8. Special Consideration for Illness or Misadventure
9. Class Clash
10. Academic Honesty and Plagiarism
11. Course Evaluation and Development
12. Student Support
13. Grievances and Review of Assessment Results
14. Other Information
ARTS1240 Course Outline
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CRICOS Provider Code 00098G
1. Course Staff and Contact Details
Course Convenor
Name Dr Marilu Melo Room TBC
Phone TBC Email m.melozurita@unsw.edu.au
Consultation Time Mondays 11am to 12pm (or by appointment)
Tutors
Name Sophie Adams Room
Email s.m.adams@unsw.edu.au
2. Course Details
Units of Credit (UoC) 6
Course Description Environment and Society is a Level 1 course and is the gateway
for the Environmental Humanities major – though it can also be
taken as an elective. Its content is designed to lead you into
Level 2 courses for Environmental Humanities.
This course is concerned with the complex and problematic
relationship between society and the environment. On one level,
the nature of this relationship seems clear: humans damage the
environment. Everywhere we look anthropogenic (or ‘human
caused’) environmental problems are increasing: From
extinction, biodiversity loss and the seemingly never ending
production of waste, through to climate change and
deforestation.
This course introduces students to these and other
environmental issues, but it does so through a focus on the
social and cultural dimensions of these issues. If indeed these
problems are all caused by people, then any full understanding
of our contemporary environment is only possible if we also
consider human societies and their unique understandings of
and ways of interacting with their environments.
Through a range of case studies, the course introduces students
to a diverse set of humanities and social sciences approaches to
environmental issues. Together, these approaches make up the
interdisciplinary field of Environmental Humanities. Drawing on
philosophy, history, environmental justice theory and
anthropology we will explore some of the diverse ways in which
people in different cultures and at different times have
understood and interacted with the ‘more than human’ world. In
the second half of the course, other approaches – like those of
political ecology, eco-criticism and science and technology
studies (STS) – will provide us with new tools for thinking
critically about how contemporary environments are shaped and
influenced by competing interests.
Ultimately, the course introduces students to some of the
underlying cultural, economic, and political systems that shape
the ways in which diverse peoples understand, influence and live
in the world.
Through this exploration of different approaches to the
environment, one of the primary goals of this course is to
ARTS1240 Course Outline
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CRICOS Provider Code 00098G
encourage a deep questioning of any simple distinction between
‘society’ and ‘the environment’. It is abundantly clear that in a
range of different ways, all human communities are bound up
with – influenced by, dependent on and impacting upon – the
‘natural’ world. In this context, what does it mean to divide the
world up into ‘society’ and ‘the environment’, and might the
mode of thinking captured in this distinction itself be a central
part of our current ecological crisis?
The ideas introduced in this course are developed in a sustained
way throughout the rest of the Environmental Humanities major.
Learning Outcomes
At the completion of
this course students
will be able to…
1.
Describe the range of environmental problems faced by
contemporary society.
2.
Analyse and explain dimensions of these problems which
are local, national and global.
3.
Analyse and explain the place of humans in ecosystems,
with insights from several disciplines.
4. Discuss the interaction between environment and society
5.
Critically analyse real-life environmental/social issues,
cultural practices and the link between the two.
6.
Identify and explore solutions to confront environmental
challenges
7.
Apply enhanced learning and communication skills,
including skills in the critical analysis of academic and
popular texts that interpret the link between social and
environmental issues.
8.
Explain the concept of environmental citizenship and chart
a course towards it.
3. Course Schedule
To view course timetable, please visit: http://www.timetable.unsw.edu.au/
Week
Comme
ncing
Topic
Lecturer
Content
Tutorial
Content
Readings
Week 1
(27 Feb)
Environment
and Society
Course
overview – key
course concepts
Marilu Melo No tutorial No readings this week
Week 2
(6 Mar)
Environmental
History
From the
emergence of
‘the
environment’ to
the
Anthropocene
Marilu Melo
Discussion
Griffiths, Tom (2010) “We
have still not lived long
enough” Humanities Australia,
vol. 1, pp. 23-32
O’Gorman, Emily (2011)
“Unnatural River, Unnatural
Flood?” Australian Humanities
Review, vol. 48, pp. 87-107
Week 3
(13 Mar)
Creative Arts
and the
Environment
Eben
Kirksey
Discussion
Kirksey, Eben, Craig
Schuetze, and Stefan
Helmereich (2014)
“Introduction: Tactics of
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Multispecies Ethnography”.
The Multispecies Salon. E.
Kirksey, ed. Pp. 1-24.
Durham: Duke University
Press
Spaid, Sue (2002)
“Ecovention, Current Art to
Transform
Ecologies”. Contemporary
Arts Center. Available on-
line: http://greenmuseum.org/c
/ecovention/sect1.html
Week 4
(20 Mar)
Environmental
Philosophy and
Ethics
Our place in and
obligations to a
more-than-
human-world
Thom van
Dooren
Discussion
Callicott, J. Baird (1988)
“Animal Liberation and
Environmental Ethics: Back
Together Again” Between the
Species, vol. 4, pp. 163-9
Plumwood, Val (1993)
“Dualism: The logic of
colonisation” in Feminism and
the Mastery of Nature
(Routledge: London and New
York), pp. 41-68 (you only
need to read up to p. 55, but
can read on if you like)
Week 5
(27 Mar)
Environmental
Justice (Waste)
Marilu Melo Discussion
Moore, Sarah A. (2008) “The
Politics of Garbage in
Oaxaca, Mexico”, Society &
Natural Resources, vol. 21.7,
pp. 597-610
Puckett, Jim (2006) “High-
Tech’s Dirty Little Secret: The
Economics and Ethics of the
Electronic Waste Trade” in
David N. Pellow (Ed.)
Challenging the Chip: Labor
Rights and Environmental
Justice in the Global
Electronics Industry. (Temple
University Press:
Philadelphia, PA).
Week 6
(3 Apr)
What is Place?
Marilu Melo Discussion
Byrne, Denis, Heather
Goodall, Stephen Wearing
and Allison Cadzow (2006)
“Enchanted Parklands”
Australian Geographer, vol.
37.1, pp. 103-15
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Plumwood, Val (2008)
“Shadow Places and the
Politics of Dwelling”
Australian Humanities
Review, vol. 44, pp. 139-50
Week 7
(10 Apr)
Narrative
(Biodiversity and
Extinction)
Thom van
Dooren
Discussion
van Dooren, Thom (2014)
“Introduction: Telling Lively
Stories at the Edge of
Extinction” in Flight Ways:
Life and Loss at the Edge of
Extinction (Columbia
University Press: New York)
Heise, Ursula K. (2016)
“Biodiversity, Environmental
Justice, and Multispecies
Communities” in Imagining
Extinction: The Cultural
Meanings of Endangered
Species (University of
Chicago Press: Chicago)
Mid-Semester Break
Week 8
(24
April)
Environmental
Anthropology
(Deforestation)
Marilu Melo Discussion
West, Paige and Dan
Brockington (2006) “An
Anthropological Perspective
on Some Unexpected
Consequences of Protected
Areas” Conservation Biology,
vol. 20.3, pp. 609-616
Tsing, Anna (2005) “A History
of Weediness” in Friction: An
Ethnography of Global
Connection. Princeton &
Oxford: Princeton University
Press
Week 9
(1 May)
What is Nature?
Marilu Melo Discussion
Vining, Joanne, Melinda S.
Merrick and Emily A. Price
(2008) “The Distinction
Between Humans and Nature:
Human Perceptions of
Connectedness to Nature and
Elements of the Natural and
Unnatural” Human Ecology
Review vol. 15.1, pp. 1-11
Cronon, William (1995) “The
Trouble with Wilderness: or,
Getting Back to the Wrong
Nature” in William Cronon
(Ed.) Uncommon Ground:
Toward Reinventing Nature.
New York & London: W.W.
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Norton & Company.
The version provided here is a
PDF from Cronon’s website:
http://www.williamcronon.net/
writing/Trouble_with_Wilderne
ss_Main.html
Week
10
(8 May)
Ecocriticism:
literature and
the environment
(Climate
Change)
Jennifer
Hamilton
Discussion
Dovey, Ceridwen (2014) "The
Bones: Soul of Camel, Died
1892, Australia" in Only the
Animals (Penguin:
Melbourne), pp. 1-14.
Atwood, Margaret (2011)
“Time Capsule Found on the
Dead Planet” in I'm With the
Bears: Short Stories from a
Damaged Planet (London:
Verso), pp. 191-193.
Heise, Ursula K. (2006)
“Hitchhiker's Guide to
Ecocriticism”, PMLA, vol.
121.2, pp. 503-506.
Week
11
(15
May)
Science and
Technology
Studies
(Biotechnologies
)
Matthew
Kearnes
Discussion
Hammond, K (2004)
“Monsters of modernity:
Frankenstein and modern
environmentalism” Cultural
Geographies, vol.11, pp. 181-
198
Haraway, Donna (1991) “A
Cyborg Manifesto: Science,
Technology, and Socialist-
Feminism in the Late
Twentieth Century” in
Simians, Cyborgs, and
Women: The Reinvention of
Nature, Routledge: New York
(short excerpt). [Please note:
This is a challenging, but
important, reading. Please
stick with it.]
Week
12
(22
May)
Conclusions:
Bringing
together
perspectives in
the
Environmental
Humanities
Marilu Melo
(and
guests)
Presentations
No required readings
Tutorials this week will be
taken up with group
presentations for your
Environmental Futures
Laboratory assignments.
Week
13
No lecture n/a Presentations
No required readings
Tutorials this week will be
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(29
May)
taken up with group
presentations for your
Environmental Futures
Laboratory assignments
4. Course Resources
There is no Textbook for this course, readings will be available via Moodle
A few other good journals (search for these in the library catalogue)
Environmental Humanities; Environment and Society; Conservation and Society;
Environmental History; Environment and History; Environmental Philosophy;
Environmental Ethics; Ethics and the Environment; Humanimalia; Journal of Political
Ecology; Capitalism, Nature, Socialism; PAN: Philosophy, Activism, Nature; Australian
Humanities Review (esp. the Ecological Humanities section).
A few good Databases (*available through the library catalogue)
Project Muse*; Philosophers Index*; Directory of Open Access Journals; Google Scholar
5. Learning and Teaching Rationale and Strategies
This course asks students to engage with work that challenges foundational assumptions
about contemporary environmental issues and the relationship between human societies and
the environment more generally. The core objective of this course is to familiarise students
with this material through lectures, in-depth tutorial discussions, independent research, and
the preparation of assessment.
This course places a strong emphasis on the development of critical analysis, reading, and
discussion skills. The tutorials play a key role in the achievement of these learning
outcomes, requiring students to carefully read and analyse material from a range of sources.
In addition to tutorial participation, the assessment in the course is comprised of three key
tasks. The first and second pieces of assessment are short essays. These essays are
designed to push students’ understandings of relevant issues beyond a basic level. These
essays will require students to conduct significant independent research that develops
analytic concepts and themes that they have encountered in lectures and tutorials. In short,
the essays will provide students with an opportunity to expand their knowledge beyond the
material covered in the course and to critically evaluate key ideas and approaches.
The final piece of assessment – the Environmental Futures Laboratory – has two key
goals. Firstly, students are required to work together in groups and so to enhance these skills
(along with time management). Secondly, this exercise requires students to connect the
theories and issues discussed in the course with practical interventions and outcomes (in the
form of a creative project and a group presentation).
Taken together, these three major pieces of assessment will provide students with the
necessary background and knowledge of contemporary environmental issues, while also
encouraging critical reflection on this material and the ways in which it might be
ARTS1240 Course Outline
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communicated to a wider audience or otherwise put to practical use in the service of diverse
environmental goals.
Learning outcomes How these will be achieved:
Describe the range of
environmental problems
faced by contemporary
society
Theoretical discussions in the lectures as well as the in-
class tutorial discussions
Assignments: Essays, Environmental Futures Laboratory
Analyse and explain
dimensions of these
problems which are local,
national and global
Theoretical discussions in the lectures as well as the in-
class tutorial discussions; and analysis of set readings
Assignments: Essays, Environmental Futures Laboratory
(and Tutorials discussion)
Analyse and explain the
place of humans in
ecosystems, with insights
from several disciplines
Theoretical discussions in the lectures as well as the in-
class tutorial discussions; and analysis of set readings
Assignments: Essays (and Tutorials discussion)
Discuss the interaction
between environment and
society
Theoretical discussions in the lectures as well as the in-
class tutorial discussions; and analysis of set readings
Assignments: Essays, Environmental Futures Laboratory
(and Tutorials discussion)
Critically analyse real-life
environmental/social issues,
cultural practices and the
link between the two
Theoretical discussions in the lectures as well as the in-
class tutorial discussions; and analysis of set readings
Assignments: Essays, Environmental Futures Laboratory
Identify and explore
solutions to confront
environmental challenges
All teaching approaches
Assignment: Essays, Environmental Futures Laboratory
Apply enhanced learning
and communication skills
including skills in the critical
analysis of academic and
popular texts that interpret
the link between social and
environmental issues
Tutorial discussions and analysis of readings
Assignment: Essays, Environmental Futures Laboratory
(and Tutorials discussion)
ARTS1240 Course Outline
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CRICOS Provider Code 00098G
6. Course Assessment
Assessment
Task
ARTS1240 Environment and Society Assessment 代写
Length Weight
Learning
Outcomes
Assessed
Due Date
Submitted in
Moodle?
(Yes/ No)
Essay 1 1,500 35%
1,2,3,4,5,6,
7,8
7 April
@4pm
Yes
Essay 2
2,000 45%
1,2,3,4,5,6,
7,8
19 May
@4pm
Yes
Environmental
Futures
Laboratory
n/a 20%
1,2,3,4,5,6,
7
In tutorials,
weeks 12
and 13
No
Please Note: If students attend less than 80% of their classes they may be refused final
assessment. See “Attendance and Absence” for details of attendance requirements.
Grades
All results are reviewed at the end of each semester and may be adjusted to ensure
equitable marking across the School.
The proportion of marks lying in each grading range is determined not by any formula or
quota system, but by the way that students respond to assessment tasks and how well they
meet the learning outcomes of the course. Nevertheless, since higher grades imply
performance that is well above average, the number of distinctions and high distinctions
awarded in a typical course is relatively small. At the other extreme, on average 6.1% of
students do not meet minimum standards and a little more (8.6%) in first year courses. For
more information on the grading categories see:
https://my.unsw.edu.au/student/academiclife/assessment/GuideToUNSWGrades.html
Submission of Assessment Tasks
Assignments must be submitted electronically through Moodle
(http://moodle.telt.unsw.edu.au/). You must use your ID login to submit your assignments in
Moodle.
Refer to the section “Course Assessment” for details of assessment tasks that are to be
submitted via Moodle.
** Please note the deadline to submit an assignment electronically is 4:00 pm on the
due date of the assignment.
When you submit your assignment electronically, you agree that:
I have followed the Student Code of Conduct. I certify that I have read and understand the
University requirements in respect of student academic misconduct outlined in the Student
Code of Conduct and the Student Misconduct Procedures. I declare that this assessment
item is my own work, except where acknowledged, and has not been submitted for academic
credit previously in whole or in part.
I acknowledge that the assessor of this item may, for assessment purposes:
provide a copy to another staff member of the University
communicate a copy of this assessment item to a plagiarism checking service (such
as Turnitin) which may retain a copy of the assessment item on its database for the
purpose of future plagiarism checking.
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You are required to put your name (as it appears in University records) and UNSW
Student ID on every page of your assignments.
If you encounter a problem when attempting to submit your assignment through
Moodle/Turnitin, please telephone External Support on 9385 3331 or email them on
externalsupport@unsw.edu.au. Support hours are 8:00am – 10:00pm on weekdays and
9:00am – 5:00pm on weekends (365 days a year).
If you are unable to submit your assignment due to a fault with Turnitin you may apply for an
extension, but you must retain your ticket number from External Support (along with any
other relevant documents) to include as evidence to support your extension application. If
you email External Support you will automatically receive a ticket number, but if you
telephone you will need to specifically ask for one. Turnitin also provides updates on its
system status on Twitter.
For information on how to submit assignments online via Moodle:
https://student.unsw.edu.au/how-submit-assignment-moodle
Late Submission of Assignments
Students are responsible for the submission of assessment tasks by the required dates and
times. Depending of the extent of delay in the submission of an assessment task past the
due date and time, one of the following late penalties will apply unless Special Consideration
or a blanket extension due to a technical outage is granted. For the purpose of late penalty
calculation, a ‘day’ is deemed to be each 24-hour period (or part thereof) past the stipulated
deadline for submission.
Work submitted less than 10 days after the stipulated deadline is subject to a
deduction of 5% of the total awardable mark from the mark that would have been
achieved if not for the penalty for every day past the stipulated deadline for
submission. That is, a student who submits an assignment with a stipulated
deadline of 4:00pm on 13 May 2016 at 4:10pm on 14 May 2016 will incur a
deduction of 10%.
Task with a non-percentage mark
If the task is marked out of 25, then late submission will attract a penalty of a deduction of 1.25
from the mark awarded to the student for every 24-hour period (or part thereof) past the stipulated
deadline.
Example: A student submits an essay 48 hours and 10 minutes after the stipulated deadline. The
total possible mark for the essay is 25. The essay receives a mark of 17. The student’s mark is
therefore 17 – [25 (0.05 x 3)] = 13.25.
Task with a percentage mark
If the task is marked out of 100%, then late submission will attract a penalty of a deduction of 5%
from the mark awarded to the student for every 24-hour period (or part thereof) past the stipulated
deadline.
Example: A student submits an essay 48 hours and 10 minutes after the stipulated deadline. The
essay is marked out of 100%. The essay receives a mark of 68. The student’s mark is therefore 68
– 15 = 53
Work submitted 10 to 19 days after the stipulated deadline will be assessed and
feedback provided but a mark of zero will be recorded. If the work would have
received a pass mark but for the lateness and the work is a compulsory course
component (hurdle requirement), a student will be deemed to have met that
requirement;
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Work submitted 20 or more days after the stipulated deadline will not be
accepted for assessment and will receive no feedback, mark or grade. If the
assessment task is a compulsory component of the course a student will receive
an Unsatisfactory Fail (UF) grade as a result of unsatisfactory performance in
essential component of the course.
7. Attendance and Absence
The UNSW Policy on Class Attendance and Absence can be viewed at:
https://student.unsw.edu.au/attendance
The Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences guidelines on attendance and absence can be
viewed at:
https://www.arts.unsw.edu.au/current-students/academic-information/protocols-guidelines/
From time to time, the Course Authority may vary the attendance requirements of a course. It
is the students’ responsibility to ensure that they are familiar with the specific attendance
requirements stipulated in the course outline for each course in which they are enrolled.
Students are expected to be regular and punctual in attendance at all classes in the courses
in which they are enrolled. Students who seek to be excused from attendance or for absence
must apply to the Course Authority in writing. In such situations, the following rules relating to
attendances and absences apply.
In this course, students must attend at least 80% of lectures (9 out of 11 lectures).
Students must attend at least 80% of tutorials (9 out of 11 tutorials).
A student who attends less than eighty per cent of the classes within a course may be
refused final assessment. The final assessment in this course is identified under “Course
Assessment”.
In the case of illness or of absence for some other unavoidable cause students may be
excused for non-attendance at classes for a period of not more than one month (i.e., 33%)
or, on the recommendation of the Dean of the appropriate faculty, for a longer period.
Explanations of absences from classes or requests for permission to be absent from
forthcoming classes should be addressed to the Course Authority in writing and, where
applicable, should be accompanied by appropriate documentation (e.g. medical certificate).
After submitting appropriate supporting documentation to the Course Authority to explain
his/her absence, a student may be required to undertake supplementary class(es) or task(s)
as prescribed by the Course Authority. If examinations or other forms of assessment have
been missed, then the student should apply for Special Consideration.
Students who falsify their attendance or falsify attendance on behalf of another
student will be dealt with under the Student Misconduct Policy.
8. Special Consideration for Illness or Misadventure
Students can apply for Special Consideration if illness or misadventure interferes with their
assessment performance or attendance.
Applications are accepted in the following circumstances only:
Where academic work has been hampered to a substantial degree by illness or other
cause. Except in unusual circumstances, a problem involving only 3 consecutive days
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or a total of 5 days within the teaching period of a semester is not considered
sufficient grounds for an application.
The circumstances must be unexpected and beyond your control. Students are
expected to give priority to their university study commitments, and any absence must
clearly be for circumstances beyond your control. Work commitments are not
normally considered a justification.
An absence from an assessment activity held within class contact hours or from an
examination must be supported by a medical certificate or other document that clearly
indicates that you were unable to be present. A student absent from an examination,
or who attends an examination and wants to request special consideration, is
normally required to provide a medical certificate dated the same day as the
examination.
An application for Special Consideration must be provided within 3 working days of
the assessment to which it refers. In exceptional circumstances an application may
be accepted outside the 3-day limit.
Students cannot claim consideration for conditions or circumstances that are the
consequences of their own actions or inactions.
Applications are normally not considered if:
The condition or event is not related to performance or is considered to be not serious
More than 3 days have elapsed since the assessment for which consideration is
sought
Any key information is missing
Supporting documentation does not meet requirements
The assessment task is worth less than 20% of the total course assessment, unless
the student can provide a medical certificate that covers three consecutive days.
Applications for Special Consideration must be made via Online Services in myUNSW. Log
into myUNSW and go to My Student Profile tab > My Student Services channel > Online
Services > Special Consideration.
Applications on the grounds of illness must be filled in by a medical practitioner. Further
information is available at: https://student.unsw.edu.au/guide
If a student is granted an extension under Special Consideration, failure to meet the
stipulated deadline will result in a penalty. The penalty will be invoked one minute past the
approved extension time. See section “Late Submission of Assignments” for penalties of late
submission.
9. Class Clash
Students who are enrolled in an Arts and Social Sciences program (single or dual) and have
an unavoidable timetable clash can apply for permissible timetable clash by completing an
online application form. The online form can be found at:
https://www.arts.unsw.edu.au/ttclash/index.php
Students must meet the rules and conditions in order to apply for permissible clash. The
rules and conditions can be accessed online in full at:
https://www.arts.unsw.edu.au/media/FASSFile/Permissible_Clash_Rules.pdf
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Students who are enrolled in a non-Arts and Social Sciences program must seek advice from
their home faculty on permissible clash approval.
10. Academic Honesty and Plagiarism
Plagiarism is presenting someone else’s thoughts or work as your own. It can take many
forms, from not having appropriate academic referencing to deliberate cheating.
In many cases plagiarism is the result of inexperience about academic conventions. The
University has resources and information to assist you to avoid plagiarism.
The Learning Centre assists students with understanding academic integrity and how to not
plagiarise. Information is available on their website: https://student.unsw.edu.au/plagiarism/.
They also hold workshops and can help students one-on-one.
If plagiarism is found in your work when you are in first year, your lecturer will offer you
assistance to improve your academic skills. They may ask you to look at some online
resources, attend the Learning Centre, or sometimes resubmit your work with the problem
fixed. However, more serious instances in first year, such as stealing another student’s work
or paying someone to do your work, may be investigated under the Student Misconduct
Procedures.
Repeated plagiarism (even in first year), plagiarism after first year, or serious instances, may
also be investigated under the Student Misconduct Procedures. The penalties under the
procedures can include a reduction in marks, failing a course or for the most serious matters
(like plagiarism in an Honours thesis) or even suspension from the university. The Student
Misconduct Procedures are available here:
http://www.gs.unsw.edu.au/policy/documents/studentmisconductprocedures.pdf
11. Course Evaluation and Development
Courses are periodically reviewed and students’ feedback is used to improve them.
Feedback is gathered from students using myExperience. It is encouraged students
complete their surveys by accessing the personalised web link via the Moodle course site.
12. Student Support
The Learning Centre is available for individual consultation and workshops on academic
skills. Find out more by visiting the Centre’s website at:
http://www.lc.unsw.edu.au
13. Grievances and Review of Assessment Results
13.1 Grievances
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All students should be treated fairly in the course of their studies at UNSW. Students who
feel they have not been dealt with fairly should, in the first instance, attempt to resolve any
issues with their tutor or course convenor.
If such an approach fails to resolve the matter, the School of Humanities and Languages has
an academic member of staff who acts as a Grievance Officer for the School. This staff
member is identified on the notice board in the School of Humanities and Languages. Further
information about UNSW grievance procedures is available at:
https://student.unsw.edu.au/guide
13.2 Review of Assessment Results
There is no automatic right to have an assessment reviewed, the Faculty reserves the right
to make such judgements.
In the first instance a student should seek an informal clarification, this should normally be
done within two working days of the return of the assessed work.
If the student is not satisfied with the informal process, they should complete the UNSW
Review of Results Application form, which is available at: https://student.unsw.edu.au/results.
An application must be lodged within 15 working days of receiving the result of the
assessment task.
Further information on review of student work in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences can
be viewed at: https://www.arts.unsw.edu.au/current-students/academic-
information/Protocols-Guidelines/
14. Other Information
myUNSW
myUNSW is the online access point for UNSW services and information, integrating online
services for applicants, commencing and current students and UNSW staff. To visit
myUNSW please visit either of the below links:
https://my.unsw.edu.au
OHS
UNSW's Occupational Health and Safety Policy requires each person to work safely and
responsibly, in order to avoid personal injury and to protect the safety of others. For all
matters relating to Occupational Health, Safety and environment, see
http://www.ohs.unsw.edu.au/
Student Equity and Disabilities Unit
Students who have a disability that requires some adjustment in their learning and teaching
environment are encouraged to discuss their study needs with the course convener prior to
or at the commencement of the course, or with the Student Equity Officers (Disability) in the
Student Equity and Disabilities Unit (9385 4734). Information for students with disabilities is
available at: https://student.unsw.edu.au/disability
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Issues that can be discussed may include access to materials, signers or note-takers, the
provision of services and additional examination and assessment arrangements. Early
notification is essential to enable any necessary adjustments to be made.
ARTS1240 Environment and Society Assessment 代写