We have no 'standardized' syllabi--although we often talk about
having meetings to standardize the coverage by varied professors--
especially since this would be helpful for part-timers. But we
have never found it compelling enough to call a meeting to actually do 
it :-)
annette

On Fri, 15 Sep 2000, Michael Ofsowitz wrote:

> Do any of you folks have to teach using syllabi, reading materials, 
> assignments, or other course-related materials that were designed by 
> other teachers (or say, a departmental committee)?
> 
> I've been told that course standardization - meaning standardized 
> syllabi, assignments, reading materials, etc. - is pretty common in 
> schools these days. Is it? (It's a point of contention between some 
> faculty at my school and some administrators.)
> 
> I'd be grateful for any feedback (send it to me and I'll eventually 
> compile it for the list).
> 
> Do you write your own syllabus? Do you teach any courses where it's 
> written for you by someone else?
> 
> Do you select your own reading materials? Do you teach courses where 
> they are preselected?
> 
> Do you devise your own assignments? Do you teach courses where you 
> are required to give pre-designed assignments?
> 
> Any other data that might help me on this (e.g., course level, 
> enrollments, type of college, impressions of what's the norm) is also 
> appreciated - like I said, it's just for an internal argument, so 
> I'll keep this pretty informal. (If any of you know about a study 
> done on this sort of thing, please pass along the reference.)
> 
> Thanks.
> 
> 
>          --> Mike O.
> -- 
> _______________________________________________
> 
>   Michael S. Ofsowitz
>    University of Maryland - European Division
>       http://faculty.ed.umuc.edu/~mofsowit
> _______________________________________________
> 

Annette Taylor, Ph. D.
Department of Psychology                E-mail:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
University of San Diego                 Voice:   (619) 260-4006
5998 Alcala Park
San Diego, CA  92110

                "Education is one of the few things a person
                 is willing to pay for and not get."
                                                -- W. L. Bryan


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