Department of Human Development and Family Studies,
College of Human Sciences, Texas Tech University
HDFS 3318 (Section 001) – Development in Young Adulthood –
Fall 2010
MWF 12:00-12:50 PM, HS 273
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Instructor |
Teaching Assistant |
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Alan Reifman,
Ph. D. |
Eveliz Tomety (Undergrad TA) |
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COURSE-RELATED NEWS & UPDATES |
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Text
(should be brought to class each day)
Arnett, J.J. (2004). Emerging adulthood: The winding road from the late teens through the twenties. New York: Oxford University Press.
Expected Learning Outcomes
Throughout the university, renewed emphasis is being placed on documenting what, specifically, students are expected to learn in classes, and what they actually are learning. Beyond grades and test scores, assessment of students' mastery of specific topics is desired. Expected learning outcomes for HDFS 3318 and how they will be assessed are listed below.
| Upon successful completion of the course, students will... |
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| Achievement of these expected learning outcomes will be assessed by one or more of the following methods... |
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Requirements
Grades will be based on two mid-term exams (each 25% of the total
grade), the final
exam (35%), and a project involving the keeping of a journal
(15%).
The final exam will contain items mostly from the latter part of the class, but will contain a small number of items from earlier weeks; in this sense, the final will be cumulative. Exams will be multiple-choice. Grades will generally follow a pattern of 90% = A, 80% = B, 70% = C, etc., but I reserve the right to modify the scale in a way that is generous to students. For example, if the highest anybody got were in the 80s, I would still give the highest person(s) an A. Or, if someone got below 70% but attended regularly and completed all the required work on time, that person could still receive a grade in the C range. Pluses and minuses (e.g., A-, B+) will be used, so if you fall just below a cut-off you will only be slightly below the next highest grade, as opposed to being a full level below (e.g., A vs. B). The University will show plus and minus grades on your transcript, but does not factor them into your GPA (e.g., B+, B, and B- are all counted as 3.0). It could still be useful for some purposes to have a plus or minus there, however (especially a plus). Attendance will not be taken, but poor attendance will probably lead to poor exam and assignment scores, thus contributing to grades indirectly.
The journal assignment will work as follows. You will have to conduct interviews with friends and family members, and write up a two-page paper for each, which you will e-mail to Dr. Reifman via attachment. To get the full credit, your write-up of a given interview should bring in concepts, theories, or research studies from class and discuss how the interviewee's experience does or does not fit with the course material. The specific topics and due dates are shown below, with each installment counting 3% toward your course grade (15% in total):
A college-aged person (18-22) who has made one or more major traditional adult transitions early (e.g., married while an undergrad) -- DUE Sept 20
Someone in his/her mid-20s who has not yet made the major adult transitions (e.g., marriage, full-time job/career) -- DUE Oct 13
Somebody 45 or older, who thus went through the transition to adulthood in an earlier era -- DUE Nov 1
A media depiction of the transition to adulthood (no interview necessary) -- DUE Nov 15. You can use any media depiction (movie, TV show, book; fiction or non-fiction) to trace the character development of someone in the transition to adulthood. MTV's "The Real World" is one option, but you can use something else, if you want.
A concluding essay integrating what you feel you've learned about development in young adulthood, from anything we've covered in class. You can focus on your own development or young-adult development in general -- DUE Nov 29.
Administrative Matters
· Missed Exams/Assignments. Missed tests and late assignments must be made up, or course passage will be jeopardized. If you have a compelling reason (e.g., medical emergency), documented by a note, for missing a test or not turning in an assignment on time, you can take a make-up test or get an extension on an assignment without penalty. The instructor reserves the right to contact the writer of the note for verification purposes. If you do not have a documented excuse, the work must still be made up, but will be penalized with point deductions (2 points off per working day for an exam; 1 point off per working day for a paper). If you should fall behind on more than one thing (e.g., a missed exam and a paper not turned in), especially as it starts getting late in the semester, you run the risk of receiving an F for the course and you might want to drop the class at that point (see below for drop deadlines).
· Incompletes. A grade of “I” will be awarded only by permission of the instructor prior to the end of the semester and only when a small amount of work remains to be completed for the course. A grade of “I” is awarded only in case of emergency (see above procedures on notes and verification) and when class performance at the time of the request is satisfactory. Poor planning or excessive absences are not valid reasons for requesting a grade of incomplete.
· Withdrawals. If illness or other problems keep you from attending class and/or lead to the missing of assignments and tests, then you should plan to drop the class by one of the deadline dates (September 13 and November 1), as shown on the university calendar of major deadlines on the web. Do not simply stop coming to classes as this may jeopardize your grade point average. Do not plan on an “I” under these circumstances; it will not happen, nor will there be special assignments or extra credit for these circumstances.
· Disability Needs.
Any student who, because of a disability, may require
special arrangements in order to meet the course requirements should contact the
instructor as soon as possible to make any necessary arrangements. Students
should present appropriate verification from Student Disability Services during
the instructor’s office hours (or before or after class). Please note
instructors are not allowed to provide classroom accommodations to a student
until appropriate verification from Student Disability Services has been
provided. For additional information, you may contact the Student Disability
Services office in 335 West Hall or 806-742-2405.
· Academic Integrity. Students are expected to abide by all of the rules for academic integrity at TTU, as specified in the Undergraduate Catalog or in the web-based guidelines for academic integrity. Any violations of these rules will be reported to the proper authorities for disciplinary review. As stated concisely by the Center for Academic Integrity (originally from the University of Central Florida), "Plagiarism and cheating - presenting another's ideas, arguments, words or images as your own, using unauthorized material, or giving or accepting unauthorized help on assignments or tests - contradict the educational value of these exercises."
Fall 2010 Schedule of Topics, Readings, Tests, and Assignment Due Dates
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Dates |
Topic |
Readings |
| Aug. 27 | Intro to course | Arnett, Chapter 1 |
| Aug. 30, Sept.1, 3 |
Life span stages; media depictions of the transition to adulthood; today vs. previous generations | Arnett, Chapter 2 |
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Sept.
6 (Labor
Day holiday) Sept. 8, 10 |
Concept of Emerging Adulthood; measurement thereof |
Reifman, A., Arnett,
J.J., & Colwell, M.J. (2007). Emerging adulthood:
Theory, assessment, and application. Journal of Youth
Development, 2(1).*
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| Sept. 13, 15, 17 |
Gender, ethnicity; international comparisons |
Arnett, pp. 53-56; also, skim "Race and Gender" article in the links below |
| Sept. 20, 22, 24 |
Identity during young adulthood; relations with parents; brain develop-ment, decision-making, risk-taking |
Arnett, Ch. 3 (except pp. 53-56); brain-development article in links below |
| Sept. 27, 29, Oct. 1 |
Education, career development |
Arnett, Ch. 6-7 |
| Oct. 4, 6, 8 |
Choosing where to
live |
Richard Florida, Who’s Your City? (Chapter 13, Young and Restless)* |
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Oct.
11 (Fall Break) Oct. 13, 15 |
Marriage, relationships, dating, ... |
Arnett, Ch. 4 & 5 |
| Oct. 18, 20, 22 |
Becoming a parent |
Arnett, pp. 214-216 |
| Oct. 25, 27, 29 | Mental health | |
| Nov. 1, 3, 5 |
Substance use |
Excerpt from Bachman et al., "Marriage, Divorce, and Parenthood.. Impacts on Drug Use and Abuse" (pp 253-263, 271-272)* |
| Nov. 8, 10, 12 |
Nov.
8: Review for exam Nov. 10: Exam II Nov. 12 Political involvement |
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| Nov. 15, 17, 19 |
Religion, Volunteerism |
Arnett, Ch. 8 |
| Nov. 22 (rest of week off for Thanksgiving) |
Economics and finances (guests from Red to Black Center) |
NCFR Report, "Financial Behaviors... Young Adults in Transition" * |
| Nov. 29, Dec. 1, 3 |
Military Public policy |
Arnett, Ch. 9 |
| Dec. 6, 8 (last day of class) |
Dec. 6: Young-Adult Panel Dec. 8: Review for final |
Arnett, Ch. 10 (except pp. 214-216) |
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Saturday, December 11,
(Overall finals schedule) |
FINAL EXAM 10:30 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. |
*Reading will be provided by Dr. Reifman.
Introduction to Course/Emerging Adulthood
Sociological/Group Perspectives
(Race-Ethnicity, Gender, Social Class, International)
Identity
and Relations with Parents
Decision-Making/Risk Taking/Brain Development
Higher Education
Jobs and Careers
(plus Cities and Relocation)
Marriage,
Relationships, Dating...
Becoming a
Parent
Mental Health
and Substance Use/Abuse
Political Involvement
Religious Views
Volunteerism and
Civic Engagement
Economics and Finances
Military Service
Public Policies to Facilitate Transition to Adulthood