Philosophy 425 (Fall 2024)
Collaborative Project in Ethics and
Society
Professor
Patrick Frierson (call me “Patrick”)
My
email: frierspr@whitman.edu
Class
Meets in Olin 186, Fridays from 1-4pm
I’m in my office
(Olin East 193) and happy to meet with students on Monday and Wednesdays from 9-10:30am. We can talk about questions related to class,
but you don’t need a specific reason to come.
If you can’t make these times, send me an email and we can make an
appointment for another time. I’m also
happy to meet with students over zoom who prefer to meet in that format. I will also keep available a timeslot for
zoom office hours Monday evenings from 9-10 PM at https://whitman.zoom.us/j/92189368747.
If you want to zoom with me at that time, shoot me an email before
dropping in (ideally at least a few hours before dropping in).
The Ethics and Society major requires that students in their senior year complete a collaborative project that culminates in a public presentation or display. The purpose of this course is to provide a context within which you can complete that project. In addition, the Ethics and Society major has several specific learning goals. Students who complete the major should be able to:
Along with the other
courses you’ve taken in the major, this course will help you achieve those
learning goals.
You (or most of you)
are seniors, ready to graduate from College soon. This course assumes that you are ready to
take ownership of your own learning process.
The seminar provides a context for you to develop, complete, and
present a collaborative project. You are
in charge of the class. Use it to get
your work done.
I am here to support
you. I will seek out guest educators who
can help you brainstorm ideas for your projects and more generally can help you
accomplish the learning goals for the major.
In many cases, these guests will also help you think about how to
translate what you have been learning into an ethical and meaningful life of
purpose after Whitman.
I also here to nudge
you along, to scaffold the process of developing, completing, and presenting
your project. Thus there are various
benchmarks and short assignments throughout the semester designed to get you to
successful completion of that project.
The final project is due by the end of the semester, and successful
completion of it will be the primary basis for your grade in this course. In addition, however, because this seminar is
a collaborative space, your grade will also be based on your contributions to
the life of our little scholarly community.
This is the first year
of this senior seminar, so one of the things that you and I will do together is
to figure out what we need and want from this course. If there is something you need or want from
your capstone senior seminar in your Ethics and Society major, tell me! I can’t promise to be able to pack everything
into our little course, but I’ll do my best.
This year (2024-25)
will be the first year that Ethics and Society will have graduating
seniors. Congratulations! You are the trailblazers for this new
major!!!
That means that you
get to help design and define what the major will look like for successive
generations. You are the template, the
paradigm, the model that others will look to as they try to interpret what the
senior requirements require.
You are required to
do a project that is…
1. Collaborative. That means that the project
must be completed in a team of at least two people. You can’t just do something amazing by
yourself. You need to work with at least
one other person, and you might choose to do something that would involve
everyone in this year’s graduating class.
How big the collaborative groups are, and what precisely collaboration
looks like, will be something you will define over the course of the semester.
2. A Project.
You should do something interesting, something that matters, something
that shows how philosophy is relevant to ethical and social issues today.
3. Public.
Technically, you need only a “public presentation or display,” but I
hope you’ll take the “public” part of this project to mean more than that. Try to find a project that has public
relevance, that gets beyond the ivory tower and out to a broader public. Note here that “public” does not have to mean
“open to the general public.” If you do
a project for a local business or non-profit and present your work to their
board of directors, that’s public. If
you pitch a proposal to a state legislator, that’s public. If you develop materials for use in the local
middle schools, that's public. If you
write an amazing 150-page thesis and give it to me, that’s not public.
4. Presentation or display. The final result of your work will not
be a paper. You might write a
paper. You might have lots of other
written material. But ultimately, you
will need to present your work.
(You get to define what precisely that means.)
This is an intensely
collaborative course, which means that accommodations also need to take into
account the needs of your classmates and the public you’ll be engaging with
through your project. That said, you all
have several years under your belt of dealing well with peers who need
accommodations, so I expect you to be mature and respectful in accommodating
your classmates’ needs.
If you are a student with a disability who will need accommodations in this course, please view next steps on the Disability Support Services (DSS) websiteLinks to an external site.. For specific questions about accommodations and/or disabilities please email dss@whitman.edu. To complete an online accommodation request click hereLinks to an external site). All information about disabilities is considered private. If I receive notification from DSS that you are eligible to receive an accommodation due to a verified disability, I will work to provide it in accordance with the college’s standards. Note that accommodations are not retroactive; you need to fulfill all course requirements until or unless you receive specific accommodations allowing you to meet course goals in a different way.
Likewise, in accordance with the College’s Religious
Accommodations Policy, I will provide reasonable accommodations for students
who have conflicts with scheduled exams, assignments, or required attendance in
class because of religious observances. Please review the course schedule at
the beginning of the semester to determine any such potential conflicts and
give me written notice (email is acceptable) by the end of the second week of
class about your need for religious accommodations. If you believe that I
have failed to abide by these policies, you may talk to your academic advisor
or contact my Division Chair Lydia McDermott at mcdermlm@whitman.edu or file a grievance
in accordance with Whitman’s Grievance
Policy.
This course is a
work in progress. We will build it
together. That said, here is a tentative
timeline that gives some ideas for how to develop your project as we go along.
|
Readings to Complete Before Class |
Work to Complete Before Class |
What to Expect in Class |
Sept. 6 |
|
|
1. Discussion of course
and goals. 2. Getting to know each
other. 3. Exploring
different routes towards finding a project you can get excited about this
semester. 4. Meeting some
campus and community partners who might help you think about your projects. |
Sept. 13 |
1. I’d like each
person to share a philosophical reading for the rest of us to read. You should read these. 2. You should also engage with (read, view, listen to) the public presentation or display shared by your classmates |
1. Give the rest of
the class a short reading. 2. Find a “public
presentation or display” of something that uses ethical reasoning to address
social issues. Share that with the
class before class. |
We’ll discuss what
makes an excellent public-facing project, and you will get started with your
teams in deciding what you want to do. |
Sept. 20 |
TBD |
Submit a “project
proposal” of at least 500 words, with an annotated bibliography of at least 6
texts. This should lay out in some
detail a possible project for this semester.
You do not need to be committed to this project. |
At this point, I’m
planning to set aside this time (or, really, any time this week) for individual
meetings with project groups to talk about your projects. Among other things,
be ready for me to ask specific questions about how you are using what you’ve
learned in philosophy as you develop your project. |
Sept 27 |
TBD |
TBD |
TBD |
Oct. 4 |
TBD |
Submit a new
project proposal. This can be an
update of the earlier one, or something completely different. Again, 500 words, at least 6 texts in bibliography. In addition, this
proposal should make clear what the form of your public presentation or
display will be, who the intended audience is, and how you plan to reach that
audience. |
TBD (Maybe individual meetings again?) |
Oct. 11 |
Mid-semester break |
|
|
Oct. 18 |
TBD |
Submit
a clear plan laying out who will be responsible for various components of your
project and when each component will be finished. |
TBD |
Oct. 25 |
TBD |
TBD |
TBD |
Nov 1 |
TBD |
TBD |
TBD |
Nov. 8 |
TBD |
TBD |
TBD |
Nov. 15 |
TBD |
Submit a clear outline
of your entire project. This should
come as close as possible to a “rough draft,” though what that will look like
will depend upon your particular project. |
TBD (Maybe individual meetings again?) |
Nov. 22 |
|
Submit specific
plans for how you will finish your project before the end of the semester. You should give me a document that says
what you have already done, what you have left to do, who will do what is
left, and specifically when those remaining components will be done. If necessary, book rooms
or space for your public presentation and/or display. |
|
Thanksgiving Break |
|
|
|
Dec. 6 |
|
During this week,
you should give/present your public presentation or display. |
|
Dec. 13 |
|
Submit a brief final
report reflecting on your project. |
|