Office hours vary based on the needs of students and the community. Please e-mail rsbeckett@actx.edu to schedule and appointment.
Any student who, because of a disabling condition, may require some special arrangements in order to meet course requirements should contact disAbility Services (Student Service Center room 119, phone 371-5436) as soon as possible.
As a student you may experience a range of issues that can cause barriers to learning, such as strained relationships, increased anxiety, alcohol/drug problems, feeling down, difficulty concentrating and/or lack of motivation. These mental health concerns or stressful events may lead to diminished academic performance or reduce a student's ability to participate in daily activities. Amarillo College offers services to assist you with addressing these and other concerns you may be experiencing. If you or someone you know are suffering from any of the aforementioned conditions, you can learn more about the broad range of confidential mental health services available on campus by calling the AC Counseling Center at 806-371-5900. The AC Counseling Center website is https://www.actx.edu/counseling/ . Also, if you are in need of social services (affordable housing, utilities, transportation, food, clothing, childcare, medical/dental/vision, legal), please call the AC Advocacy & Resource Center at 806-371-5439. The AC Advocacy & Resource Center website is https://www.actx.edu/arc
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The Amarillo College Privacy Policy is found at https://www.actx.edu/-amarillo-college-privacy-notice , and applies to all Amarillo College students. If you have questions about this privacy statement or you believe that your personal information has been released without your consent, send email to humanresources@actx.edu .
MUSI-1306-004 Music Appreciation
Designed for the non-music major to increase understanding and enjoyment of music as represented by prominent composers throughout the history of Western Civilization.
Student Resources Student Resources Website
The National Association of Schools of Music (NASM) and the Performing Arts Medicine Association (PAMA) have developed a comprehensive overview of neuromusculoskeletal, vocal and hearing health issues for postsecondary schools and departments of music. Information of a medical nature is provided by PAMA; information regarding contextual issues in music programs, by NASM. The following links address the risk of noise-induced hearing loss, neuromusculoskeletal and vocal injury—all of which are widespread and serious public health issues for musicians and others.
\(3 sem hrs; 3 lec)
Online Course
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MUSIC APPRECIATION- MUSI 1306 Online
PREREQUISITE: None
COURSE DESCRIPTION: Designed for the non-music major to increase understanding and enjoyment of music as represented by prominent composers throughout the history of Western Civilization. Background in music not required.
INSTRUCTOR NAME: Professor Beckett
OFFICE LOCATION: Music Building, Room 311
OFFICE HOURS: TBA, by appointment (Skype is available)
PHONE: (806) 371-5351 (if working, please do not leave a message, e-mail through your course Shell in AC Online!)
E-MAIL: rsbeckett@actx.edu (use course e-mail through AC Online within this course, use campus e-mail as a last resort). Please be polite and courteous when contacting a professor.
TEXTBOOK/MATERIALS:
Machlis, Joseph, and Forney, Kristine. The Enjoyment of Music, 11th Edition, Shorter Version, W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. ISBN: 978-0-393-93415-1
The Norton Recordings, 11th Edition, 4-CDor DVD version, Sony Music Special Products.
ISBN: 978-0-393-11837-7 (4-CD set) or ISBN: 978-0-393-11838-4 (DVD set)
Both are available in the AC Bookstore, and online in “E” version (substantial savings!) at:
eBook- http://books.wwnorton.com/books/detail.aspx?ID=22994
STUDENT PERFORMANCE/LEARNING OUTCOMES: At the completion of this course, the student should be able to:
· Identify and understand the basic building blocks of music
· Identify major social characteristics that have affected the history of music
· Identify historical musical periods
· Identify principal composers of each musical period
· Understand basic formal structures of music from these periods
· Pinpoint primary environmental influences on the lives of composers from each period
· Master a common vocabulary for discussion of music of all styles
· Develop skills of aesthetic judgment and critical thinking through music listening
· Integrate the role of music within historical, artistic, and cultural traditions
· Understand the roles that music plays in different cultures
· Grasp the influence of popular and world music on art music
· Build skills related to the appreciation of music and music listening
ATTENDANCE POLICY: Regular module completion is necessary for satisfactory achievement; therefore, it is the responsibility of the student to log on to this class regularly and work through the material. The instructor must approve excused absences at least 48 hours in advance of the period to be missed (Not Examinations unless it is a major emergency). You may contact me via e-mail through this course first, and next at the actx.edu account shown in my contact information. You will be responsible for the material that is covered in the period that you miss. Students are not allowed to miss examinations. Plan ahead and accordingly. “My computer crashed” is not an acceptable excuse. After six unexcused instances have occurred, the instructor reserves the right to fail the student. Emergencies can occur, and these will be dealt with on an individual basis, but please contact me without panicking, and know that I want you to succeed but will not allow slacking. Excused absences must be accompanied with an appropriate document of legal note (Physicians note, court order, death certificate, Police report, etc… ) “My Girlfriend’s goldfish died” is not an appropriate excuse, and yes, I heard that one in-class before!
Please regulate your time in this course. I want you to be successful, but one cannot be successful if one is not putting forth a proper effort and doing the required work.
DISABILITY STATEMENT: Any student who, because of a disabling condition, may require some special arrangements in order to meet course requirements should contact DisAbility Services (SSC 125, Phone 371-5436) as soon as possible.
GRADING CRITERIA/GRADE SCALE:
Exam 1- 20% (09/19/11)
Exam 2- 20% (10/12/11)
Exam 3- 20% (11/07/11)
Final Exam- 20% (AC assigned date) (12/05/11)
Participation, and Discussion- 20% (Yes, one must participate in the course discussions)
(Extra credit- READ CAREFULLY: Reviews of Professor-Approved Concert Events ONLY! See concert review section below. For each properly written concert review/concert attended, only after it is approved in ADVANCE (not the afternoon of the event), I will add 3 points to the student’s final grade.)
Individual Chapter quizzesare for your benefit. These do not calculate towards your final grade in this course. Use them to help you understand the material and gauge your learning within this course.
Final Gradeis based on the following scale (a 10-point scale):
A= 90-100
B= 80-89
C= 70-79
D= 60-69
F= Below 60%
Discussion Board/Student Posting:
There will be discussion questions posted by the Professor during each module. The students are required to read each discussion posting and post at least 10 total intelligent and insightful postings within each question (please, know the definition of intelligent and insightful!). Remember, intelligent and insightful, not coy, flipped, or comments of an inconsequential nature. Here are some examples that are NOT acceptable:
“I liked your post” – Really, what did you like and why did you like it?
“I agree with you”- OK. That’s nice, why do you agree, and on what grounds?
“That’s not right”- Why? Explain your argument and discuss!
“OK”- Seriously? Wow, we can type a two-letter word!
“You really made me think”- Think about what? What has changed in your opinion? Discuss!
If you must use a website as reference for your postings, please use a plausible source. Wikipedia is not a good source of information and is banned for reference within this course. It can put you on the correct track, but it is not source material. The Virginia Tech University music dictionary website is a plausible reference site, but not the only one.
Please be courteous and polite in our virtual classroom environment. Remember, if members of this class already knew all of the information contained within this course, then they probably would not be enrolled in this course. We all start from somewhere, and we all make mistakes, which is why we have erasers on pencils and a “backspace” key on our computer keyboards!
EXAMINATIONS:
There will be four graded examinations in this class (schedule listed below!), one S.A.C.S. Assessment examination (non-graded, this is forced on us by S.A.C.S.), and one syllabus examination (discussed below) (Six examinations total). The first three graded exams are listing on the course calendar and syllabus (available on the course homepage), and will cover the material from the finished module’s material. The Final Exam will be administered on AC’s assigned examination day only (Monday December 5th, 2011 from 10:30am-12:30pm (2 hours)). The Final Exam will be based on materials covered over the last 25% (Module 4) of the course and will not be comprehensive, but some material may overlap because of the time periods discussed.
Exams may consist of a variety of formats, but will be taken online through the course shell in AC Online. The examinations will be open for a 24-hour period only (Due to Angel LMS parameters, the time will be 00:00 hours CST to 23:55 hours CST) on exam days will be closed after that point. When the student logs into AC Online, the examination icon will appear in the course when it is opened and will not appear once it is closed. It is your responsibility to take the examinations in the time period given. Do not ask for special permission. Examinations will be timed, and the student is not allowed to use any reference material, notes, people, Internet, or textbook during the examinations for help in answering the examination questions. If family members are taking the course together, they may not help each other during the examinations. Also, I would suggest that you use different computers to take the examination so as not to be suspect of cheating. (This keeps us all honest!)
The examination questions will be administered one at a time. Once a question has been viewed during the examination, the student must submit an answer. One may not skip questions and expect to revisit the question later.
Also, one must take the Syllabus examination AND S.A.C.S. (Southern Association of Colleges and Schools) Assessment examination during the first week of classes. Simply read the syllabus and take the two examinations. These particular examinations will be open for the first workweek, and you may revisit questions on the syllabus examination only (unlike the actual graded examinations). The student should make a 100 on the syllabus examination, if not, retake until you receive a 100. The S.A.C.S. Assessment examination will be timed, and you need not worry about making a less-than-desirable grade on the examination, we will cover the material throughout the course (This is only used for assessment, so feel free to fail it!). I will not give you any grades in this course until these preliminary examinations are taken and a score of 100 is received on the syllabus examination.
CONCERT REVIEWS (Extra Credit only):
Since an important part of gaining an appreciation and understanding of music is based on listening to music, students are encouraged to write reviews of Professor-approved live concerts (Yes, you can find concerts that are free. Yes, I will help guide you, not find them for the student). Popular culture music reviews will not be accepted (if by any chance one does not understand what this means, contact the instructor for clarification). Reviews are due by Friday, December 2, 2011 23:59; 59 Central Standard Time, NO EXCEPTIONS! Reviews should be submitted electronically via our AC Online course e-mail as a MS Word file attachment, and titled using your full name and the number of the review submitted. (Example- John Doe Concert Review 1) One can actually increase one’s grade a lot, if completed. They are fun to attend, and the reviews are easy to write.
The format will be: Microsoft Word format (.doc or .docx files only!), 12-point Times New Roman font, 1 inch margins, double spaced, footnotes are at 1 inch, >500 words.
How do I write a concert review? One can Google search the term “concert review” and instantly have access to thousands of reviews to look at and understand how to critique concerts. Also, the Amarillo Globe News frequently has concert reviews within its contents that one can use for reference. Use the terms and ideas that you develop through this course to help describe the events. Make sure to include who performed, what group, where, what was performed, whether or not you enjoyed the performance and why you did or did not enjoy the performance. Be precise and in-depth.
QUESTIONS:
This syllabus is only an outline of the course of study. If you should have any questions regarding any of the topics of the course, I will be happy to discuss them with you. No question is unimportant, and I look forward to having you in this course. Be sure to read the syllabus before asking questions. Answers that are covered within the pages of the course syllabus may go unanswered.
Disclaimer: The instructor reserves the right to alter the syllabus and/or other course content based on the instructor's continuing evaluation of the course. Students will be alerted to changes made.
Students in this class will not be “given” a grade. It is the student’s responsibility to “earn” their respective grade for this course. So, please pay attention to the timeline for this class and all of the due dates for course materials.
Also, you must have a copy of Microsoft Office on the computer you use for this course, in order to fully utilize the potential of the materials for this course (This is available on any computer at Amarillo College for free to use by the student).
Plagiarismon any level will not be tolerated, and it is the students’ responsibility to understand the forms of plagiarism including blatant and collusionary. Cheating is really dumb. It degrades the cheater and the academic environment. Just don’t do it! Also, textbooks cannot be used for examinations. Please use academic honesty and integrity when taking examinations and writing within this course. Any counts of plagiarism give the Instructor of this course the right to fail the student without question. Please, just do not cheat, you are better than cheating.
The Professor receives around 1000 student e-mail messages per semester. Please give at least 48 hours after you send an e-mail to the Professor, to get a response. Also, I might be traveling during the semester. Please be patient, you will get a response if one is requested and/or needed.
Music Appreciation Fall 2011 Online Course Outline
Module 1: August 22-September 18, 2011; Preludes 1 and 2, Chapters 1-15
September 19, 2011- Examination 1
Module 2: September 21-October 11, 2011; Preludes 3 and 4, Chapters 16-26
October 12, 2011- Examination 2
Module 3: October 13-November 6, 2011; Preludes 5 and 6, Chapters 27-39
November 7, 2011- Examination 3
Module 4: November 8-December 4, 2011; Preludes 7 and 8, Chapters 40-47
December 5, 2011- (Final Exam, during AC assigned time, Monday 10:30am-12:30pm)
In order to receive your AC Connect Email, you must log in through AC Connect at https://acconnect.actx.edu .
If you are an active staff or faculty member according to Human Resources, use "Exchange". All other students, use "AC Connect (Google) Email".
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