sarah.wolf@brooklyn.cuny.edu
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All CUNY members have free access to The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and the Chronicle of Higher Education.
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3 hours, 3 credits
Course Pre-requisite(s): Health and Nutrition Sciences 1100
In this course students will:
By the end of this course students will be able to:
https://libguides.brooklyn.cuny.edu/hnsc2100/
ACADEMIC ARTICLES
For academic articles, students should read through each article, focusing on the conclusions and the evidence underlying the conclusions, but avoid getting bogged down in technical details.
WEB SITES/WEB PAGES:
For web pages/sites, students should browse the resources to be familiar with what is available, and explore how the information provided contrasts with other information we cover. Sites from governmental sources such as the CDC are designed to provide information on many topics at varying levels of detail. I don’t expect students to spend more than 5-15 minutes on each web resource page unless they are particularly curious.
VIDEOS:
For the most part, videos are brief (less than 15 minutes each). These videos complement other sources of information and should be viewed before the class meetings in order for students to understand the topic and contribute to discussions.
Attendance is required. I will be taking attendance. It is important to attend and take notes, or obtain notes from a student who attended if you miss class.
It is important to read the material for the week before the Tuesday class meeting begins so that you are prepared to actively participate in class. To encourage good note taking, you will be required to post images of your notes. This is also an opportunity to improve your note-taking skills by seeing how your classmates take notes.
Your final course grade will be comprised of the following components:
Extra Credit may be offered in this course.
Unless otherwise stated, a curve will not be used.
Late submission of assignments must be discussed in advance.
Student Learning Outcome:
Three to four short homework assignments throughout the semester from 2-3 points each.
Student Learning Outcomes:
Starting in week 4, we will begin classes with 1 student presenting on a public health topic of interest in the news (NYT, Guardian, Washington Post , or a scientific journal). Presentations will be up to 10 minutes long along with up to 5 minutes for discussion (up to 15 minutes total).
Due throughout the semester
Student Learning Outcomes:
FYI: All CUNY members have free access to The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and the Chronicle of Higher Education.
NY Times: Anyone who initiates an account will have an active subscription for one year from the date she/he creates the account. If you already have an annual subscription to the NYTimes, you can cancel it and will receive a refund. However, if you only have a monthly subscription, the New York Times will not issue a refund for that month.
There will be two short surveys, an assignment to create an exam question for both the midterm and the final exams, and a TBD non-evaluative assignment. Each of these will receive a participation grade of 1, meaning you will receive full credit for completing the assignment
Assignment | Point Value | Date Due |
---|---|---|
Student created question for Midterm Exam | 1 point | Due Fri, Mar 10, 10PM |
Midcourse evaluation survey | 1 point | Due Mon, Mar 20, 10PM |
Student created question for Final Exam | 1 point | Due Mon, May 16, 10PM |
Post course evaluation survey | 1 point | Due Wed, May 24, 10PM |
TBD | 1 point | TBD |
To encourage and support reading the material AND note taking, submitting reading and lecture notes to an online shared folder will be required. Starting in week 2, submit lecture notes from the previous week and reading notes for the coming week by 10PM Monday. What counts as notes? Written notes, screenshots of annotated text, typed notes, even oral notes if that’s what helps you learn, may be submitted.
Each lecture note submitted is 1 point and each reading note submitted is 1 point. You are required to make 5 submissions of reading notes and 5 submissions of lecture notes.
Student Learning Outcomes:
There will be 4 announced quizzes throughout the semester, each worth 2.5 points. Quizzes will cover the assigned readings/viewings for the week.
The Semester Assignment will address a public health topic of relevance to you and your community or a community of interest to you in NYC. You will focus on a public health issue and its determinants, from a socio-ecological perspective.
Topics will be timely. Ideas for topics may include gun violence, maternal and infant health outcomes, climate change and heat injuries, green space and mental health, Monkeypox, COVID-19, asthma, chronic diseases (e.g., cardiovascular, diabetes), pedestrian and bicyclist injury and death. You will formulate a research question which you would like to answer and will undertake over three assignments to help answer that question. See general information below; more details to come.
Semester Project Part 1: Population, topic and research question (10%) Due Monday, 3/27 10PM
You will identify and describe a relevant population or community, will describe basic health and demographic indicators, identify a particular health outcome of interest/relevance, and present a hypothesis, or research question, as to the causes of that health outcome, using a socioeconomic determinants perspective.
Semester Project Part 2: Class presentation (10%) Starting week of 4/18
You will present for 3-5 minutes to your peers on the health issue you selected, the research you have conducted, and the intervention you are proposing..
Semester Project Part 3: Final paper (10%) Due Monday, 5/15, 10PM
The final paper will synthesize the work done to date on your project, creating a cohesive paper, incorporating feedback received for previous assignments and fleshing out your proposed intervention. Further, you will present a proposal for improving the health issue addressed. Length: 4-6 pages.
Student Learning Outcomes 1,2,3,4
The Midterm Exam will be based on assigned readings, lectures, and class activities from the first half of the semester and may consist of short-essay and multiple-choice questions.
Exam Date:
Student Learning Outcomes:
The Final Exam will be based on assigned readings, lectures, and class activities from the second half of the semester and may consist of short-essay and multiple-choice questions.
Exam Date: Tuesday, 5/23, 10:30AM-12:30PM
Student Learning Outcomes:
Numeric Score | Letter Grade |
---|---|
97-100 | A+ |
92 - 96 | A |
90 - 91 | A- |
87 - 89 | B+ |
82 - 86 | B |
80 - 81 | B- |
77 - 79 | C+ |
72 - 76 | C |
70 - 71 | C- |
67 - 70 | D+ |
61 - 66 | D |
60 - 61 | D- |
≤59 | F |
Together we will create a collegial atmosphere of mutual respect as we learn together. All have something to contribute. The class is a laptop/tablet/phone free zone, unless otherwise instructed for in-class online activities.
If you are expecting an emergency or important call and must have your phone out, please let me know.
We build knowledge collectively and everyone has something to contribute. Most of class-time will be composed of discussions and in-class individual and group activities. All are expected to attend and be on time to all classes. Please notify me in advance if you will be late, absent, or need to leave class early.
https://apastyle.apa.org/style-grammar-guidelines
https://extras.apa.org/apastyle/basics-7e/
All assignments should be submitted via Blackboard. Complete assignments on time. Due dates are noted in the syllabus and on Blackboard.
Email is a professional means of communication in the context of school or work, and this is a good time to practice. In preparation for entry into, or continuation in, the professional world, please practice making emails polite, clear, and concise. This includes using greetings, and salutations, polite language, proper grammar, and punctuation, and signing messages by name.
I will do my best to answer all emails within 48 hours of receipt, if not sooner. To help me answer your emails promptly, please avoid abbreviations and text-messaging shorthand and use the following subject line format:
The Brooklyn College Center for Student Disability Services is back to working in-person on campus, though you can still reach out via email and phone. Please email them at testingcsds@brooklyn.cuny.edu for assistance.
Location: 138 Roosevelt Hall
Phone: 718.951.5538
FAX: 718.951.4442
Department Office Hours:
Note: Office hours during summer and winter intersession breaks varies.
Students should inform the professor if they have a disability or any other situation that may require Section 504/ADA accommodations. The faculty and staff will attempt to work out whatever arrangements are necessary.
Please provide your professor with your course accommodation form and discuss your specific accommodation with your professor as soon as possible to ensure accommodations are met in a timely fashion.
In order to receive academic accommodations students must first be registered with the Center for Student Disability Services. Students who have a documented disability or who suspect that they might have a disability are invited to set up an appointment with the Director of the Center for Student Disability Services, Ms. Valerie Stewart-Lovell or the Assistant Director, Josephine Patterson or their general email testingcsds@brooklyn.cuny.edu
Center for Student Disability Services (CSDS) Mission:
It is the mission of the Center for Student Disability Services (CSDS) to ensure that students with disabilities have equal access to all campus facilities, curricula, and activities. The program’s objective focuses on providing students with reasonable disability-related accommodations and the opportunity to maximize their academic success at Brooklyn College. The goal is to ensure an inclusive environment while maintaining and enhancing the college’s academic excellence by providing students with disabilities the opportunity to achieve their highest possible academic potential.
Academic dishonesty of any type, including cheating and plagiarism, is unacceptable at Brooklyn College. Cheating is any misrepresentation in academic work. Plagiarism is the representation of another person’s work, words, or ideas as your own. Students should consult the Brooklyn College Student Handbook for a fuller, more specific discussion of related academic integrity standards.
Academic dishonesty is punishable by failure of the “…test, examination, term paper or other assignment on which cheating occurred” (Faculty Council, May 18, 1954).
In addition, disciplinary proceedings in cases of academic dishonesty may result in penalties of admonition, warning, censure, disciplinary probation, restitution, suspension, expulsion, complaint to civil authorities, or ejection (Adopted by Policy Council, May 8, 1991).
NOTE: If you have a question about how to cite correctly ask your teacher BEFORE submitting your work.