Introduction to American Indian Studies -- Web Based
History 102 / Amerind 102

University of Wisconsin--Whitewater
(Summer 2011)

This page was last updated: Monday, July 18, 2011 12:36 PM


Instructor Information Exams
Content Outline Participation
General Course Information Quizzes
Course Prerequisites Grading
Course Objectives Statement on Academic Integrity and Personal Responsibility
Required Readings Reading Schedule  

Evaluation

UW-Whitewater Policy Statement


Instructor Information: Anthony G. Gulig 
Office: White Hall 222
Office Hours: Via e-mail and by appointment 
E-Mail: guliga@uww.edu
Web Page: http://facstaff.uww.edu/guliga/
Office Phone: (262) 472-5148

Content Outline

As the course title states, Introduction to American Indian Studies is an interdisciplinary approach to the study of the many components that combine to create the contemporary American Indian experience in the United States.  A thematic approach will be applied to this study, and topics such as history, mythology, linguistics, music, theatre, literature, law, film and gender issues will be explored in some detail.  The limited time offered by the three week summer term, and the survey nature of the course, requires that topics will be examined in a survey, rather than exhaustive manner.  The various themes, readings and other content material combining to create this study will allow students to view the American Indian experience from a variety of perspectives.  

Course Information

Prerequisites:

None

Course Objectives

By the end of the course students will be able to: 

  • Identify important historic and contemporary themes relative to North America's Aboriginal people
  • Understand the divergent experience of Native peoples in the United States 
  • Understand the complex nature of the relationship among Native peoples, and with North American Governments 
  • Interpret present day events in relation to their historical antecedents 
  • Present their own scholarship concerning the development and meaning of the above-referenced themes
  • Think critically about the historic and contemporary American Indian experience   
  • Locate, evaluate, and draw meaning from secondary source scholarly material related to American Indian Studies
  • Locate, evaluate, and draw meaning from primary sources related to American Indian Studies

Web and E-Mail Proficiency:

This class is exclusively web-based.  Instruction in this course will take place via the World Wide Web page and accompanying Desire to Learn (D2L) course site dedicated to this course.  It is imperative that all students understand the course requirements from the beginning. You should note that the syllabus is full of helpful links--links to on-line material and course information and material is underlined and may appear differently on your browser.  Become familiar with the course web pages and requirements early and often.  

Students should be able to retrieve information via the World Wide Web.  Information regarding course assignments, study guides, assigned reading, and review material is made available via the WWW pages devoted to the course.  It is the student's responsibility to check the web pages devoted to this course often (at least daily) for important information.  

Required Reading:

Duane Champagne, ed. Contemporary Native American Cultural Issues (rental).

Charles Wilkinson, Blood Struggle: The Rise of Modern Indian Nations (rental).

Additional required readings, sound files, or other supplementary course information will be assigned and made available via UW-Whitewater's system of on-line content delivery Desire to Learn  (D2L) and on-line electronic journals.

Evaluation

    Exams*: There will be three exams in this course--two mid-terms and a final. Both will have the same format, that being the form of a take-home written essay to be submitted on or by the due date to the D2L dropbox provided for each exam.  Consult the tentative reading schedule for a listing of exam dates.

*Exams must be submitted to the D2L dropbox by or on the date specified.

    Participation: The ability to merely recite lectures or the prose in a history text is not education. Learning occurs best when ideas and interpretations are shared and discussed. Participation will occur in a number of ways in this course:

  • Students will read and participate critically and interactively 

  • Students will participate in the on-line components of the class and be prepared to discuss the assigned readings in the daily on-line forums

  • Students will complete course content surveys, quizzes and questionnaires in class from time to time throughout the term.

Quizzes There will be ten on-line quizzes.  The first quiz (scheduled for July 5th) will test your general understanding of the course requirements as outlined in the course syllabus.  The introductory reading for July 5th will also be covered by that quiz.  The remaining quizzes will be based on the reading and discussion assigned during the period covered since the previous quiz.  Each quiz will have twenty objective questions.  You will have thirty minutes to complete each quiz and the window for taking each quiz will be available for 24 hours--the day in which it is assigned.  Once you begin a quiz you must finish it within the thirty minutes allowed.  I will not reset incomplete quizzes without written documentation of a problem from the campus D2L center (D2L-support@uww.edu).  Should you have trouble completing a quiz it is your responsibility to obtain and provide me with the necessary documentation of the problem from the D2L Help Center.  

There will be a practice quiz available on D2L before the class begins.  The practice quiz will not affect your course grade.  the purpose of the practice quiz is t help you learn to navigate the D2L page, and the quiz page.  Unlike the graded quizzes, you may take the practice quiz as often as you would like.  The graded quizzes--beginning with "Quiz # 1" on July 5th and thereafter, may be taken only once.

    A note on class participation: You are expected to read and participate in this on-line class every day--often several times a day.  This usually means taking part in the daily discussion and responding to the posts of others in a thoughtful and meaningful way.  In fact, your discussion participation is a significant way in which I will evaluate your understanding of the course material and general progress in this course.  Participation is not accomplished by packing in volumes of "me too," or "what she said" at the end of the discussion period.  Participation is on-going, meaningful and a regular, daily expectation of this three-week course.

    Grading: The weight of assignments in the calculation of final grades is as follows:

1st Mid Term -- 20%

2nd Mid-Term Exam--20%
Final Exam--20%

Overall Quiz Average  --20%

Discussion and Participation --20%

Statement on Academic Integrity and Personal Responsibility

All students are expected to complete the required assignments, readings, and participate in the class discussion as prescribed in this syllabus.  It is further expected that work submitted for this class is the students’ own work created expressly for the assignments in this course.  All assignments are due on the due date. Exams must be delivered to the D2L dropbox on or before  the date specified. Late work will not be accepted.  

Important Note:  Plagiarism is a serious offense and all instances of it will be dealt with according to the  “Student Academic Disciplinary Procedures” [UWS Chapter 14] see below.   Students who submit plagiarized work, discussion submissions, or exam material, in whole or part, will receive a failing course grade in all instances    Plagiarism is generally defined as using the ideas of another as your own.  Plagiarism is not avoided by simply changing a few words or by paraphrasing the work of others. Click here for more information on how to avoid academic misconduct!


Tentative Class and Reading Schedule. (This reading/topic schedule is subject to change. Any changes will be announced via e-mail.)
Class Meeting: 

Topic

Reading and Other Assignments
Pre-Course Information D2L Practice and becoming familiar with the course requirements, goals and essential learning outcomes. The Course Syllabus

The Course D2L site.

Take the Practice Quiz--This will not affect your course grade.

 

Unit 1: What is Indian Studies, and Who are Indian People?

July 5th 

Course Introductions Course Introductions  

Be sure you've reviewed the course syllabus 

Participate in the introductory discussion board--see D2L.

Introduction to Contemporary Native American Cultural Issues, Champagne, p. 7-13.

What the Hell were They Thinking?

Complete Quiz 1, See D2L, based on the course syllabus and reading for July 5th.

July 6th

Origins, Traditional Mythology, and the Continued Search for Identity

List of Federally Recognized Tribes

Examples of Tribal Constitutions

Indian Tribes not Currently Recognized (this is a non-government site)

“American Indian Identities: Issues of Individual Choice,” p. 13-38 in Champagne

Hilary Weaver, "Indigenous Identity: What Is It and Who Really Has It?" American Indian Quarterly 25, no. 2 (Spring 2001): 240-255. (Available in full text from through Project Muse database via the Andersen Library's on-line journal holdings.)

Complete Quiz 2, See D2L, based on readings and discussion for July 6th

July 7th 

Culture Regions and the Historic Politics of Indian Country

“The Crucible of American Indian Identity: Native Tradition versus Colonial Imposition in Postconquest North America,” p. 39-68 in Champagne

Wilkinson, Bloodstruggle, Introduction and pp. 3-56.

July 8th

Termination and Native American Religion on the Ground.

Crawford, p. 16-39. (See content section of D2L)  

Wilkinson, Bloodstruggle, pp.57-88.

Complete Quiz 3, See D2L, based on readings and discussion for July 7th and 8th

July 11th

Written Exam # 1 Due by 10pm, July 11th in D2L Exam # 1 Dropbox (See D2L)  

Complete Quiz 4, See D2L, based on readings and discussion for the entire first week of the course. 

 

Unit 2: Indian People in Modern America

July 12th

Tribal Codes and Gender Issues  

Modern Tribal Leadership

“Tribal Codes and Gender Issues,” p. 103-126 in Champagne.

Jane Lawrence, "The Indian Health Service and the Sterilization of Native American Women," American Indian Quarterly  24, no. 3 (Summer 2000): 400-419. (Available in full text from through Project Muse database via the Andersen Library's on-line journal holdings)

Wilkinson, Bloodstruggle, pp. 89-128.

July 13th

The Contemporary Powwow  
“The Powwow as a Public Arena for Negotiating Unity and Diversity in American Life,” p. 129-144 in Champagne  

Wilkinson, Bloodstruggle, pp. 129-176.

Tina Kuckkahn, Celebrating the Indian Way of Life, American Indian Quarterly 29, nos. 3 and (Summer/Fall 2005): 505-509. (Available in full text from through Project Muse database via the Andersen Library's on-line journal holdings).

Complete Quiz 5, See D2L, based on readings and discussion for July 12th and 13th.

July 14th

Native American Religion and Assimilation Crawford, p. 62-83. (See content section of D2L)

Wilkinson, Bloodstruggle, pp. 177-240.

July 15th

Contemporary Native American Religion

Crawford, p. 84-104. (See content section of D2L)

Wilkinson, Bloodstruggle, pp. 241-270.

Complete Quiz 6, See D2L, based on readings and discussion for July 14th and 15th.

July 18th

Written Exam # 2 Due by 10pm, July 18th in D2L Exam # 2 Dropbox (See D2L)  

Complete Quiz 7, See D2L, based on readings and discussion for entire second week of the course. 

 

Unit 3: Contemporary Issues in Indian Country

July 19th 

The Legal Scene in Indian Country—Then and Now

Anthony Gulig and Sidney Harring, “An Indian Cannot Get a Morsel of Pork,” from the Tulsa Law Review, Fall 2002,  38, no. 1 (Fall 2002): 87-112. (Available in full text through Lexis-Nexis Academic database via the Andersen Library's on-line journal holdings.)

Wilkinson, Bloodstruggle, pp. 271-328.

Complete Quiz 8, See D2L, based on readings and discussion for July 19th.

July 20th 

American Indian Environments

“Friendly Fire: When Environmentalists Dehumanize American Indians,” p. 277-292 in Champagne

 “Uranium is in My Body,” p. 307-316 in Champagne 

Wilkinson, Bloodstruggle, p. 329-351.

Complete Quiz 9, See D2L, based on readings and discussion for July 20th.

July 21st

Sovereignty Ecology and Native Religious Freedom

Crawford, 105-126. (See content section of D2L)

Wilkinson, Bloodstruggle, p. 352-382.

July 22nd

Course Conclusions

Wilkinson, Bloodstruggle, p. 383.

Complete Quiz 10, See D2L, based on readings and discussion for the entire course.

Written Final Exam Due by 10:00p.m., 22 July 2011 in the D2L Final Exam Dropbox (See D2L)

The University of Wisconsin-Whitewater is dedicated to a safe, supportive and non-discriminatory learning  environment.  It is the responsibility of all undergraduate and graduate students to familiarize themselves with University policies regarding Special Accommodations, Misconduct, Religious Beliefs Accommodation, Discrimination and Absence for University Sponsored Events.  (For details please refer to the Undergraduate and Graduate Timetables; the “Rights and Responsibilities” section of the Undergraduate Bulletin; the Academic Requirements and Policies and the Facilities and Services sections of the Graduate Bulletin; and the “Student Academic Disciplinary Procedures” [UWS Chapter 14]; and the “Student Nonacademic Disciplinary Procedures” [UWS Chapter 17]).