Supplement for
Conflict
Studies
Majors or Minors
in Professor Thomas Hall's classes
DePauw University
Fall 2006
Professor Thomas Hall
Office: 420 Anderson E, x4519, email: thall
OFFICE HOURS: Tu&Th 1:15-2:30; W 1:30 - 5, & by appt
Last Updated 8-26-06
For further information on
Conlflict Studies Program see DePauw catalog, its web page, myself [prof. hall],
or Conflict Studies Coordinator, Professor Rebecca Upton
[Rupton@depauw.edu, 221 Asbury Hall;
Office Hours: T 11:30-1 pm and W 1:30-5 pm and by appt].
Conflict studies requires
students to take courses in different disciplines that focus on conflict.
Virtually all my courses do in one way or another. In our continuing
efforts to make the Conflict Studies Program better each instructor has
Conflict Studies students either do something extra, or more typically,
something different
from the rest of the class.
For my courses -- Soc 237 Race & Ethnic Relations, Soc 249 Native Nations of the U.S., Soc 323 Social Change -- I will ask conflict studies students to emphasize conflict issues in their written assignments. I also encourage Conflict Studies students to bring out conflict issues in discussions. This is valuable for each of you, but also for the class as a whole.
Issues include at least the following:
What is Conflict?
Is it individual?
Small group?
Large group?
Institutional?
etc?
all of the above?
What factors contribute to:
likelihood of conflict?
to changes in intensity of conflict?
to length of conflict?
Also think about is conflict always bad?
Can it sometimes be good?
other issues?
Do your answers to any of the above, reinforce, amend, contradict, complement, or supplement answers to similar questions in other Conflict Studies courses you have taken? [Note: not all CFT students will answer any of these questions the same way. That is fine. The important thing is to think about them!]
I will also from time to time ask Conflict Studies students to focus discussion on conflict.
I do NOT require, but STRONGLY URGE, all conflict studies students to make efforts in classroom discussions and in written work, to tie the material in my courses to materials in their other Conflict Studies courses. This can be noting how new topics are covered, or how familiar topics are seen from a different angle, or it reconfirms other courses, or how it contradicts other courses. You should also think in terms of how the materials in my course[s] help you understand conflict better OR make it more confusing.
My point is NOT what position you take, but that you actively work at integrating your course work. This is vital to your fulfilling the major. And, because Conflict Studies students take different courses, this cannot be done by any instructor, but must be done by you, the student. I will help you with it if you ask me. This, however, is a continuing process, NOT an assignment that you do once then file away.
Doing this in my course[s] [and indeed, in all your courses] will make your senior seminar MUCH EASIER, and much more fun.
Send comments or questions to thall@depauw.edu