Instructor: Cathlena Martin
Email: cmartin@english.ufl.edu
Section: 1794
Office: Turlington 4409
Office Hours: Tuesday 11-3 in the Image Lab on the 4th Floor of Rolfs
Hall
Mailbox: 4301 Turlington
Class Times: MWF per 7 (1:55-2:45) / R per E1-E3 (7:20-10:10)
Class Room: CBD 310
Class Listserve: spring-1794-l@lists.ufl.edu
Class Wiki: http://uffilmanalysis.pbwiki.com/ (password: film)
Class Website: http://www.clas.ufl.edu/users/cmartin
Course Overview:
This class is an introductory class devoted to an overview of film techniques,
film vocabulary, and film history. As an introduction to film analysis,
this class provides students a working knowledge of film vocabulary
and develops analytical tools in the context of film history and film
theory. Having completed this course, a student should have a sense
of both film historys general outline and film theorys most
important issues.
While this is NOT a film appreciation course, you will hopefully gain
a deeper appreciation of film as you study and analyze it. This IS a
6,000-word Gordon Rule class (per the Gordon Rule established by the
Florida Legislature), you must meet the writing volume minimums in order
to pass the course.
Composition (C)
Writing is one of the most important skills students need to communicate
effectively during their professional careers and lives. Composition
courses focus on methods of writing, conventions of standard written
English, reading and comprehension skills, and techniques in production
of effective texts for readers in varied situations. "C" designated
courses are writing-intensive, require multiple drafts submitted to
the instructor for feedback prior to final submission, and fulfill 6,000
of the university's 24,000-word writing requirement.
Humanities (H)
The humanities requirement enables students to think critically about
what artists and thinkers (past and present) have to teach us about
the nonmaterial qualities of human beings and human values. In courses
in the humanities, students become acquainted with the enduring products
-- in words, sounds, paint, stone, metal, and many other media -- in
which thoughtful and gifted human beings have attempted to meet our
individual and collective needs for emotional, spiritual, or intellectual
fulfillment. Humanities courses address major intellectual, cultural,
and aesthetic achievements. Students consider questions of ultimate
meaning and study human activities, artifacts, and values in the context
of the ages in which they were produced.
Course Objectives:
1. To gain a general introduction to film and film analysis.
2. To learn and practice applying theoretical and analytical strategies
for viewing and writing about film.
3. To learn techniques and vocabulary for reviewing and analyzing film.
4. To involve films within the context of film history and film theory.
5. To learn techniques for improving stylistic clarity, concision, cohesion,
and coherence.
6. To share ideas, philosophies, and writing strategies related to film
and writing and develop individual and collaborative writing processes.
7. To critique and revise your own documents and peer’s writings
to insure that they fulfill their audience and purpose.
8. To gain a greater appreciation for the medium of film and its meaning.
Texts (available at OBT):
Pramaggiore, Maria and Tom Wallis. Film: A Critical Introduction. New
York: Pearson, 2006.
We will be reading articles from Braudy, Leo and Marshall Cohen. Eds.
Film Theory and Criticism 6th Edition. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1974,
2004, but I will post them on the wiki. You do not have to purchase
this book, unless you want it as a resource.
Recommended Materials:
Style Guide - MLA Handbook or Pocket Style Guide
Pen light
Notebook/Journal
Online Helps:
Yale Film Analysis
Internet Movie Database
Media Resource Library
Class Policies and Requirements
Writing Help: You are expected to be familiar and fluent
with the conventions of standard written English. Those needing extra
help with such conventions should also purchase a writing handbook and
be prepared to visit the Writing Center, as well as sign up for writing
conferences with me.
Attendance: This class is developed around discussion
and student participation through filmic examples. Absences not only
affect you, but they affect your classmates and eventually your group
members. Therefore, to learn professionalism and team work, and because
class attendance is critical to your understanding of class material,
you are allowed four absences over the course of the semester. After
four absences, your final grade average will be dropped half a letter
grade for every day missed. The first four absences will alter your
Professionalism, Participation, and Attendance grade.
According to the Student Catalog: "Students are responsible for
satisfying all academic objectives as defined by the instructor. Absences
count from the first class meeting. The university recognizes the right
of the individual professor to make attendance mandatory. After due
warning, professors can prohibit further attendance and subsequently
assign a failing grade for excessive absences." If you have excessive
absences, whether excused or unexcused, you will fail the class.
This class has four class sessions per week. The screening period on
Thursday nights does count as a class period and will go on your record
as an absence if it is missed. However, you are welcome to bring friends
to the screening periods as well as movie snacks and drinks.
You are responsible for contacting me or a class member to find out
what material you missed and any work that was assigned. If work is
due in class on the day of the absence, the work is due in my email
or mailbox before class. Tardies (arriving late in class or departing
class early) are not acceptable because they are disruptive, and, beyond
any excused tardies, class participation grade and overall grade will
be affected (3 tardies = 1 absence).
If you participate in a university-sponsored event (music, theater,
field trip, or athletics), you must provide me with documentation from
an appropriate authority.
Class Participation: In addition to attending class,
you are also expected to contribute class discussions, group work, and
participate in workshop sessions with your peers. Learning is not a
solitary process, but one that necessarily involves others and I thus
consider class participation a very important part of achieving this
classs goals.
Quizzes: I reserve the right to give quizzes at any
point in the semester.
University and Departmental Policies
Plagiarism: Plagiarism is the unacknowledged borrowing
of someone else’s work and is a serious offense with serious consequences.
Plagiarism will result in a failing grade on the paper in question and
can possibly result in a failure for the course. Please consult the
University of Florida’s Honor Code for a thorough description
(www.dso.ufl.edu/stg/code_of_conduct.html). Academic honesty requires
that all work presented in this class be the student’s own work.
Evidence of collusion (working with another student or tutor) or plagiarism
(use of another’s ideas, data and statement without acknowledgment
and/or extensive use of another’s ideas, data and statements with
only minimal acknowledgment) will lead to the procedures set up by the
University for academic dishonesty in the Honor Court. There is a clear
distinction between learning new ideas and presenting them as facts
or as answers, and presenting them as one’s own idea. Unless the
work assigned is specifically designed to be completed in groups, all
work must be individual.
Essentially, plagiarism means to present the ideas and/or words of someone
else as one’s own. You commit plagiarism if you use (without credit):
~Any part of another person’s essay, speech, or ideas
~Any part of an article in a magazine, journal, newspaper; any part
of a book, encyclopedia, CD-ROM, online WWW page, etc.
~Any idea from another person or writer, even if you express that idea
in your own words.
~Any image from a print or online source.
UF Computer and Software Requirement: The following
is the official UF policy on the student computer requirement: Access
to and on-going use of a computer is required for all students to complete
their degree programs successfully. The University of Florida expects
each student entering the junior year, as well as each student new to
the university, to acquire computer hardware and software appropriate
to his or her degree program. Competency in the basic use of a computer
is a requirement for graduation. Class assignments may require use of
a computer, academic advising and registration can be done by computer,
and official university correspondence is often sent via e-mail.
While the university offers limited access to computers through its
computer labs, most students will be expected to purchase or lease a
computer that is capable of dial-up or network connection to the Internet,
graphical access to the World Wide Web, and productivity functions such
as word processing and spreadsheet calculation. Costs of meeting
this requirement will be included in financial aid considerations.
(http://www.circa.ufl.edu/computers/)
See also the CLAS computer policy (http://www.clasnet.ufl.edu/computers/student/).
Classroom Dynamics: Because class participation relies heavily
on individuals feeling comfortable expressing their opinions, you must
always show respect for the diversity of opinions expressed in this
class. You must also demonstrate respect for gender, racial, class,
and ethnic differences among your colleagues and instructor.
Harassment: Every student in
this class is expected to participate in a responsible and mature manner
that enhances education. Any conduct that disrupts the learning process
may lead to disciplinary action.
Accommodations for Students with Disabilities: Students
requesting classroom accommodation must first register with the Dean
of Students Office. The Dean of Students Office will provide documentation
to the student who must then provide this documentation to the Instructor
when requesting accommodation.
Challenging a Grade: Any complaints about separate
assignments should be addressed to me and not to the English Department.
If you have any complaints on the final grade, you may see me or email
me. However, because all of your grades are online, you should be aware
throughout the entire semester where you stand in the class. But, if
you find that you still have complaints after our meeting, you may express
your complaints on a form in the English Department Office (4012 Turlington).
The form and accompanying course material will be given to Sid Dobrin
for further action. A review committee may decide to raise, lower, or
keep the originally assigned grade. This decision is final. The material
submitted will remain on file in the English Department Office. To file
this complaint, you will need copies of all of your graded assignments.
Grades
You'll need your Gatorlink ID and password in order to access your
grades through the WebCT/Vista online gradebook. Please keep a running
total of your grades for yourself in case I miscalculate or there is
a technical difficulty with the gradebook.
Your final grade will be calculated in the following manner:
Professionalism, Participation, Attendance 10%
Student Examples 10%
Two Outside Viewing Reports 10%
Viewing Journal 10%
Comparative Scene Analysis Essay 10%
Formal Scene Analysis 10%
Auteur paper and presentation 20%
Final Project 20 %
Grading Scale:
A: 90-100
B+: 87-89
B: 80-86
C+: 77-79
C: 70-76
D: 60-69
E: 0-59
The University of Florida does not use minus grades. So you can't receive
a B- as your final grade for this course. However, other class work
may receive minuses to allow for a more precise evaluation of the quality
of your work. Rounding up for final grades is not an absolute.
Rubric: Here is the brief, general rubric for grades
I assign to your papers (you should use the statements to determine
how you might work toward a higher grade):
A
You did what the assignment asked for at a high quality level, and your
work shows originality and creativity. Work in this range shows all
the qualities listed below for a B, but it also demonstrates that you
took extra steps to be original or creative in developing content, solving
a problem, or developing a style. Since careful editing and proofreading
are essential in writing, papers in the A range must be free of typos
and grammatical or mechanical errors (papers with more than one or two
errors cannot receive an A).
B
You did what the assignment asked of you at a high quality level. Work
in this range needs revision; however it is complete in content, is
organized well, and shows special attention to style.
C
You did what the assignment asked of you. Work in this range needs significant
revision, but it is complete in content and the organization is logical.
The style is straightforward but unremarkable.
D
You did what the assignment asked of you at a poor quality level. Work
in this range needs significant revision. The content is often incomplete
and the organization is hard to discern. Attention to style is often
nonexistent or chaotic.
E
An E is usually reserved for people who don’t do the work or don’t
come
to class. However, if your work is shoddy and shows little understanding
of the needs of the assignment, you will receive a failing grade.