CCOG for PS 225 Fall 2024
- Course Number:
- PS 225
- Course Title:
- Political Ideologies: Idea Systems
- Credit Hours:
- 4
- Lecture Hours:
- 40
- Lecture/Lab Hours:
- 0
- Lab Hours:
- 0
Course Description
Addendum to Course Description
This course fulfills General Education and Diversity Requirements --and may be applied toward satisfying Associate Degrees at Portland Community College. It's credits can be used for the Peace and Conflict Studies (PACS) I, II, or III Program Awards. Students should consult with an Academic Advisor and/or other institutions regarding transfer and application of credit to other institutions.
Intended Outcomes for the course
Upon completion of the course students should be able to:
- Distinguish among major contemporary ideologies, identifying the culturally based assumptions and influences which lead to conflict and to cooperation among them.
- Communicate clearly historical sources contributing to the evolution of different idea systems, with the ability to express opinions regarding strengths and weaknesses associated with each.
- Apply critical thinking skills with regards to controversial issues including the impact of cultural filters on social and political interactions.
- Articulate personal value judgments, while demonstrating sensitivity and empathy for other people with differing points of view.
- Practice ethical and social requirements of responsible global citizenship.
- Organize information in conceptual frameworks in order to evaluate ethical and social issues.
Social Inquiry and Analysis
Students completing an associate degree at Portland Community College will be able to apply methods of inquiry and analysis to examine social contexts and the diversity of human thought and experience.
General education philosophy statement
Political science is fundamental to helping students understand and act as more effective and empowered citizens. We contribute to the college and the wider community by examining critical questions about power and by preparing our students to be better citizens across the globe. Political science offers a variety of diverse approaches to the college and is strongly grounded in the sub-fields of American and Comparative Politics, International Relations and Political Theory. Our mission is to support educated and empowered students and to foster deep understandings of complex global and local issues. Our goal is to teach critical thinking and to expose students to the complex and diverse world that we live in.
Outcome Assessment Strategies
At the beginning of the course, the instructor will distribute a course syllabus which clearly includes the criteria for assigning course grades. The SACC assumes that instructors will assess student learning by using some combination of formative assessment tools which may integrate the following types of tasks into the course to assess student achievement of course outcomes in a fair, comprehensive, and holistic manner:
- Exams comprised of essay and/or objective (like short answer) elements which require integration, application, and critical examination of course concepts, issues, and themes.
- Short analytical or application papers on specific concepts, issues, or themes.
- Term or research papers, using a variety of research strategies.
- Oral presentations resulting from group research, analysis, and critical evaluation.
- Participation in class discussions, role plays, case studies, workshops, and/or other activities.
- Response papers or journals reflecting on life experiences, events, and social/political phenomena.
- Service-learning tasks: involving service to community, reflection, and application of course criteria.
Course Content (Themes, Concepts, Issues and Skills)
After completing this course, the student should have a basic understanding of
- levels of understanding and analyzing political ideologies, including basic assumptions, beliefs, goals, and strategies (programs for action) associated with each.
- how different idea systems, economic systems, and socio-political realities help create, perpetuate, and/or resolve crises and conflicts on interpersonal, group, societal, international, and global levels.
- selected historical case studies which may help illustrate the relationship of idea systems in theory and their manifestation in real world practice.
- the relationship of personal behavior and lifestyle choices to crises and conflicts which took place in the past, continue into the present, and may or may not be transcended in the future.
- how one's own values and actions impact what is seen as right and wrong, good and bad, and the prospects for a future to unfold that is more to one's liking.
Competencies and Skills:
- Write and communicate orally in a clear, organized, and effective manner.
- Think critically about current public policy issues and analyze complex social and political realities.
- Use varied and effective research techniques and strategies.
- Develop and refine group process skills, which may include listening, brainstorming, cooperating, negotiating, or otherwise communicating regarding shared tasks.
- Develop an ability to listen to and empathize with diverse perspectives and experiences.
- Integrate coursework with current events and trends through examination of popular media and various sources of news.
- Develop and practice active citizenship skills.
Approved Texts:
All texts are selected at the each instructor's discretion. However, successful past offerings of this course and a desire to have some continuity of pedagogy among the instructors strongly encourages use of one standard textbook supplemented by an easy-reading utopia or other primary source that represents one or more of the ideologies studied in the course.
Sample Textbooks:
- Modern Political Ideologies, by Terrence Ball and Richard Dagger (Harper Collins, 1999). Political Ideologies, by Andrew Heywood (Worth Publishers, 1998).
Supplemental Texts:
- Herland, by Charlotte Perkins Gilman (Pantheon Books, l919). Looking Backward, by Edward Bellamy (McGraw-Hill Publishers, 1887). Brave New World, by Aldous Huxley (Mentor Books, 1948).