|
|
|
||
Poslední úprava: Mgr. Eliška Ullrichová, Ph.D. (18.09.2023)
|
|
||||||||||||||||||
Poslední úprava: Mgr. Eliška Ullrichová, Ph.D. (06.10.2023)
1. In-class activity 10% The students will be required to read mandatory texts for each class, except for the introductory one. The articles will be developed and discussed during the classes; students are expected to be active. You are allowed a maximum of two (un)certified absences. 2. Oral presentation 20 % Students will deliver an individual 10-15 minutes oral presentation[1] on a given topics distributed on the first introductory class. The student delivers a handout of one page including resources to the Moodle by Tuesday 8 AM before the class to enable your colleague to prepare for a review. The oral presentation is classified by 20 points. Not delivering the handout by the indicated deadline is sanctioned with -1 point per each day, the same applies to exceeding max. time load for the presentation (every additional 2 minutes are sanctioned with -1 point). If a handout is not delivered in time, it will be considered in grading for review having a limited time for the preparation. [1] The length of the oral presentation up to confirmed during the first class based on the number of registered students. 3. Presentation review/discussion 10% A discussant is tasked with reading papers/listening carefully to a presentation and then delivering a concise, constructive discussion of the relative merits of the work, in a manner designed to help the author develop and strengthen the work (either the presented one or the future one – in most cases both). The discussion of the presentation should be approx. 5 minutes and the feedback should provoke a further debate in a class. Tips on how to review/discuss a presentation or a paper: (1) shaping the discussion agenda – it is helpful if the discussant can oil the wheels of the wider discussion by highlighting certain insights from or issues raised in the paper that warrant wider discussion; (2) remember to assess the presentation/paper on its own merits – don’t fall into the trap of suggesting the author was trying to or should have written a different paper; (3) centre the paper/presentation and its arguments – play the ball and not the player, don’t veer into a discussion that is essentially about how you would have approached the topic. 4. Final essay 60 % This is a paper of 10 NS (18,000 characteristics including spaces +/-10%) in which a student discusses an element of European economic integration in the context of the theoretical and empirical academic literature. The paper is due on January 26, 2024 (Midnight). Your essay has to be submitted to the Moodle system. Late submissions of one day are sanctioned with -1 point per each day of the delay. To pass the course, you have to get at least 50%, i.e., 25 points. The final essay will be evaluated based on the following rubric:
Grading is based on the Dean's Measure no. 20/2019: https://fsv.cuni.cz/deans-measure-no-20/2019
|
|
||
Poslední úprava: Mgr. Eliška Ullrichová, Ph.D. (06.10.2023)
If not said otherwise, the classes are taken in person. Classes require preparation and active participation of students. Access to Moodle. |