California State University, Dominguez Hills
University of Wisconsin, Parkside
Latest update: July 29, 1999
Faculty on the Site.
This page is under construction for Fall 1999. July 29, 1999.Sociology 368-01
Time: T-Th 4:00 - 5:15 p.m.
Room: SBS B 137
Jeanne Curran, Ph.D., Esq.
Course requires computer literacy.
CRMJ/SOCA 233 Section 001
Time: MWF 10:00-10:50 a.m.
Room: MOLN D101
Susan Takata, Ph.D.
Course requires computer literacy.
Pollock, Joycelyn M. Criminal Women. Cincinnati: Anderson Publishing, 1999
Williams III, Frank P. and Marilyn D. McShane. Criminology Theory: Selected Classic Readings. Cincinnati: Anderson Publishing, 1998 (2nd ed.)
(optional) Adler, Freda, Gerhard O.W. Mueller, and William S. Laufer. Criminology: The Shorter Version. Boston: McGraw-Hill, 1998 (3rd ed). The major concepts covered by the Adler book will be covered in lectures. If you are comfortable with occasionally borrowing the text from a friend who has it, and with being sure to have any questions answered in lecture, then you may wish to rely on that. Otherwise, you should have this text.
A series of exercises, with accompanying lecture notes designed to clarify what we were thinking of when we asked the question, must be answered by e-mail. The lecture notes will apprise you of at least one plausible way to answer the question, and you should reflect in your answer that you recognize our response, though you are welcome to disagree with it.
Answer to concept exercises shall be kept to no more than 50 words.
You shall recognize any author whose work you quote with quotation marks; and some of your answer must be rephrased into your own words.
You may work in groups on any or all of these exercises. Cooperative groups are strongly encouraged. Permission to work with more than one group, and to work with different groups. All names of active group members should be recorded as indicated on the exercise material.
You are required to submit 10 concept exercises, your choice of which concepts, but the concepts must cover at least three of the topic sections.
These exercises will be recorded, but not corrected, since the lecture notes have already provided satisfactory responses.
Discussion questions, along with accompanying lecture notes, are provided with each topic section.
For the actual experience, you may wish to visit an agency, interview someone with an experience to share, visit a "battered women's" shelter, visit a local school and talk to young people about their experience with the criminal justice system, or any of a variety of other activities.
You are strongly encouraged to work in collaborative groups. You may work with a variety of different groups.
You are required to submit one debriefing of a shared experience. Please keep your analysis brief, and be sure to link it to theory, to policy, to course discussions. A form for the debriefing that you may use as a guide will be available.
Successful and timely submission of all exercises will earn a C for the course.
For a B or an A, your discussion and debriefing submissions must show scholarly discipline in conceptually linking your material to theory, policy, and course discussions, with appropriate citations to academic sources, and should show some creative thought on the issue.
Jeanne Curran
Office Location: SBS B-326
Office Telephone: (310) 243-3831
Office Hours: TTh: 2:00-4:00 pm
Susan Takata
Office Location: 370 MOLN
Office Telephone: (414) 595-2116
Office Hours: MWF 8:45-9:45 a.m. and by appointment
Email: takata@uwp.edu
FAX: (414) 595-2471