Please follow this link to the current syllabus.
A syllabus (plural "syllabi" and not "syllabuses") is the course "handbook." Many Senior students of economics will (if they have not already through CCP) engaged in a postsecondary course in which the professor hands you a ten- to thirty-page syllabus, tells you to read it, and never says another word about how the course works or how documents are to be prepared and submitted, when assignments are due, etc. After all, why say anything? A quote I have heard many times in my own academic preparation has been "It's in the syllabus."
The syllabus for this course is not nearly as voluminous as the worst-case scenario I have described, but it is as important. By the end of the first week of class I will have given each a printed version of this critical document, which must be the first document in the dedicated course binder (which you should bring to class every single day). Additionally, I will ask both students and parents to acknowledge by signature and document return that they have reviewed the syllabus and have had the opportunity to ask questions about it.
Updated 8/9/2019
A syllabus (plural "syllabi" and not "syllabuses") is the course "handbook." Many Senior students of economics will (if they have not already through CCP) engaged in a postsecondary course in which the professor hands you a ten- to thirty-page syllabus, tells you to read it, and never says another word about how the course works or how documents are to be prepared and submitted, when assignments are due, etc. After all, why say anything? A quote I have heard many times in my own academic preparation has been "It's in the syllabus."
The syllabus for this course is not nearly as voluminous as the worst-case scenario I have described, but it is as important. By the end of the first week of class I will have given each a printed version of this critical document, which must be the first document in the dedicated course binder (which you should bring to class every single day). Additionally, I will ask both students and parents to acknowledge by signature and document return that they have reviewed the syllabus and have had the opportunity to ask questions about it.
Updated 8/9/2019