Washington Center

General Research: Developing Critical Writing and Thinking Skills Through Independent Research

Credits: 
4
Day and Time: 
To Be Determined
Quarter Dates: 
Week of September 21, 2020
Semester Dates: 
Week of August 24, 2020
Campus: 
UCDC
Category: 
Core Seminar
Description: 

Stephen Colbert coined the term “truthiness” to describe the tendency of people to “go with their gut” rather than facts and evidence in evaluating the world around them. We are all affected by biases that obstruct critical thinking. Challenging these biases is essential to making rational, evidence-based arguments and decisions. A  primary concern underlying public discourse and policy making about issues such as COVID-19, climate change, school testing, immigration, poverty, gun control, mass incarceration, and so many other contemporary issues is the availability, validity, reliability, and utility of evidence to support arguments on one side or another. We will spend this term developing and using the critical thinking and writing skills necessary to examine and propose solutions to real-world problems. Students will develop research projects on a topic of their choosing, preferably related to the work of their internship organization. They will work independently and in small groups, if possible, throughout the multi-stage writing process. 

Course Outline

About the Instructor: Professor Jennifer Diascro is the Associate Academic Director of the University of California Washington Program (UCDC) and a political scientist. She earned her BA in political science from the University of California, San Diego (1990) and her PhD in political science from the Ohio State University (1995). She was on the faculty at the University of Kentucky (1995-2002) and American University (2002-2010). In 2000-01, she was a Supreme Court Fellow at the US Sentencing Commission in Washington, DC. Before coming to UCDC, Professor Diascro was a senior director at the American Political Science Association (2011-2015). She's authored or coauthored peer reviewed journal articles, book chapters, and books, on topics related to American judicial politics, and is CO-PI on an NSF award for a workshop on success and failure in the academy.

UCDC faculty are currently working to adapt their more traditional, in-person courses to a virtual environment for the Fall 2020 term.  As a result, course titles and descriptions may change.

 
Course ID: 
UCDC191A01F20