2013 Fall Syllabus - USC School of Architecture

2013 Fall Syllabus - USC School of Architecture 2013 Fall Syllabus - USC School of Architecture

12.07.2015 Views

first class meeting. Readings must be completed prior to the lecture for which they are listed.Exams will be based on the material covered in the lectures and readings.Required Texts: Primary readings are from the following texts. Their purchase is highlyrecommended. Readings are listed by chapter rather than page numbers to allow students toread from any edition. Exam questions will be drawn from lectures and readings; students areexpected to complete readings prior to class as noted.• Jellicoe, G., Jellicoe, Susan. The Landscape of Man: Shaping the Environment fromPrehistory to the Present Day. Thames & Hudson. 1995+.• Barlow Rogers, Elizabeth. Landscape Design: A Cultural and Architectural History. HarryN. Abrams, Inc. 20012. Research - Analytical Paper (Due November 7 via Turnitin)Students will be responsible for documenting and analyzing a selected work of landscapearchitecture, concept or form especially its terms of its historical antecedents and in terms of itsexpression of a world-view regarding the relationship between humanity and nature. This workwill be presented as a scholarly report in standard 8 1/2 “ x 11” form. The report must containboth appropriate written and visual data and include original drawings, photos and analysis(derived from personal site visits if possible). This report shall include 4-5 pages of writtenmaterial and 4-5 pages of graphic material. If the paper is turned in one day to one week late, itwill be automatically marked down one grade, two weeks late and it will be marked down twogrades. If it is not turned in within two weeks the student will receive an automatic F on thisassignment.3. Powerpoint Presentation (Due on appropriate dates as noted in project list)Working in teams of two or three, students will present a selected landscape design to the classin a ten-minute powerpoint presentation. Teams will investigate and critically analyze a historiclandscape design, its designer, cultural and environmental context and history. A handoutdistributed later in the semester will give more detail.4. Lecture Notebook/SketchbookThis note/sketchbook is specifically for lecture notes. All students will take notes and makedrawings of the designs presented and discussed in class. These note/sketch books will be dueon November 28 for evaluation and will be returned on the final day of class to aid your studiesfor the final exam.5. Attendance:The School of Architecture’s general attendance policy is to allow a student to miss theequivalent of one week of class sessions (Note this means one class meeting for ARCH565!) without directly affecting the student’s grade and ability to complete the course. Ifadditional absences are required for a personal illness/family emergency, preapprovedacademic reason/religious observance, the situation should be discussed and evaluated withthe faculty member and appropriate Chair on a case-by-case basis.For each absence over that allowed number, the student’s letter grade can be loweredup to one full letter grade as the discretion of the instructors.Ten minutes late is considered tardy. If arriving late, a student must be respectful of a class insession and do everything possible to minimize the disruption caused by a late arrival. It isalways the student’s responsibility to seek means (if possible) to make up work missed due toabsences, not the instructor’s, although such recourse is not always an option due to the natureof the material covered6. EXAMS & GRADING:Exams 1 and 2 shall cover material discussed in the lectures and readings since the prior exam.Students are expected to attend all lectures and to take notes, as lecture material will not be4

posted. Students are expected to purchase or rent the required texts and to complete thereadings prior to class. The exams will emphasize critical thinking over memorization, yetstudents should be familiar with the key designs, designers, dates and terms presented inlectures and readings.Class Participation 5%Research-Analytical Paper 15%Powerpoint Presentation 15%Note/sketchbook 15%Midterm 20%Final Exam: 30%Other recommended readings:Tom Turner. Garden History: Philosohpy and Design 2000BC-2000AD. Spon Press:London.2005.Christopher Thacker. The History of Gardens. UC Press, 1979. ISBN 0520056299Clemens Steenbergen and Wouter Reh, Architecture and Landscape: The Design Experimentof the Great European Gardens and Landscapes. Prestel-Verlag, Munich, 1996.Charles Moore, et al. Poetics of Gardens. MIT Press. ISBN 0262631539Ehrenfried Kluckert. European Garden Design: From Classical Antiquity to the Present Day.Konnemann, Cologne, Gernany. 2000. ISBN 3829022891Philip Pregill and Nancy Volkman. Landscapes in History: Design and Planning in the WesternTradition. VNR, New York, 1993.William Mann. Landscape Architecture: An Illustrated History in Timelines, Site Plans andBiography. Wiley and Sons, Inc, NY, 1993.M. Mosser and G. Teyssot. The Architecture of Western Gardens: A Design History from theRenaissance to the Present Day. MIT Press, 1991.Patrick Goode, ed., et al. The Oxford Companion to Gardens. Oxford Press, 1991.Phillips and Foy. A Photographic History of Gardens. SB 465 P45 1995Marie-Luise Gothein. A History of Garden Art. Hacker, Pub., 1978. A classic.Derek Clifford, A History of Garden Design. Faber and Faber, London, 1962Denis Cosgrove. Social Formation and Symbolic Landscape, 1984. The Iconography ofLandscape, 1988.Lehrman, Jonas, Earthly Paradise, University of California Press, 1980Peter Valder, Gardens in China, Timber Press, 2002Copyright 2012 Regula CampbellUSC Policy Statements:Students with DisabilitiesAny student requesting academic accommodations based on a disability is required to registerwith Disability Services and Programs (DSP) each semester. A letter of verification for approvedaccommodations can be obtained from DSP. Please be sure the letter is delivered to me (or toTA) as early in the semester as possible. DSP is located in STU 301 and is open 8:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. The phone number for DSP is (213) 740-0776.Academic Honesty and IntegrityUSC seeks to maintain an optimal learning environment. General principles of academichonesty include the concept of respect for the intellectual property of others, the expectationthat individual work will be submitted unless otherwise allowed by an instructor, and theobligations both to protect one’s own academic work from misuse by others as well as to avoidusing another’s work as one’s own. All students are expected to understand and abide by theseprinciples. Scampus, the Student Guidebook, contains the Student Conduct Code in Section11.00, while the recommended sanctions are located in Appendix A:http://www.usc.edu/dept/publications/SCAMPUS/gov/. Students will be referred to the Office of5

first class meeting. Readings must be completed prior to the lecture for which they are listed.Exams will be based on the material covered in the lectures and readings.Required Texts: Primary readings are from the following texts. Their purchase is highlyrecommended. Readings are listed by chapter rather than page numbers to allow students toread from any edition. Exam questions will be drawn from lectures and readings; students areexpected to complete readings prior to class as noted.• Jellicoe, G., Jellicoe, Susan. The Landscape <strong>of</strong> Man: Shaping the Environment fromPrehistory to the Present Day. Thames & Hudson. 1995+.• Barlow Rogers, Elizabeth. Landscape Design: A Cultural and Architectural History. HarryN. Abrams, Inc. 20012. Research - Analytical Paper (Due November 7 via Turnitin)Students will be responsible for documenting and analyzing a selected work <strong>of</strong> landscapearchitecture, concept or form especially its terms <strong>of</strong> its historical antecedents and in terms <strong>of</strong> itsexpression <strong>of</strong> a world-view regarding the relationship between humanity and nature. This workwill be presented as a scholarly report in standard 8 1/2 “ x 11” form. The report must containboth appropriate written and visual data and include original drawings, photos and analysis(derived from personal site visits if possible). This report shall include 4-5 pages <strong>of</strong> writtenmaterial and 4-5 pages <strong>of</strong> graphic material. If the paper is turned in one day to one week late, itwill be automatically marked down one grade, two weeks late and it will be marked down twogrades. If it is not turned in within two weeks the student will receive an automatic F on thisassignment.3. Powerpoint Presentation (Due on appropriate dates as noted in project list)Working in teams <strong>of</strong> two or three, students will present a selected landscape design to the classin a ten-minute powerpoint presentation. Teams will investigate and critically analyze a historiclandscape design, its designer, cultural and environmental context and history. A handoutdistributed later in the semester will give more detail.4. Lecture Notebook/SketchbookThis note/sketchbook is specifically for lecture notes. All students will take notes and makedrawings <strong>of</strong> the designs presented and discussed in class. These note/sketch books will be dueon November 28 for evaluation and will be returned on the final day <strong>of</strong> class to aid your studiesfor the final exam.5. Attendance:The <strong>School</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Architecture</strong>’s general attendance policy is to allow a student to miss theequivalent <strong>of</strong> one week <strong>of</strong> class sessions (Note this means one class meeting for ARCH565!) without directly affecting the student’s grade and ability to complete the course. Ifadditional absences are required for a personal illness/family emergency, preapprovedacademic reason/religious observance, the situation should be discussed and evaluated withthe faculty member and appropriate Chair on a case-by-case basis.For each absence over that allowed number, the student’s letter grade can be loweredup to one full letter grade as the discretion <strong>of</strong> the instructors.Ten minutes late is considered tardy. If arriving late, a student must be respectful <strong>of</strong> a class insession and do everything possible to minimize the disruption caused by a late arrival. It isalways the student’s responsibility to seek means (if possible) to make up work missed due toabsences, not the instructor’s, although such recourse is not always an option due to the nature<strong>of</strong> the material covered6. EXAMS & GRADING:Exams 1 and 2 shall cover material discussed in the lectures and readings since the prior exam.Students are expected to attend all lectures and to take notes, as lecture material will not be4

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