GENEALOGY AND
HISTORY
Course Syllabus
General Information:
(1) Course title: Genealogy and History
(2) Semester: First
(3) Professor: L. J. Andrew Villalon (Dr. V;
Professor V; Mr. V)
(4) Course number: 350L (40270)
(5) Course Section: Only one
(6) Days/Time of meeting: M 3-6 p. m.
(7) Classroom: GAR 2.108
(8) Campus Office: GAR 4.120
(9) History Departmental Office, First Floor of GAR (To the
right of the Main Entrance)
(10) Office Phone: (512) 475-8004
(11) Departmental Phone: (512) 71-3261
(12) Office Hours: M: After class. W: 3-5;
F: 3-5. (5-6 by appointment; limited access to the 4th floor at this time
requires phoning the professor's office upon arrival).
(13) Email Address: avillalon@austin.rr.com
(14) Webpage URL for this course:
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Parthenon/9507/c-SpanHist-index.html
(15) Website on which this material appears: Wire
Paladin
Current URL: http://www.geocities.com/wirepaladin/geo
Former URL: http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Parthenon/9507
(If you do not have available the URL to my website, you can
always find it easily by typing into Google "Andrew Villalon Wire Paladin."
The website should come up as the first entry on the list. You
can then click through to it.)
Course Description:
Genealogy is that part of history that traces family relationships
over time. Most people are interested in finding out where they have
come from, who their ancestors were, and what those ancestors did.
In the past, such a search often required extensive effort, including widespread
travel or considerable expense or both. The most readily available
sources of information were those in possession of the family itself, including
such things as letters, diaries, diplomas, birth and death certificates,
inscribed family bibles, old photographs or home movies, newspaper clippings,
and, of course, word of mouth. Other sources such as court records,
social security information, police reports, city registries, passenger manifests,
and records of military service were housed in libraries, archives or government
repositories, many of them far removed from the locale in which the researcher
was working. At the very least, this necessitated time-consuming
correspondence by snail mail. Often it was necessary to travel far
and wide or alternatively to hire genealogical consultants. Today, thanks
primarily to the web and email, it has become far easier to conduct a genealogical
search into the history of one’s family. This course will teach students
who have an interest in learning about their families the principles of genealogical
research in the twenty-first century. Each student will apply those
principles to researching his or her own family history and where possible,
placing family members into a larger historical context.
Contacting the Professor:
There are three very reliable ways to contact this professor:
(1) Speak with him after class. If the subject
requires a lengthier conversation, an appointment can be made to meet
during office hours or communicate by means of email.
(2) Come tohis office during office hours (see above).
No appointment is needed; I am almost always available
in my office (or very nearby) during office hours. If you do not
at first find me, try down the hall in the departmental office, especially
around the photocopying machines. If, for whatever reason,
I have to miss the office hours, something that does not happen often, then
I shall try to leave a note on the door. If that occurs, let me apologize
in advance.
(3) Contact him through email.
I check and respond to my email regularly and I will
try to reply to your message as soon as I get it. The home address
email is the one given above. It is here that you should send your
emails.
Other means of getting in contact are much less certain.
I have purposely omitted my home telephone number from this syllabus for
the simple reason that I do not wish to receive student phone calls at
home. Email serves the same purpose, more reliably and less obtrusively.
Course Goals:
(1) To provide students with an adequate understanding of
how genealogical research (a branch of historical research) is conducted.
(2) To provide an understanding of the various types
of evidence available to scholars when they undertakes reconstruct
a family's past.
(3) (Hopefully) To inspire in the student a further interest in
the study of genealogy, which becomes for some a lifelong obsession.
Course Webpage:
A webpage for Genealogy and History appears on the teaching
section of my website, Wire Paladin (see above for the URL).
Like the rest of my teaching materials, it can be reached by accessing
the site's main index (type into Google Andrew Villalon Wire Paladin), then
clicking on the chess knight entitled University
of Texas Courses taught by Dr. Villalon.
Throughout the term, the webpage will undergo updating. You are
responsible for periodically consulting the website to see if anything
new has been posted. If you are reading this syllabus, you are
already aware that it is also posted on the webpage. Your first assignment
is to READ THIS SYLLABUS CAREFULLY.
Required Course Materials:
A. To Purchase:
1. Matthew Helm, et al., Genealogy Online
for Dummies.
Despite its very "un-academic" title, this is
an excellent, inexpensive, and easily available book that will serve as the
required text in this course. As the title indicates, it centers around
how to do genealogy on the web, which is where all students will start.
Since Genealogy Online
for Dummies is updated virtually every year, the book has gone
through a number of editions, many of which are still available on the
web. While no specific edition is being assigned, try to get as recent an edition as your pocketbook
will allow.
A word to the wise: If you are particularly interested in the
exciting new procedure of genealogical DNA testing, the 2009 edition of Genealogy Online
for Dummies is the first one to devote a chapter to the subject.
2. Recent version of a major genealogical program
such as Family Tree Maker. A very useful instruction book and
access to several critical genealogical sites comes with the package.
3. A subscription to Ancestry.com.
This is the major commercial genealogical site on the web. It
supplies fairly easy access to a list of web sources that is growing every
day. Students who take this course almost always rank it as the most
valuable site that they use.
Unfortunately, there is no such thing as an institutional membership;
consequently, you will not be able to get it through the University of
Texas libraries. You will have to purchase a membership (or, if you
know someone who has already done so, arrange to use theirs.)
Memberships can be purchased for various time periods; for example, by the
month. I would recommend for students taking a semester course a
3-month subscription. Perhaps several of you can make arrangements
to "double-up."
B. Assorted FREE web sources on genealogy either posted
directly on the professor’s website or freely accessible on the web
For required (but free) web texts, access URL:
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Parthenon/9507/c-Genealogy-Readings.html
Important Genealogical Web Sources
To aid students in their search, a web sources page has been placed
in this course website.
See:
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Parthenon/9507/c-Genealogy-Websources.html
Criteria for Grading:
See the section of the website entitled
Paper and Portfolio.
In addition to the written requirements listed in that section,
participation will be of considerable importance in this class. This
can take the form of contributing relevant information, asking good questions,
helping your fellow students find their family information, discussing
in office hours, etc. This course will be what all scholarship should
be--cooperative rather than competitive.
Retaining Copies of Work and Work handed back:
It is a good practice in any course to keep copies of everything
that you have handed in. It is also a good practice to retain any
work that is handed back until you have received your (correct)
final grade in the course. Mistakes happen, and even
though they are more frequent in a large class, they happen in small classes
as well. Items get lost and errors are made in recording grades.
In such instances, the student cannot merely claim to have done the work.
He/she must be able to produce it.
Instructions for Students Who
do not receive a grade:
This is almost certainly the result of a failure to complete some
part of the course work. The student should contact the professor
as soon as possible and arrange a meeting in order to determine what can
be done about the problem. In most cases, something can be done.
Concerning the Finality of Grades:
In most cases, final grades are indeed final. The obvious
exception: if I have made a mistake in computing your grade,
in which case you should contact me immediately. In rare instances,
usually where a student's grade is borderline, I may let that individual
something to improve the grade.
Attendance:
Attendance is required!!!
Attendance in any course is important, but it is particularly important
when that course is based heavily upon in-class lectures and discussion
and where participation plays an important role. Failure to attend
will be taken into consideration in assigning the final grade; and the
professor reserves the right to deny a student a passing grade if the
attendance is poor enough. Remember, we meet only once a week; therefore,
missing a single class is tantamount to missing an entire week's work.
Consequently, students who wish to have their attendance correctly
recorded have two responsibilities.
(1) They must sign the attendance sheet for the class.
(2) If the professor forgets to circulate an attendance
sheet (as sometimes happens), students should raise their hand and remind
him. (Such an interruption will always be most welcome.)
Students should never skip a class simply because they feel unprepared.
After all, you might miss something interesting or useful! Besides,
there are no unannounced quizes and I never seek to embarrass unprepared
students.
Cheating or Plagiarism:
Everybody knows what cheating is, so there is no need for a definition.
On the other hand, some of you may not be familiar with the word
plagiarism. It refers to any attempt to pass off as your own work
something done by somebody else. Even when only part of a paper
is copied from the work of another person, this is still plagiarism.
While it is perfectly acceptable to quote from another person’s work, such
passages must be carefully footnoted.
Both the university and I regard cheating and plagiarism as extremely
serious; as a result, I would recommend that you avoid them like the
plague throughout your college career and, for that matter, afterwards.
Although I shall treat both cheating and plagiarism on a case-by-case
basis, the offender should not expect leniency. A substantial lowering
of the final grade or even expulsion from the course are the normal penalties
for such offenses.
Withdrawal from the Course:
As far as I am concerned, a student wishing to withdraw from the
course for whatever reason will be allowed to do so without penalty, even
if he/she is failing the course at the time of the withdrawal. It
has always been my belief that losing time and tuition is enough of a
penalty to pay for doing poorly in a course.
However, I would strongly recommend to all students that once
they have decided to withdraw, they should do so as soon as possible.
It is always best to get this unpleasant task out of the way.
First of all, it is better to drop a “loser” and concentrate one’s
energies where they will they will do the most good, i.e. in courses
where one is doing well.
Secondly, in putting off the inevitable, some students wait too
long and pass withdrawal dates mandated by the university, after which
withdrawing may become far more complicated, if not impossible. While
I am always willing to approve a withdrawal, after a certain point in
time, the university may not accept it.
Grading Procedures and Student Complaints:
Within any academic discipline, a teacher tries to design a course
which will present a body of knowledge, while developing critical thinking
and skills in research and writing. He or she then evaluates carefully
each student's performance in order to arrive at a grade, which will count
toward college credit. Factors which a professor may take into consideration
when defining student performance include such things as exams (either
in-class or take-home), other written work (papers, book reviews, journals),
and various forms of classroom participation (discussion, oral presentations,
answering questions). Each individual teacher will determine which
of these factors to employ in arriving at a grade, as well as their relative
importance. The student should also be aware that classroom deportment
may be taken into consideration; in other words, anyone who habitually
acts in a manner which tends to disrupt the learning process may well
find that fact reflected in his or her grade.
In any class worth the name, a grade is earned by the student,
for demonstrating the required knowledge and ability and performing the
work within the deadlines set by the instructor. Failure on the
part of a student to demonstrate adequate knowledge and/or to meet reasonable
academic guidelines (as defined by the instructor) may result in a failing
grade and the withholding of academic credit for the course. Again,
let me emphasize: grades are earned, not given or negotiated!!
On the other hand, for students who believe that they have been
unfairly evaluated, the University of Texas has established grievance
procedures. Grade appeals must be made in accordance with that
procedure, which mandates as its first step an attempt by the student
and professor to resolve the grievance without any outside interference.
At this point in the procedure, intervention by third parties such as parents,
boyfriends, attorneys, department heads, administrators or other faculty
members is inappropriate. If, after consultation with the faculty
member, the student wishes to pursue the grievance, he or she should contact
the department head. [For further information concerning the grievance
procedure, see the university handbook which should be available at every
college office.]
Brief Biography of this Professor:
L. J. Andrew Villalon received his Ph.D. in history from Yale
University in 1984. After many years at the University of Cincinnati,
where he retired as a full professor, he is currently a senior lecturer,
teaching at the University of Texas. Although Villalon specializes in late
medieval and early modern European history, he has also done work dealing
with the twentieth century. He has delivered numerous conference papers
on such topics as Pedro “the Cruel”, Don Carlos, San Diego de Alcalá,
Machiavelli, Sir Hugh Calveley, royal favorites, saint-making,
landholding, and academic editing. His articles have appeared in
collections and in various journals including The Catholic Historical
Review, Sixteenth Century Journal, Mediterranean Studies,
and the Proceedings of the Ohio Academy of History. Villalon is
currently working on two book length studies, one on the canonization of
San Diego (after whom the city is named, the other on the life of Sir Hugh
Calveley (an English knight and mercenary in the Hundred Years War). He
has also co-edited with Donald J. Kagay five collections of medieval
essays—The Final Argument: The Imprint of Violence on Society in
Medieval and Early Modern Europe (The Boydell Press, 1998); The
Circle of War in the Middle Ages: Essays on Medieval Military and Naval
History (The Boydell Press, 1999); Crusaders, Condottieri, and
Cannon : Medieval Warfare in Societies around the Mediterranean
(Brill, 2002); The Hundred Years War: A Wider Focus (Brill,
2005), and The Hundred Years War: (Part II): Different
Vistas (Brill, 2008).
Currently, the pair are gathering essays for a sixth collection (also
dealing with the Hundred Years War) and doing research for a joint
monograph concerning the War of the Two Pedros (1356-1366) and the battle
of Najera (1367). In addition to
work in his major field, Villalon has published on automotive history and
the history of World War I. He has held several grants for study in
Spain, including a Fulbright; received two awards from the American
Association of University Professors for defending academic freedom; and
in 2001, was presented the Professional-Scholarly Activity Award for the
University College at the University of Cincinnati. (A
complete c.v. is available on the website.)
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