PHILOSOPHY HOME PAGE

211 History of Philosophy in the 17th and 18th Centuries Philosophy at Lancaster

211 HOME PAGEH

LIST OF COURSESME PAGE

Policy on Assessment

Assessment for this course is based on two essays, one in each of the two terms, and a 3 hour closed book exam.

We set out the different skills and abilities the course is designed to develop for you in the table. Alongside we explain how these are assessed through essays and exams.

How your developing skills are assessed

Assessment tests for i.e. your ability to: How do essays test for this? How do exams test for this?
lucidity avoid confusion in the presentation of more difficult ideas and more complex argumentation ; to make and sharpen conceptual distinctions By asking you to set out positions and arguments of a conceptually sophisticated nature, and asking you to engage with them Ditto
structure of presentation synthesise a range of ideas and arguments into a single coherently structured written presentation By requiring you read a number of things, take different views and arguments etc from different sources and pull them together into the single coherent presentation which is your essay. (A successful essay is more than a set of notes reporting the different sources. It is the material of the notes organised into a unified tailor-made structure.) The second essay is more challenging on structure than the first. Less emphasis on structure in an exam, but it still counts significantly. I.e., in an exam you get more credit from a mere list of points than you would in an essay.
grasp of problem grasp at least some of the main dimensions of a philosophical problem at issue in such a way as to support the beginnings of critical independent thought about it; to be able to analyse problems and propose solutions A major question we ask in marking an essay is to what extent philosophical issues have been grasped and responded to. The response usually takes the form of identifying problems and exploring ways by which they might be resolved With an exam it is more difficult to conceal lack of understanding. This is an important reason for employing them.
critical awareness maintain throughout a limited study the sense that claims are open to test and evaluation An essay is seriously marked down if positions are just reported with no sense of how they might be open to challenge. Ditto
coherence of argumentation

work with a sharp sense of validity and invalidity in relation to complex lines of argumentation

use analytical techniques to construct, present and assess reasoned arguments

At the heart of an essay in philosophy is the quality of its argumentation, and its evaluation of argumentation. Ditto
evidence of study draw intelligently in one's own reading, writing and thinking on a range of challenging contributions made by others Essays written in a great rush and with no careful preparation beforehand in terms of reading or reflection usually betray their origins are not assessed highly. In marking exam scripts more credit is given to writing intelligently even though off the top of the head, but most answers benefit crucially from the knowledge and understanding, gained through study, which you bring into the exam room.
knowledge and grasp of relevant literature read and have a good understanding of at least some aspects of some challenging contributions to the problem at issue Essays in this course always require you to undertake some reading which you have made good sense of. Sometimes one key text is enough (eg a key few pages from Descartes); sometimes the topic or the essay instructions will require you to draw on several studies. Ditto, though there is less emphasis on this in the exam. Accurate referencing in an exam answer is certainly not top priority - your capacity to present an idea or argument clearly is much more important.
sense of relevance work with a sense of relevance in relation to a limited project as a whole, both in choice of reading and in presentation of argumentation An essay that introduces positions and arguments (or anything else) that are not relevant to the question being pursued loses credit. In a good essay every statement is makes a definite contribution to the answer to the question being developed. Ditto.

 

Essays

The primary point of writing essays is to help you develop skills, not to test them. But they do play a central role in assessment on this course nonetheless.

They ask you to engage in a sustained bit of philosophising,.

The first gives you a structure: it asks you to give a careful exposition of a position/line of argument and to follow this with a critique.

The second does not specify a structure but invites you to address a problem, creating a structure which best suits it and your approach.

For the first essay, though the general area and format is set, you are asked to specify a particular question within that yourself. This is to maximise your freedom to choose a topic of real interest to you while fulfilling the learning objectives of the course. Allowing wide freedom of choice also spreads the load on the library so it is easier for you to find the reading you need.

The same reasons lie behind the design of the second essay In this case you are simply are asked to choose a question from a long list.

In each case you are asked to construct a 'synopsis' of the essay (to go on the title page). This helps you refine your sense of structure, and gives you practice in helping your reader follow your presentation.

The length guideline for each essay is 2,500 words.

 

Exam

We use exams to test for much the same capacities as are shown in essays, though with different emphases - see table. They test also your capacity to work under a very special kind of pressure (!). The University insists on your taking a minimum number of exams in your total assessment profile in part because they are thought to act as a check against plagiarism.

Across all your undergraduate programme as a whole, you are meant to develop a range of knowledge, some of it on restricted topics but deep-going and some of it shallower but relating to a wider sweep. If you are using this course to develop breadth, you should opt for the exam. If you are getting breadth elsewhere, as it were, you should consider writing a dissertation in lieu of an exam. (The University rules that you can be assessed via dissertations in up to four of your 16 units of assessment.)

If you opt for the dissertation you will not be assessed for 'coverage'.

A function of an exam, as we use it in this course, is to test for 'coverage'. It tests, among other things, the breadth of your knowledge of the subject. It does this by setting questions (12 in all) which range across the whole course, by requiring you to answer three questions, and by requiring you to choose those questions so as to display knowledge of at least three of the major philosophers covered by the course. This strategy clearly allows a good deal of latitude. It is designed so that you can choose within limits to specialise by, say, ignoring a figure that does not attract you. On the other hand you can only expect to fail if you 'specialise' too much.

211 HOME PAGE | LIST OF COURSES |  PHILOSOPHY HOME PAGE

University Approved Page prepared by VP