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Activities

Aspasia watches Socrates wrestle a hog.

Photo: Justin Lubin / NBC.

I will measure your progress and success in this course by having you engage in these activities:

  • Quizzes embedded in my videos and posted at the end of each module, which check your basic understanding of the course material.
  • Unit exams that have you demonstrate your knowledge of key terminology and the arguments from the reading, apply course material to new cases, compare competing claims about ethics, and justify positions of your own on moral issues.

As you complete these activities, you will earn philosophy experience points:

Earning Philosophy Experience Points
Activity Experience Points Total Points Available
Orientation 200
Quizzes 200 per module 5,000
Unit Exams 1,000 per exam 6,000
Total 11,200

You have entered this class as a New Philosophy Student, but as you do these activities and earn philosophy experience points you will advance to higher levels. The level at which you end the semester will determine your final letter grade in the course:

Philosopher Advancement
Experience Points Level Title Letter Grade
Less than 2,700 1 New Philosophy Student F1
2,700 to 3,199 2 Philosophy Student D−
3,200 to 3,799 3 Philosophy Initiate D
3,800 to 4,399 4 Novice Philosopher D+
4,400 to 5,099 5 Apprentice Philosopher C−
5,100 to 5,799 6 Unemployed Philosopher C
5,800 to 6,599 7 Armchair Philosopher C+
6,600 to 7,399 8 Stand-Up Philosopher B−
7,400 to 8,299 9 Assistant Philosophy Professor B
8,300 to 9,199 10 Associate Philosophy Professor B+
9,200 to 10,199 11 Philosophy Professor A−
10,200 to 11,199 12 Philosopher Royale A
11,200 or higher 13 Philosopher Supreme A+

UB does not allow final course grades to be an A+ or a D−. Therefore, a final course grade of an A+ will be assigned an A and a final grade of a D− will be assigned a D.

This philosophy experience point structure means that you are free to choose some activities and skip others. You are also free to decide how much you want to engage in the course.

Some students will reach the level of Unemployed Philosopher and then vanish. Fair enough! Others will not relent until they are Philosopher Supreme. Great—go for it! In the end, I will support whatever choice you make.

Happy people checking in at a desk.

Photo: Colleen Hayes / NBC.

24-Hour Grace Period

All activities (including unit exams) have an automatic 24-hour grace period. This means that you are free to finish any activity up to 24 hours after its official due date/time without penalty.

In short, all activities have an automatic 24-hour extension. Further extensions will require the use of philosopher’s stones and/or reasonable accommodations.