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Along with DCB email, I will also use the “announcement” section of the

Moodle class to communicate, so be sure to check it regularly.

Academic Integrity:

All students are expected to adhere to the highest standards of academic

integrity. Dishonesty in the classroom or studio and with assignments,

quizzes, exams, and papers is a serious offense and is subject to disciplinary

action by the instructor and college administration. For more information

refer to the Student Handbook. Please note that I have a ZERO tolerance

policy for cheating, plagiarism, and copyright violations.

Disabilities and Special Needs:

If you have a disability for which you are, or may be, requesting an

accommodation, you are encouraged to contact your instructor and Kayla

O’Toole in the Learning Center (228-5479) as early as possible during the

beginning of the semester.

Late Assignments:

I will NOT accept late assignments unless you make arrangements ahead of

time. The art world is a deadline driven world, and I would be doing you a

great disservice to allow late work.

Grading Philosophy:

Please understand that I do not care about your grades, I care about your

education. My job is to teach you, your job is to learn what I teach you, and

hopefully more. If we both do our jobs, grades shouldn’t be necessary.

An instructor once said to me, “if you do everything that is expected of you in

this class, then you will earn a “C”. Because only doing what is expected is

average, and a “C” represents an average grade. If you want a “B,” do more

than is expected, if you want an “A,” do a lot more than is expected.”

I embraced this philosophy as a student and discovered something amazing.

When I did more than what was expected, I learned more, and when I did a

lot more than was expected, I learned a lot more. Amazing huh?

The best way to succeed in my class is to not focus on - “what’s my grade” -

but instead focus on - “how much can I learn.” If you embrace this, you won’t

be doing assignments for grades, you’ll be doing them in order to learn, and

the grade will become secondary and take care of itself.