This course has two aims. The first supports you in thinking, reading and writing critically about concepts found in the various disciplines of the humanities. Writings in the humanities contain abstract concepts that often turn into scientifi c and technological reality. It is important for you as a scholar to learn how concepts in STEM disciplines have roots that go back to the humanities. It is also relevant for you to understand how scientifi c and engineering innovations have objectives that promote the quality of life for all members of our human race. You will learn to identify different methodologies and approaches to texts and discuss the rhetoric and reasoning employed in these texts. You will then apply these approaches to the real world of scientific and engineering technologies and events. The second aim is to support your communication and presentation of scientific and technical concepts to the lay public. You will learn to explain technical terms in STEM fields in language that the non-scientific public can understand. You will learn to write and present persuasively, so that the lay public will be convinced of the scientific findings and results. This is important for you as a STEM scholar, as you will be facing policy makers and politicians in your career, and you should acquire the skills and techniques of persuasion and rhetoric.
Academic Units | 3 |
Exam Schedule | Not Applicable |
Grade Type | Letter Graded |
Department Maintaining | SOH |
Prerequisites | Must be a Turing AI Scholar |
Mutually Exclusive |
Index | Type | Group | Day | Time | Venue | Remark |
---|
0930
1030
1130
1230
1330
1430
1530
1630
1730
SC1301
22034
SEM | RPR SR2
Teaching Wk1-9,11-13
SC1301
22034
SEM | ONLINE
Teaching Wk10
SC1301
22035
SEM | RPR SR2
Teaching Wk1-9,11-13
SC1301
22035
SEM | ONLINE
Teaching Wk10
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