Re: Urban and Regional Course

1994-06-08 Thread BMCFARLING

I've had some success with using in five of the core chapters 
of Jane Jacob's classic _The Life and Death of Great American Cities_ (but 
it might be "Death and Life"). Jacobs is a thought provoking read for 
students while it is written well enough to be an easy read.

Virtually,

Bruce McFarling, Pellissippi State
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 



Re: Urban and Regional Course

1994-06-07 Thread JTREACY


I'm starting to think about the fall :^( and redesigning my course on
urban and regional theory.  

Treacy: Sometimes it is fun to use something like Von Thunan's Der Isolated 
State and compare it to the modern stuff. [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Marsh Feldman
Community Planning  Phone: 401/792-2248
204 Rodman Hall   FAX: 401/792-4395
University of Rhode Island   Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Kingston, RI 02881-0815



Re: Urban and Regional Course

1994-06-07 Thread R. Anders Schneiderman

On Tue, 7 Jun 1994, Marshall Feldman wrote:

> I'm starting to think about the fall :^( and redesigning my course on
> urban and regional theory.  It's an introductory course for graduate
> students in community planning who have no economics or social science
> prerequisites.  The course is called "Spatial and Fiscal Relationships
> of Communities" and I generally teach it as a course in urban theory,
> covering such "classic" things as Christaller's central place theory,
> the Chicago School's concentric zone theory, etc. and more recent and
> radical stuff like flex-spec, and the like.  Generally, I've used
> Dicken and Lloyd's _Location in Space_ combined with Mike Davis' _City
> of Quartz_ the past few years.  I'm a bit dissatisfied with the course
> covering too much and covering things in too little depth.  Does anyone
> out there teach a similar course and/or have suggestions?

One strategy might be to pick one or two urban areas or urban problems 
(or 1 or 2 problems in 1 urban area) and then alternate between 
theoretical and empirical approaches--perhaps even breaking the class 
into teams who are supposed to produce parts of a larger report.  I've 
used this strategy successfully in teaching computer courses (and with 
mixed success in teaching about the welfare state).  I found that by 
building the course around a task that's very tangible and very 
bounded, I could interweave different theoretical approaches, issues, 
etc. without leaving the students feeling too overwhelmed.  However, it 
does require a lot of thinking/daydreaming about the structure of the 
course well in advance.

Anders Schneiderman
UCB Sociology / Center for Community Economic Research