<%@LANGUAGE="JAVASCRIPT" CODEPAGE="65001"%> beginning metals course outline

anvil
beginning metals art240, spring 2012, mark rooker, rookermd@jmu.edu, o.h. 9:30-10:30 m-th

course outline:

Course goals
  • Students will gain competency in basic technical skills of metal fabrication including sawing, filing, sanding, texturing, shaping, joining, and welding metal.
  • Students will develop their knowledge of metallurgy--kinds of metal, their properties, uses, and forms--by working with metal as a medium of personal aesthetic expression.
  • Students will expand their awareness of historical and contemporary movements in metal and the relationship of metal to other disciplines.
  • Students will, through creative and technical experimentation, produce original works of art in metal by applying metal fabrication techniques, design methodology and visual organization skills.
  • Students will cultivate commitment and professionalism through critiquing and evaluating their own artwork and the work of others, on the basis of individual performance, craft, design, and conceptual elements.
Grades:

Your semester grade will be determined by the following:

25 points: Project 1: Flatware
25 points: Project 2: Piercings
25 points: Project 3: Ring

20 points: Skill-building Exercises (ten exercises worth two points each)

05 points: Performance-based final exam

100 points total

Projects and project grades will be composed of three parts: ideation (methodology, sketchbook, and models) object (craft, and design), and critique (display and criticism).

Exercises (2 points each) will allow you practice key techniques and develop your technical competence. They will be graded solely on craft.

The final exam will test your knowledge of key concepts and techniques through a performance based task (5 points).

I'll be using the standards for grades as they are defined in the Undergraduate Catalog.

"A" Superior,
"B" Good,
"C" Average,
"D" Passing,
"E" Failure.

Out of the total of 100 points possible, the grading scale is as follows:

100 - 98 = A+
<98 - 93 = A
<93 - 90 = A-
<90 - 88= B+
<88 - 83 = B
<83 - 80 = B-
<80 - 78 = C+
<78 - 73 = C
<73 - 70 = C-
<70 - 68 = D+
<68 - 63 = D
<63 - 60 = D-
<60 and below = FAILING
Attendance and work hours:

It is important to attend every class, be on time, and be prepared to work. Failure to attend class regularly and/or arriving late suggests poor motivation on the part of the student. Therefore, if more than one absence and/or three tardies are accumulated, it will be reflected in your final grade as follows: 1/3 of a letter grade penalty on your semester grade for each unexcused absence and for every three tardies beyond the two "free" absences and three tardies allowed.

You are responsible for any information missed during an absence. No make-up presentations will be given.

Aproximately one hour of work outside of class is expected for every hour spent in class. Open lab hours will be posted.

Deadlines:

Group and individual critiques rely on completed work and full student participation, so meeting deadlines is critical. A late penalty of 1 point per class will be assessed on any late assignment. Completed work is to be turned in at the beginning of class on the day it is due. If you are absent on the day the work is due, it must be handed in at the beginning of the next class period you attend. Lost or damaged work will be viewed as incomplete, so protect all completed work with great care.

Office Hours:

My office hours will be 9:30-10:30 Monday through Thursday in the Metals Classroom. Meetings can also be arranged by appointment. Feel free to come in during office hours for extra help, or to ask questions.

Other Policies:

Any art work not picked up by the beginning of the following semester will be disposed of.

If you recieve an incomplete for the course, it must be made up before you will be allowed any overrides for more advanced metals courses.

You and a a partner will be issued will assigned a drawer in the metals classroom. Personal items must be cleaned out of the drawers by the last day of finals. After that date, anything found in the drawers will be disposed of.

Only currently enrolled metals and jewelry students are allowed to use the studio and tools. "Public" tools may not be removed from the studio or stored in "personal" toolkits. Lost or stolen "public" tools will not be replaced during the semester.

Other University policies can be viewed at:

www.jmu.edu/syllabus

Access:

Currently enrolled students will have access to the Wine-Price building and the Metals Classroom 24/7 except while other classes are meeting. JACard readers are located at each interior classroom door and the southwest entrance of the building. Lab Hours can be viewed by clicking here.

 

 

 

mark rooker, james madison university