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Showing posts from March, 2020

Origins of Modern American Anthropology (Aaron Dahlgren, Calvin To, Valerie Castro, Emily Ortiz)

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Eugenics in America by Natalie P. and Corinna G

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Eugenics (Carlos, Savannah, Destenie)

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Controversial Racism in Early Anthropology by Briana Acosta, Yvonne Almaraz, Mikhael Fenelon

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Eugenics - Arguments throughout History (Courtney Babcock & Regina Crocfer)

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Sexuality Through a Lens

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Racial Theory

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Ethnocentrism

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By Paul Grant, Devin Florian, Bernardo Villatoro, Jessica Zepeda Ethnocentrism - Canva

Evolution Of Racism Through Time

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Evolution Of Racism Through Time I have also attached a link to our Canva account since the quality of the pictures doesn't seem to be the best.  The Gender of Anthropology was because I confused this class with my Gender since i have both with T sooo Big Ooops :}

Boasian Anthropology

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Some Notable Ideas That Reshape the Way We View Culture

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A Scope Into: Gods of the Upper Air (Social Anthropology Terms)

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The Ones that Changed American Anthropology -Tammy Phan

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cultural relativism vs eugenics infographic

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Infographic by Ashley Merdkhanian

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Facilitation Info

Signing Up:  If you have not yet signed up to facilitate, please write your name in below. Let's aim for no more than 4 facilitators per session. We'll begin just after "Spring Break." Facilitation Guidelines (these are also on Blackboard): Post five open-ended questions. Open-ended questions begin with words such as “how” or “why” and encourage lively conversation. If your question can be answered with a single word (“yes,” “no,” “dinosaur”) it is not open-ended. Three of the questions should focus on the content (Mead’s trip to Samoa, for example) Two of the questions should be more meta , focusing on theory, methods, practice, writing (“Why did ‘patterns’ prevail over ‘squares’?” for example, or “Why do you think King chose to write this as a popular book, not an academic one?” Participation Guidelines: Choose one discussion thread and jump in. Please feel free to engage with the original questions, your peers' comments, or both.  Week 1...

Infographics

Welcome! This blog will be the showcase spot for your infographics.  When you are ready to share, please download your infographic from Piktochart or Canva and attach it to the body of your post. Feel free to add any relevant background information as text in the body of your blog post.  To post, log into Blogger and click on  New post . Be sure to include the names of everyone in your group.  You may post your infographic anytime between now and March 26th at midnight.  We're all pretty isolated right now. Let's break the silence by adding feedback in the comments section.  Your grade will appear on Blackboard.