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I'm a Survivor: Claims, Reasons, and Evidence
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CC BY-NC-SA
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This is a first year college composition lesson for a unit on persuasive writing that discusses claims, reasons, and evidence. Before this lesson, we would have already discussed what claims, reasons, and evidence are and how they work in persuasive writing. This is a group work activity. Students will need to be placed into manageable groups of 3-4, so they can comfortably discuss and confer with one another. 

Subject:
Composition and Rhetoric
English Language Arts
Higher Education
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Author:
Yvonne De La Cruz
Date Added:
11/30/2019
Zombie Apocalypse: Holy Land, Haiti, Hollywood
Unrestricted Use
CC BY
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Zombie Apocalypse: Holy Land, Haiti, Hollywood explores the intellectual and cultural histories of two highly influential and essentially religious ideas, that of the zombie and that of the apocalypse. The former is a modern idea rooted in Haitian Vodou and its popular African and European religious antecedents, while the latter is an ancient one rooted in Zoroastrianism and the Bible and widely expanded in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, and is arguably one of the most influential ideas in world history. Today the merger of the zombie and the apocalypse has pervaded popular culture, with the zombie surpassing the vampire and Frankenstein as the most prolific monster in popular American consciousness.

Drawing on biblical studies, African studies, Caribbean studies, and the sociology and history of religion, Parts I (Holy Land) and II (Haiti) explore the religious origins of these ideas. Part III (Hollywood) uses aspects of cultural studies, literary analysis, critical race theory, and cinema studies to document the (primarily) American obsession with the zombie and the zombie apocalypse.

The apocalypse and the zombie have been momentous intellectual, historical, and cultural realities and social forces in both very ancient and very recent human history and culture. As such, Zombie Apocalypse provides a focused analysis of certain fundamental aspects of human existence. It challenges readers to cultivate their critical thinking skills while learning about two of the most compelling notions in human religious history and the impact they continue to have.

Subject:
Arts and Humanities
Religious Studies
Material Type:
Textbook
Provider:
Temple University
Author:
Terry Rey
Date Added:
03/07/2024
A Zombie Got My Leg
Read the Fine Print
Educational Use
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Students experience the engineering design process as they design and construct lower-leg prostheses in response to a hypothetical zombie apocalypse scenario. Like the well-known Apollo 13 story during which engineers were challenged to fix the crippled spacecraft with limited supplies in order to save astronauts' lives, in this activity, students act as engineers during an imaginary disaster in which a group member's leg was amputated in order to survive a zombie attack. Building on what they learned and researched in the associated lesson, they design and fabricate a replacement prosthetic limb using given specific starting material and limited additional supplies, similar to how engineers design for individuals while working within constraints. A more-advanced scenario challenges students to design a prosthesis that is able to provide a more-specific movement function.

Subject:
Applied Science
Engineering
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Provider:
TeachEngineering
Provider Set:
TeachEngineering
Author:
Andrea Lee
Megan Ketchum
Date Added:
10/14/2015