Faculty Syllabus

HUMA-1301 Humanities: Prehistory to Renaissance


Kenneth Alewine


Credit Spring 2026


Section(s)

HUMA-1301-015 (32408)
LEC MW 1:30pm - 2:50pm SGC SGC1 1317

Instructor Information

Instructor: Kenneth Alewine, PhD Medical Humanities—University of Texas Medical Branch (2017)
Adjunct Associate Professor of the Humanities—ACC.

Email: kenneth.alewine@austincc.edu


Course Description/Rationale

A study of representative samples of literature, art, and music of various periods and cultures from prehistory through the Renaissance. The study of the interrelationships of the arts and their philosophies emphasizes an understanding of human nature and the values of human life.

A passing score or the equivalent on the reading and writing portion of the TSI test is required for this class.

This stand-alone course is an interdisciplinary survey of cultures focusing on the philosophical and aesthetic factors in human values with an emphasis on the historical development of the individual and society and the need to create.


Course Requirements

GRADING SYSTEM

Class Participation/Discussions — 30%

3 Study Question Assignments — 30%

3 Making Connections — 30 %

12 Journal Posts — 10%

SCALE:  100 - 90 = A

89 - 80 = B

79 – 70 = C

69 – 60 = D

below 60 = F

Instructional Methodology

Participation:

This course is all about participation. Thoughtful and consistent participation is a very important part of the class. Each student is expected to be an active participant. Your presence is requested and required. This is the single most important component of the course. The class does not work unless each student is an active participant in the course. If you were not usually the one to talk in class discussions in the past, don’t worry; this is a supportive group where you will get an opportunity to practice participating. Participation is also 30% of your course grade.

Study Questions for Class Discussion:

Each reading assignment will include several study questions to help direct your reading of the text. Careful thinking about the study questions while you are reading and before coming to class will help you form your thoughts and make class conversation easy and enjoyable.

Study Question Essay:

You must complete three Study Question Essay assignment over the duration of the semester. See Course Calendar for due dates. Assignments are submitted via Blackboard. You should select a passage from the assigned reading that you think addresses one study questions selected for the essay assignment.

Then, you should reproduce this passage, paraphrase it in your own words and explain why that passage addressed the study question. Finally, answer any additional parts of the questions. So, your assignment should take the following form:

A quotation from the assigned reading, which helps answer the study question. (please also list chapter, page and/or line number)

A paraphrase, in your own words, of the quotation you selected

An explanation of why that passage in the text addresses the study question.

Your response to the personal reflection portion of the study question.

Please review the grading rubric on Blackboard to see how your faculty leaders will grade your assignment. This should be used to help guide your drafting of the assignment.

Making Connections:

Throughout this semester, each student will complete three “Making Connections” assignments in preparation for course meetings and discussions. In preparation for “Making Connections” days you will (1) explore a list of great works that humans have created, (2) select a work that interests you, and (3) conduct research to learn about the work. On “Making Connections” days, you will have an opportunity to share what you have learned with your classmates and learn about what they have discovered.

These assignments are designed to encourage students to explore works of cultural significance and broaden their cultural and historical knowledge base.

Faculty Meetings:

Students will meet privately with their professor twice each semester. Remember, your faculty leaders are not just here to guide you in this course but to help you understand how to navigate ACC as well. They will help introduce you to ACC resources and make sure you have the support you need to be successful.

One meeting will take place in the first 3 weeks of the semester and another in the second half of the semester. Each meeting will last between 10-15 minutes. Some meetings last an hour or so. It’s up to you.

Student Success Journal:

Your journal entries are viewable by you and your professor - feel free to ask for advice and guidance about anything related to your first semester at ACC. You will create journal entries throughout the semester, so consider this a conversation with your professor and yourself. These are intended to be reflective and are not formal writing assignments. Use the prompts provided as a starting point, and make sure you write at least a good paragraph or two (at least 200 words).


Readings

Homer’s Odyssey

Translated by: Emily Wilson Publisher: Norton

ISBN: 9780393356250

The Odyssey is Homer’s epic poem of Odysseus’ journey home after 10 years of war in Troy. We will follow along on Odysseus' epic journey, all the while analyzing his ultimate goal, the factors that motivate him to undertake such a journey, and the ways in which he is able to keep going even in the face of temptations and obstacles. Throughout our discussions, you will be encouraged to reflect on your own educational journey in a similar light. This story has inspired men and women for the past 3,000 years to set high goals for themselves and develop a plan to achieve them. It has helped countless people see that even when one suffers detours and setbacks like Odysseus, reaching one’s goals is still possible.

 

Plato’s Meno

Translated by: GMA Grube Publisher: Hackett

ISBN: 9780915144242

Plato’s Meno deals with the timeless struggle of how to learn something new. Sometimes people think that if they don’t understand something right away that it is just not in them to learn it.

They may say something like, “I’m not a math person” or “I’m not smart enough” and then give up on trying. In the Meno, Socrates confronts a boy who has a similar reaction when working on a difficult mathematical problem and gets him to overcome his false assumption that he cannot learn by guiding him through the process of solving it. After a discussion with Socrates, the boy experiences a shift in mindset from assuming he is not intelligent enough to solve the problem to realizing the solution was in him all along, and that by engaging with the problem and persisting in the face of uncertainty he could indeed unlock the knowledge needed to find the solution.

Throughout the text, Plato challenges us to think about our thinking. How do we know when we know something? How do we know when we still need to do more work before we can know it? In the Meno, Socrates teaches that all real learning begins when we recognize that we don’t know.

 

Euclid’s Elements

Euclid’s Elements Book One with Questions By Dana Densmore

Publisher: Green Cat Press ISBN: 9781888009460

Euclid’s text is a model for how to think clearly and logically. Through the study and demonstration of his geometrical proofs, we will learn the structure of logical arguments and what it means to prove something. This text will help us apply principles of metacognition to our studies by introducing us to the experience of what it is like to really know something. After you understand an entire proof of Euclid’s, you will feel what it is like to really know that something is true. His proofs provide a window onto the beauty of truth and will inspire us to want to open it further. Studying this text will provide you with a benchmark by which you can judge how well you know other things.

You should ask yourself about future topics of study, “is this as clear to me as a Euclid proof?” Applying this question is a great way to gauge how well you understand a thing.

 

The Heart of Chinese Poetry: Fifty-Seven of the Best Traditional Chinese Poems in a Dual-Language Edition

Translated and Edited by Greg Whincup

Publisher: Anchor; First Edition (September 16, 1987) ISBN: 038523967X

These selections of Chinese poems represent over 1,000 years of poetic tradition in China. According to Prof. Greg Whincup, “Poetry is the heart of Chinese culture. Inasmuch as we are all members of one human race, Chinese culture is our culture. The heart of Chinese poetry beats in us, too.” Through these readings, you will learn not just about Chinese poetry but also about the culture, history and language of China, whose soul is poetry.

Additional required selected readings are available on Blackboard. They are in .pdf format.


Course Subjects

Ancient Greek Literature
Homer, Sappho
Euclidian Geometry
Ancient Creation Narratives
Medieval Christian Mystics
Hildegard von Bingen, St. John of the Cross
Humanist Literature: Petrarch
Eastern Indian Poetry
Classical Chinese Poetry
 


Student Learning Outcomes/Learning Objectives

Departmental Learning Outcomes

After successful completion of any Humanities course, a student should be able to:

  • Identify a variety of significant works of art from various times and places in human history.
  • Analyze works of art within their cultural context.
  • Evaluate the relationship between the arts and human values.

Student Learning Outcomes

After successful completion of this Humanities 1301 course, a student should be able to:

  • Demonstrate awareness of the scope and variety of works in the arts and humanities.
  • Articulate how these works express the values of the individual and society within an historical and social context.
  • Articulate an informed personal response and critically analyze works in the arts and humanities.
  • Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of the influence of literature, philosophy, and the arts on cultural experiences.
  • Demonstrate an awareness of the creative process and why humans create.

Set goals to support personal motivation and achievement.

  1. Adopt a growth mindset toward personal education and career goals which fosters hard work, grit, a desire for continual improvements, and persistence in the face of failure.
  2. Distinguish between intrinsic and extrinsic motivation and examine how intrinsic motivation encourages lifelong learning.
  3. Apply principles of metacognition to increase self-awareness of the learning process and personal strengths and weaknesses as a learner.
  4. Enhance emotional intelligence, thereby improving interpersonal, leadership, and self-management skills.

General Education Competencies

  • Communication Skills: Develop, interpret, and express ideas and information through written, oral and visual communication that is adapted to purpose, structure, audience, and medium.
  • Critical Thinking Skills: Gather, analyze, synthesize, evaluate and apply information for the purposes of innovation, inquiry, and creative thinking.
  • Personal Responsibility: Identify and apply ethical principles and practices to decision-making by connecting choices, actions and consequences
  • Social Responsibility (Civic and Cultural Awareness): Analyze differences and commonalities among peoples, ideas, aesthetic traditions, and cultural practices to include intercultural competence, knowledge of civic responsibility, and the ability to engage effectively in regional, national, and global communities.

Course Calendar

Week

Monday

Wednesday

Due Sunday

1

1/19-1/25

 

1/19 HOLIDAY

HOLIDAY

Class Introduction

 

Discussion:

First Lines of the Odyssey

 

Journal #1

Orientation Exit Survey

 

 

2

1/26-2/1

Unit One: Struggle

Read: Homer’s Odyssey:

Books 1- 4

 

Discuss: Books 1-4

Study Questions

Read: Homer’s Odyssey:

Books 5- 8

 

Discuss: Books 5-8

Study Questions

Journal #2

 

 

3

2/2-2/8

Read: Homer’s Odyssey:

Books 9-12

 

Discuss: Books 9-12

Study Questions

Read: Homer’s Odyssey:

Books 13-18

 

Discuss: Books 13-18

Study Questions

Journal #3

 

Making

Connections Topic 

Selection Due

 

4

2/9-2/15

Read: Homer’s Odyssey:

Books 19-24

 

Discuss: Books 19-24

Study Questions

 

Review and Reflect

Discuss Making Connections Expectations.

Study Question

Essay #1

 

Making Connections Due Monday.

5

2/16-2/22

Making Connections Presentation 1 Due

 

Discuss:

Making Connections 1 Presentations

Discuss:

Making Connections 1 Presentations

Journal #4

 

6

2/23-3/1

Unit Two: Truth and Creation

Read: Plato’s Meno 70a- 84c

 

Discuss: Meno 70a-84c

Read: Plato’s Meno 84c-end

 

Discuss: Meno 84-end

Journal #5

 

 

 

 

Week

Monday

Wednesday

Due Sunday

7

3/2-3/8

Read: Euclid, Book I (Definitions, Postulates and Common Notions)

 

Discuss: Euclid, Book I (Definitions, Postulates and Common Notions)

Demonstrate: Euclid Propositions 1-5

 

 

Journal #6

8

3/9-3/15

Demonstrate: Euclid

Propositions 11-13, 15, and 29

Demonstrate: Euclid Propositions 32, 35, 36, 37, and 47

 

Optional: Euclid IRL

Journal #7

 

Making

Connections Topic 

Selection Due

 

 

 

3/16-3/22

 

            

 

              Spring Break

             

 

 

         Spring Break

 

9

3/23-3/29

 

Read: Creation Selections

Quran and Genesis

 

Discuss:

Quran

Genesis 1, Chapters 1-4

 

Read: Creation Selections

Popol Vuh and Rig Veda

 

Discuss:

Popol Vuh

Rig Vega

 

Journal #8

 

Study Question

Essay #2

 

Making Connections Due Monday.

10

3/30-4/5

Making Connections

Presentation 2 Due

 

Discuss:

Making Connections 2 Presentations

Discuss:

Making Connections 2 Presentations

Journal #9

11

4/6-4/12

Unit Three: Devotion and Passion

Read: Devotion Selections

Psalms and Matthew

 

Discuss:

Psalm 14,23,51

Matthew 5-7

 

Read: Devotion Selections

St. John of the Cross, Hildegard and Kabir

 

Discuss: Devotion

St. John of the Cross Hildegard

Kabir

 

Journal #10

 

 

Week

Monday

Wednesday

Due Sunday

12

4/13-4/19

 

Read: Passion Selections

Petrarch

 

Discuss: Petrarch

 

Read: Passion Selections

Sappho

 

Discuss: Sappho and

poetry exercise

Journal #11

 

13

4/20-4/26

Read: Passion Selections

Rumi

 

Discuss:

Rumi

 

Read: Passion Selections

Mirabai and Nammalvar

Discuss:

Mirabai and Nammalvar

Making   

Connections Topic 

Selection Due

 

Last Day to Withdraw for 16, 14 and 12-week classes is 4/27

 

14

4/27-5/3

Read: The Heart of Chinese Poetry

1-9, 12-16

Discuss: Chinese Poetry

 

Read: The Heart of Chinese Poetry

19, 21, 25, 29, 31, 33

Discuss: Chinese Poetry

 

 

15

5/4-5/10

Read: The Heart of Chinese Poetry

35-41 and 48-52

 

Discuss: Chinese Poetry

 

Share: Your Chinese Poem exercise

 

Discuss:

Concluding Thoughts

Making Connections

Presentations Due Monday

 

Study Question Essay #3

 

16

5/11-5/17

Discuss:

Making Connections Presentations

Discuss:

Making Connections Presentations

Journal #12

 

GQS Exit Survey

 


Office Hours

M T W Th 2:50 PM - 3:50 PM ZOOM, SGC and RRC

NOTE Online Zoom hours and F2F availability . . . .

Published: 01/19/2026 10:35:49