6 EC
Semester 1, period 1
5512CIEC6Y
During this course we will observe the linear economy and the current state of it. We will try to identify the externalities of this economy that have influences on the world around us. After looking at the status quo, we will study transition theory and will try to tackle some of the problems that currently exist in our economical system. The circular economy is one of the solutions that were presented to solve the problems in the linear economy. We will study this solution, its benefits and its flaws in detail. We will also study other proposed solutions (such as dougnut economics and the biobased economy) and will identify the differences between them. After that we will look at the changes that both governments and companies will need to make in order to make the shift towards a circular economy. The students will analyse specific cases individually as well as in a group assignment.
Will become available as a reader online
Lectures
During the 8 lectures in this course, the field of the circular economy and related fields will be explained thoroughly
Seminars
During the seminars, the matter of the lectures and the corresponding literature will be discussed in depth
Presentations
Once during the course, the students will teach each other about a specific subfield.
Self-study
A lot of self-study is necessary during this course. For a 6EC course, we have a relatively small amount of contact moments. The course uses quite a lot of literature (books, articles and documentaries), that will need to be read by the students.
Working independently on a project
Much of the time available for this course will be spent on a group assignment in a group of 3 or 4. The group assignment entails an analysis concerning the circular economy.
Feedback meeting
One of the tutorials will be used for a feedback session with the tutor.
|
Activity |
Hours |
|
|
Lecture |
14 |
|
|
Exam |
2 |
|
|
Question hour |
1 |
|
|
Tutorials |
14 |
|
|
Self study |
77 |
|
|
Group work |
60 |
|
|
Total |
168 |
(6 EC x 28 uur) |
Additional requirements for this course:
The lectures have no attendancy obligations, but the subjects of the lectures are a part of the exam.
According to the OER, 10% of the tutorials can be missed. This adds up to 1 of the tutorials.
| Item and weight | Details |
|
Final grade | |
|
50% Exam | Must be ≥ 5.5, Mandatory |
|
40% Group assignment | Mandatory |
|
10% Individual assignments | Mandatory |
The exam will consist of open questions. Per question there is a maximum amount of points. All the points are added up. The grade is determined as follows:
(Number of Points)/(Maximum number of points)*9+1
In case the course structure did not change fundamentally from previous year, the IIS uses the rule that course components that were passed with a sufficient grade ánd meeting the attendance requirements ánd practical exams, can be used for one year. In case students want to finish the course after two years, they need to meet the same requirements as the first year.
| Passed component in... | Last year | 2+ years before |
|---|---|---|
| Attendance requirements | Stays valid, as long as student contacts Tim Bulters before 10-08-2019 | No longer valid |
| Mid term exam | Sufficient grade stays valid in case student contacts Tim Bulters before 10-08-2019 | No longer valid. |
| Final exam | Sufficient grade stays valid in case student contacts Tim Bulters before 10-08-2019 | No longer valid. |
| Paper | Sufficient grade stays valid in case student contacts Tim Bulters before 10-08-2019 | No longer valid.. |
After the exam, the grades will be communicated through an email and a central moment will be organized, at which the students can review their exam and ask question about the answers and the grading.
For the work that is handed in digitally, the grades will also be communicated digitally. If students then have questions about the grading, they can ask those per email. If necessary, a separate meeting can be planned.
During the couse there will be two smaller assignments, that will together form 10% of the final grade of the course:
There is also a large final assignment, that will be executed in a group of 3 or 4. More information about the contents of this assignment will be communicated through Canvas. Feedback will be given through Canvas or email. This grade will make up 40% of the final grade.
This course adheres to the general rules on ‘Fraud and Plagiarism` as set by the UvA. Students are expected to have familiarized themselves with these rules.
The terms Fraud or Plagiarism are to be interpreted as the copying of the work of peer-student and/or the copying of (scientific) sources of information, without explicitly referring to its source.
Fraud/plagiarism is forbidden and actively checked by staff. When one is suspected of having committed fraud/plagiarism, the exam committee of beta-gamma and future planet studies will be informed. The highest punishment for fraud/plagiarism involves the student to be disallowed to partake of any exams or examination activities within the future planet studies programme, for the duration of a whole academic year, or may even face dismissal from the programme. More information about Fraud and Plagiarism can be found at: www.uva.nl/plagiaat
| Week nr. | Topics | Study material |
| 1 | Linear Economy | See Canvas |
| 2 | Transition theory | See Canvas |
| 3 | Circular Economy | See Canvas |
| 4 | Measuring circularity | See Canvas |
| 5 | What can governments do? | See Canvas |
| 6 | What can companies do? | See Canvas |
| 7 | Guest lecture circular entrepreneur | See Canvas |
| 8 | Overview lecture | See Canvas |
The schedule for this course is published on DataNose.
This course is being taught for the first time, so there is no evaluation from a previous year yet.