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University of Pittsburgh-Johnstown
2019-2020 Johnstown Campus Catalog
University of Pittsburgh Johnstown
   
2019-2020 Johnstown Campus Catalog 
    
 
  May 03, 2024
 
2019-2020 Johnstown Campus Catalog [Archived Catalog]

Course Information


Please note, when searching courses by Catalog Number, an asterisk (*) can be used to return mass results. For instance a Catalog Number search of ” 1* ” can be entered, returning all 1000-level courses.

 

Geography

  
  •  

    GEOG 1300 - RUSSIA AND EURASIAN STATES


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Presents a systematic analysis of the area’s physical, human, and cultural variables and analyzes the distribution, arrangement, and interrelations of these variables.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
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    GEOG 1350 - GEOGRAPHY OF TERRORISM


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    The class will explore theoretical and applied spatial topics of geography in terrorist networks, geostrategies, propaganda and other topics of contemporary terrorism research. Global terrorism and counter terrorism, regional conflicts and mass violence, along with American reaction to global terrorism will be examined. Current events, relative to course material, will be discussed. Class discussion will be an integral part of this course.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
    Course Requirements: PREQ: Any GEOG class or instructor consent
  
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    GEOG 1410 - FIELD RESEARCH


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Examines various field techniques for the collection, analysis, and interpretation of data. Both physical and cultural variables are studied. Students are expected to spend time in an out-of-class situation.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
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    GEOG 1420 - GIS SPECIAL PROJECTS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course provides the student with an opportunity to develop and demonstrate proficiency in the design and execution of an original, substantive, term-length project using geographic information systems. Students work one-on-one with a faculty supervisor.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GEOG 0420 and GEOG 1425 and GEOG 1440
  
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    GEOG 1425 - REMOTE SENSING


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course provides an introduction to remote sensing. The major goal of remote sensing is to obtain information about the earth’s surface from measurements by aircraft or satellite sensors of radiated energy. Remote sensing is considered an important research field in geography and other earth sciences. Throughout the course, students will learn the basic physical principles underlying remote sensing analysis and how to process and interpret images obtained from satellite sensors. The course will introduce the basic principles of image interpretation in relation to optical, thermal, and microwave remote sensing systems. Examples of remote sensing applications will be presented along with methods for obtaining quantitative information from remote sensing images. Interpretation of remote sensing images will emphasize the importance of spatial and society-environment relationships.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
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    GEOG 1440 - GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Explores the use of computer-based GIS (Geographic Information Systems) and spatially-referenced data to solve problems of accessibility, optimal routes, site selection and land use planning, market area analysis and spatial modeling for raster and vector GIS. GIS software is used in all lab exercises.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GEOG 0420 and MATH 0001 or Math Placement Score (46 or greater)
  
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    GEOG 1600 - JOHNSTOWN AREA STUDY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This seminar affords participants the opportunity to devise, implement, analyze and write up an actual research project, drawing on data from the Johnstown area. The substantive topic varies from year to year; whatever the topical focus, considerable attention is paid to the practical aspects of conducting research.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
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    GEOG 1610 - URBAN PLANNING


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Urban planning aims to promote the social, economic, and environmental well-being of local communities. In this course, students will explore the purpose, practice, and theories of contemporary planning. They will also develop the ability to observe, analyze, and evaluate the built environment, which provides a crucial foundation for good urban policy decision-making. Through reality-based problems, students will understand the interplay between planning analysis, regulation, markets, and the political process. Course themes include the history of planning, land use and zoning, the legal framework of planning, downtown redevelopment, suburban sprawl and new urbanism, public space, transportation planning, citizen participation in planning, and other topics.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
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    GEOG 1615 - SUSTAINABLE CITIES 1: THEORIES AND CONCEPTS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Explorations of the sustainability concept and how it applies to cities, including efforts to build more livable, equitable, energy efficient, and ecologically sound places. Technological, social, and cultural innovations that shape the form and function of the built environment will be examined on location in Amsterdam, the Netherlands
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
    Course Requirements: CREQ: GEOG 1620
  
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    GEOG 1620 - SUSTAINABLE CITIES 2: FIELD RESEARCH


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Focuses on field research in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. Students are expected to build on knowledge acquired in Sustainable Cities 1 and develop an independent project which will result in research on a topic related to sustainable cities.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Directed Studies
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
    Course Requirements: CREQ: GEOG 1615
  
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    GEOG 1800 - SPECIAL TOPICS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Detailed analysis of a particular topic not covered by regularly scheduled courses.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
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    GEOG 1810 - DIRECTED READING


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 6
    The student undertakes a specified course of study, comparable in content to a special topics course, under the direct supervision of a faculty member.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Directed Studies
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
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    GEOG 1820 - DIRECTED RESEARCH


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 6
    The student undertakes a defined task of research under the supervision of a faculty member, and in which the results of the research are embodied in a thesis, extended paper, laboratory report, or other appropriate form.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Directed Studies
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
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    GEOG 1830 - INDEPENDENT STUDY


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 6
    The student undertakes, under specific conditions, an independent program of study, research, or creative activity, usually off-campus and with less immediate and frequent guidance from the sponsoring faculty member than is typically provided in directed reading and directed research courses.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Independent Study
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis

Geology

  
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    GEOL 0010 - PRINCIPLES OF ASTRONOMY


    Minimum Credits: 4
    Maximum Credits: 4
    The course involves a systematic survey of both the solar system and stellar astronomy which includes historical perspectives and modern discoveries. The planets, stars, galaxies and cosmology are discussed in detail homework and class exercises expose the student to practical methods of astronomy and utilize basic math skills of algebra and trigonometry.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
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    GEOL 0024 - METEOROLOGY


    Minimum Credits: 4
    Maximum Credits: 4
    This course will provide students with an overview of the earth’s weather systems. Emphasis will be on lab-centered, hands-on activities designed to demonstrate weather phenome non through a holistic approach. Topics will include, but are not limited to, structure and composition of the atmosphere, global patterns of circulation, pressure systems, fronts, air masses, weather maps and weather prediction, and climate systems. Students will be required to complete weekly assignments; there will be a semester project; at least one class session will be a field trip.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: MATH 0001 or Math Placement Score (46 or greater)
  
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    GEOL 0061 - HISTORICAL GEOLOGY


    Minimum Credits: 4
    Maximum Credits: 4
    Basic principles for reconstructing the geologic past are introduced, and earth history is surveyed in terms of geological and biological evolution from the origin of the solar system to the present. Laboratory work includes study of rocks as clues to earth history, identification of fossils, stratigraphic correlation, paleoenvironmental and paleogeographic reconstruction, and interpretation of geologic history from geologic maps.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GEOL 0015
  
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    GEOL 0083 - INTRO TO PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Emphasis on physical aspects of the oceans. Topics include geology of the seafloor, chemical and physical nature of seawater, waves, tides, coastal systems, ocean resources, and environmental concerns.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
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    GEOL 0086 - ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will provide the student with an awareness of the environmental problems and geologic hazards facing mankind today. Case studies of environmental disruption, both natural and manmade, will be presented. The main topics include: volcanism, earthquakes, flooding, slope instability, hydrologic cycle, surface and ground water supply, water law, water pollution, fuel resources, acid mine drainage, and greenhouse effect.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
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    GEOL 0090 - EARTHQUAKES AND VOLCANOES


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Introductory class that will provide the student with an understanding of how earthquakes and volcanoes occur and impact our planet. Earthquakes and volcanoes can vary from small phenomena with little effect on their surrounding environment to large-scale disasters that impact a wide-geographical region. This course will explore the physical causes, the differences between small and large events, and the results that impact the landscape of our planet.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
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    GEOL 0091 - PREHISTORIC LIFE


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    How has life on earth changed throughout the last 3.8 billion years of geologic time? This course is an overview of the science of paleontology and the fossil record of ancient life. Geological and biological principles for interpreting ancient life are introduced and examined. The earth’s geologic timescale and methods of absolute and relative age dating techniques will be discussed. Important groups from the invertebrate and vertebrate fossil records, including, plants, dinosaurs, and other organisms will be covered. The course will include several field trips to nearby locations to collect and examine fossils along with the rocks in which they are found.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
  
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    GEOL 0092 - GEOLOGY OF NATIONAL PARKS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    The basic principles of physical geology are explored within the context of observed geology at United States National Parks. The basic science of various geological concepts are introduced and specific Nationals Parks are explored as examples of those processes. Each section of the course is designed to fully incorporate the natural examples of geology within our wonderful National Park system.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
  
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    GEOL 0093 - GEOLOGY AND CINEMA


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    How does Hollywood get science so wrong? This course explores Hollywood’s depiction of science, especially natural disasters, and the liberties they take. Lecture will introduce topics and explain the foundations of the scientific principles that help us understand how our Earth works. Disaster movies are viewed in lecture followed by a discussion of the scientific accuracies and inaccuracies. This course provides a fun way to learn more about science by breaking down the poor, glamorized science depicted in movies.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
  
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    GEOL 0200 - GEODYNAMICS


    Minimum Credits: 4
    Maximum Credits: 4
    The earth operates as a system on long time scales and millennia of scientific investigation has revealed the processes at work. This course is designed to build on topics introduced in introductory geology and strengthen the understanding of basic geologic / scientific principles. This course will provide the history, data and empirical derivation of the principles of earth science as we know them today.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
  
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    GEOL 0210 - EARTH MATERIALS


    Minimum Credits: 4
    Maximum Credits: 4
    This course provides a detailed investigation into the formation and properties of earth’s primary materials: rocks and minerals. Topics include: the physical, chemical, structural, and optical properties of minerals; description and identification of common rock-forming and ore minerals; minerals assemblages and associations; and classification and identification of common rock types.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
  
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    GEOL 0220 - FOSSIL FUELS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course provides an overview of energy resources, with special attention given to fossil fuels and the resources of Western Pennsylvania. Emphasis will be placed on the origin, development, and distribution of resources. Alternative energy sources, such as renewable energy and nuclear, will also be covered, as well the environmental implications of use, production, and disposal of the various resources.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
  
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    GEOL 1000 - MINERALOGY & OPTICAL MINERALOGY


    Minimum Credits: 4
    Maximum Credits: 4
    The symmetry, structure, and crystal chemistry of minerals are the focus of this course. Laboratory work includes the physical properties of minerals and hand sample identification. The student is introduced to the use of the polarizing microscope as a tool for mineral identification.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GEOL 0015
  
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    GEOL 1004 - IGNEOS & METM PETRLGY & PETGRPHY


    Minimum Credits: 4
    Maximum Credits: 4
    The origin, occurrence, and classification of rocks form the heart of the course. Problems of petrogenesis are approached through the use of phase equilibria and crystal chemistry. Laboratory work includes hand specimen identification and the use of the polarizing microscope.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GEOL 1000
  
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    GEOL 1005 - SEDIMENTATION & STRATIGRAPHY


    Minimum Credits: 4
    Maximum Credits: 4
    Course focuses on sedimentological processes and products, depositional environments, and modern stratigraphic principles. Lab emphasizes description and interpretation of various types of sedimentological and stratigraphic data.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GEOL 0061
  
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    GEOL 1010 - COMPUTER APPLICATIONS IN GEOSCIENCE


    Minimum Credits: 4
    Maximum Credits: 4
    This course will offer students a chance to gain familiarity with computer applications that are commonly used by working geoscientists. The students will work through real-world example problems and implement software solutions to solve geologic problems, produce publication-grade graphs and figures, perform data analysis, utilize geospatial technology (remote sending, GIS, GPS, and mapping), and become more familiar with the management of small and large data sets.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
  
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    GEOL 1061 - GEOMORPHOLOGY


    Minimum Credits: 4
    Maximum Credits: 4
    This course is a survey of the major landform features found on the earth’s surface. Each landform type is first described qualitatively and then examined in terms of the processes, such as stream flow or glacial activity, which cause its development. The purpose of the course is to familiarize students with geomorphic principles.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GEOL 0015
  
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    GEOL 1090 - GEOCHEMISTRY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Geochemistry is an interdisciplinary subject that explores the common ground between the more traditional subject of chemistry and geology. In this context, the purpose of this course is to examine the chemistry of natural waters (both surface and subsurface), radiogenic isotopes, and trace element partitioning through the application of thermodynamic and kinetic models of geologic environments at low to moderate temperatures. The basic objective is to gain a more broad understanding of how chemical reactions control geologic processes.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GEOL 0200
  
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    GEOL 1105 - HYDROLOGY


    Minimum Credits: 4
    Maximum Credits: 4
    Detailed discussion of all parts of the hydrologic cycle except for ground water. Topics include: precipitation, evaporation, transpiration, interception, surface water runoff, watershed analysis, flood and low-flow frequency analysis, water quality, statistical treatment of hydrologic data.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GEOL 0015
  
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    GEOL 1106 - HYDROGEOLOGY


    Minimum Credits: 4
    Maximum Credits: 4
    Topics to be covered include soil moisture and groundwater regimes, water mass budgets, precipitation, evapotranspiration, interception, surface water runoff, hydraulic conductivity of earth materials, principles of groundwater flow, well hydraulics, geology of groundwater occurrence, watershed analysis, statistical treatment of hydrologic data, and water quality. A number of labs will be field exercises. Permission of instructor required if prerequisite is not met.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GEOL 0015
  
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    GEOL 1108 - RPT WRITNG & COMP APPLIC IN GEOL


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Conventions of scientific writing are introduced and applied to the preparation of geologic reports. Covers use of various types of software and web-based resources used in geologic research and report writing. Poster and oral presentation are required term projects.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GEOL 0015 and 0061
  
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    GEOL 1109 - REPORT WRITING AND COMPUTER APPLICATIONS IN GEOL


    Minimum Credits: 4
    Maximum Credits: 4
    Report Writing and Computer Applications in Geology. Conventions of scientific writing are introduced and applied to the preparation of geologic reports. Covers use of various types of software and web-based resources used in geologic research and report writing. Poster and oral presentation are required term projects. The lab component is an opportunity to highlight advanced uses of commonly used compute programs. Students benefit from lessons showing advanced uses of these programs to process geologic data.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GEOL 0061 or GEOL 0200
  
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    GEOL 1110 - STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY


    Minimum Credits: 4
    Maximum Credits: 4
    Mechanical properties of rock deformation, the principles of geologic mapping, and introductory methods of structural analysis. Laboratory work includes solving geologic structural problems using orthrographic and stereographic methods, fault motion, and drill hole interpretation.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GEOL 0015
  
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    GEOL 1139 - GEOLOGY OF SOILS


    Minimum Credits: 4
    Maximum Credits: 4
    The genesis, classification, properties, and utilization of soil are discussed with emphasis on topics of current interest. Relationships of soils to geology, chemistry, and biology are stressed.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GEOL 0015
  
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    GEOL 1150 - SENIOR PROJECT


    Minimum Credits: 4
    Maximum Credits: 4
    The student selects, with the project director’s assistance, an area of study, prepares a proposal, performs the research, and prepares both written and oral reports to be presented to the GPS faculty.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Directed Studies
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GEOL 1108
  
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    GEOL 1157 - GEOLOGIC FIELD METHODS


    Minimum Credits: 4
    Maximum Credits: 4
    Course format emphasizes practical work in field situations with supplemental lectures, and includes introduction to the use of Brunton compass, altimeter, allidade, and field mapping techniques.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GEOL 0015
  
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    GEOL 1170 - INTERNSHIPS


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 12
    Experience with local and state cooperating agencies; also departmental assistantships.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Internship
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
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    GEOL 1202 - INTRODUCTION TO PALEONTOLOGY


    Minimum Credits: 4
    Maximum Credits: 4
    Geologically significant fossils are studied with emphasis on paleoecology and evolution. Laboratory work involves morphological study of fossils, and use of fossils in solving geological and paleontological problems.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GEOL 0015
  
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    GEOL 1406 - INTRO TO SOLID-EARTH GEOPHYSICS


    Minimum Credits: 4
    Maximum Credits: 4
    Study in the application of gravity, seismology, magnetism and resistivity to determination of the composition and structure of the earth. Geophysical equipment operation, data collection, and interpretation are covered.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GEOL 0015
  
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    GEOL 1905 - INDEPENDENT STUDY


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 12
    This course permits undergraduates to explore specific topics in the geological sciences. The course is designed in a more flexible format than a directed study, stressing a higher degree of independent library research.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Independent Study
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
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    GEOL 1906 - DIRECTED RESEARCH


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 12
    This course provides the opportunity for under graduates to obtain “hands on” experience in geology by actively interacting with faculty members on research projects.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Directed Studies
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis

Healthcare

  
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    HLTHCR 1050 - HEALTH CARE EDUCATION


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course is restricted to health care majors only. This course will present the basic principles of education to include objective writing, didactic lab and clinical teaching techniques, and student evaluation as it pertains to health education.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
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    HLTHCR 1054 - HEALTH CARE MANAGEMENT


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course is restricted to health care majors only. This course will present the various aspects of health management to include basic management principles and their application to the ever-changing health care environment.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
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    HLTHCR 1060 - COMPARATIVE HEALTHCARE


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 1
    This course examines the structure of the current health care system in Belgium, with a focus on comparing and contrasting European and American systems. Students will examine the roles of various health care professionals within the systems, and will have the opportunity to discuss issues such as quality of care, access to care, financial considerations, and perception of outcomes with Europeans currently working in or preparing for careers in the health professions. The course includes visits to both acute care and community care facilities serving diverse groups of patients, where students will observe and interact with health care professionals. In addition, students will participate in activities including a service-learning experience that will serve as a basis for a reflection paper and presentation.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
  
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    HLTHCR 1061 - SPECIAL TOPICS IN HEALTH CARE


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 1
    Analysis of a particular health care topic not covered by regularly scheduled courses.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
  
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    HLTHCR 1095 - HEALTH CARE INTERNSHIP


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course is restricted to health care majors only. This internship will allow the student to explore areas of interest in health care management and education in clinical, administrative or business environments. The experience will be structured to include a preliminary project description, measurable goals/objectives, and a time line of activities. Evaluation will be based upon a journal documenting activities, achievement of goals and objectives, oral and written summation of experience and independent evaluation by faculty.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Internship
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: HLTHCR 1050 and 1054
  
  •  

    HLTHCR 1119 - LEGAL ASPECTS OF HEALTH CARE


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course is restricted to health care majors only. Discusses principles of hospital law and aspects of handling confidential and health records information. Actual cases and statutes are discussed.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
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    HLTHCR 1120 - LANGUAGE OF MEDICINE


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: Information Systems Major or Management (Healthcare Management Subplan) Major

History

  
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    HIST 0120 - WESTERN CIVILIZATION 1


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course explores the origins of the Western traditions and the changes which occur in the political, social, economic, intellectual, artistic and other aspects, over time, and with shift in geographical focus. The course begins with the Bronze Age and ends with the Reformation and Age of Exploration. Writing skills are emphasized.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0130 - WESTERN CIVILIZATION 2


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course explores the changes which occur in Europe from the Age of Absolutism to the late twentieth century. Writing skills are emphasized.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0424 - CLASSICAL EAST ASIA


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course deals with geography, government society, economy, philosophy, and religions of china, Japan, and Korea from prehistoric times to the 18th century. Emphasizes the role of China and its influence upon its neighbors.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0425 - MODERN EAST ASIA


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Presents the history of China, Korea, and Japan in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Traces the Western impact on East Asia and the responses of these states as they become modern.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0610 - UNITED STATES TO 1877


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This is an introductory, lower division, course that develops the history of United States from the 1400s through the Civil War and Reconstruction
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
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    HIST 0620 - UNITED STATES 1877 - PRESENT


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    An introduction to American history from 1877 to the present which emphasizes selected topics on changes in American society and politics as an earlier agrarian society became an industrial-urban one and as the nation took up an ever larger role in world affairs.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
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    HIST 0750 - HISTORICAL METHODS & THEORIES


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course introduces students to various modes of historical thought and practice, ranging from major historiographical debates to hands-on practical instruction in methods of historical deduction, arguing, reading, and writing. Students will craft historical writing projects such as research papers, book reviews, and bibliographies, and will explore a wide variety of historical writings. This course will be an option for the methodology requirement for the history major. The course is intended to prepare students for upper level history courses, especially HIST 1002 writing seminar for majors.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
    Course Requirements: PREQ: Any HIST course or instructor consent
  
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    HIST 0760 - INTRODUCTION TO PUBLIC HISTORY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    The course will introduce students to the theory, methodology, and practice of Public History. Public History is the employment of professional historical methods by public and private agencies to engage communities in shaping the presentation of the past into usable histories. Through the course, students will be able to analyze how Public historians and the Public collaborate to explain individual and collective human behavior through a variety of methods, mediums, and contexts. Moreover, students will learn how Public Historians and the Public create and express historical meaning for their local, state, national, and global communities.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 0770 - HISTORICAL DOCUMENTARY FILM AND FILMMAKING


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
  
  •  

    HIST 0780 - FICTION AND NON-FICTION PUBLIC HISTORY WRITING


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will introduce students to five types of writing for Public and Applied Historians: Historical Fiction, such as novels, plays and screenplays; Museum and Exhibit Panels; Characters for First Personal Interpretation; Historical Preservation Applications and Grant Writing. Students will learn the principle for writing and editing for each of these fields.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
  
  •  

    HIST 1002 - WRITING SEMINAR FOR MAJORS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will reinforce the proper techniques of historical research in the development of a major research project.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: Junior or Senior Status
  
  •  

    HIST 1023 - SENIOR CAPSTONE IN PUBLIC AND APPLIED HISTORY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will require the student to engage in a project that will produce a tangible work in Public and Applied History, either for an external agency or as a project created by the student and instructor. Possibilities include Digital History, Oral History, Historic Preservation, Museum Exhibit, Tourism and Urban Development, Historical First Person Interpretation, Interpretive Plans for Historical Societies, Annotated Bibliographies for Genealogic and Research libraries, etc.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
    Course Requirements: PREQ: HIST 0760 and HIST 0750
  
  •  

    HIST 1113 - MEDIEVAL EUROPE: 1100-1500


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Role of nobility, peasantry, church, development of towns, beginnings of national states, education, and culture.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1127 - MODERN BRITAIN


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    A seminar that examines the history of Britain in the Twentieth Century. Topics to be discussed include: the British constitution, parliament and parties, the monarchy, the economy, social classes, Britain and the two World Wars, “the troubles” in Ulster, the British Commonwealth, Britain and European Union, and Britain and America.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1170 - RENAISSANCE AND REFORMATION


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    The revival of classical thought, literature, and art in 14th- and 15th-century Italy; development of humanism with its secular tendencies and emphasis on the human personality; the Northern Renaissance of the 16th century; movements for reform in the church; Luther, Calvin, and the Protestant Reformation; the spread of Protestantism, and the Catholic Reformation (counter reformation).
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1300 - ENGLAND TO 1689


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Surveys the development of English social, political, economic and cultural history through the “glorious revolution”.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1342 - RUSSIA SINCE 1860


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Pre-Revolutionary Russia, its social structure, political tensions, beginnings of industrialization, 1905 Revolution, Bolshevik Revolution and establishment of the Soviet State, Civil War, the Stalin Period, World War II and the Post War “thaw.”
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1381 - EUROPE 1914-1945


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    History of both Western and Eastern Europe from World War I through the end of World War II, with emphasis on national and ethnic tensions, the failure of democracy, depression, the growth of fascism, international conflicts, and war.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1385 - EUROPE SINCE 1945


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    History of Western and Eastern Europe: the Postwar reconstruction, communism in Eastern Europe; Europe in the Cold War; economic, social and cultural changes; the Revolutions of 1989.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Attributes: DSAS Geographic Region General Ed. Requirement, DSAS Historical Analysis General Ed. Requirement, SCI Polymathic Contexts: Global&Cross Cul GE. Req., SCI Polymathic Contexts: Soc/Behav. GE. Req.
  
  •  

    HIST 1400 - COLONIAL AMERICA


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This is an upper division course that develops the history of the North American English colonies from around 1400 through the early 1760s.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1405 - SLAVERY IN AMERICA, 1619-1865


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This reading/discussion seminar will consider a variety of issues relating to the enslavement and emancipation of African-Americans in Colonial America and the U.S., Including but not limited to: African origins, the Atlantic slave trade, the middle passage, early colonial slavery, varieties of colonial slavery, slaves and free blacks and the American Revolution, slave religion, slave society, slave families, the politics and law of slavery, slave resistance and rebellions, slaves and free blacks and the Civil War, abolitionism, and abolition.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1409 - THE EARLY REPUBLIC: US 1789-1848


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course examines the social, ideological, political, diplomatic, geographic, and religious atmosphere that influenced the founding of the United States of America.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1410 - AMERICAN REVOLUTION 1763-1783


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This is an upper division course that considers the history of Revolutionary America between the 1750s and the 1790s.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1413 - AMERICAN LABOR HISTORY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This three-credit upper division reading seminar will explore the development and implementation of labor systems and the roles and experiences of American workers within those systems from the Colonial Era to the present.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1416 - AMERICAN WOMEN’S HISTORY TO 1890


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Exploration of women’s themes in American history, including changing expectations of gender roles, evolving nature of work and family life, race relations and ethnic difference, and the participation of women in important social and political movements.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
  
  •  

    HIST 1417 - AMERICAN WOMEN’S HISTORY SINCE 1890


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Continuation of topics covered in HIST 1416.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
  
  •  

    HIST 1430 - CIVIL WAR HISTORY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This is an upper division course that considers the impact of the Civil War upon the development of the United States.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1505 - FILM AND HISTORY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    A seminar on the moving visual image as historical artifact. Examines the impact of film and video on the historical profession. Seeks to provide expertise in the technologies of film-making required for scholarly use of visual resources.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1521 - THE PACIFIC WAR


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    An examination of the conflict between the United States (and its allies) and the Empire of Japan, 1941-1945. Both American and Japanese perspectives are explored.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1535 - COLD WAR CULTURES


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course explores the political, social, and cultural history of the Cold War in the United States, emphasizing themes such as civil rights and civil liberties, the McCarthy period, the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, the Vietnam War, the rise of the new left and the new right, the Reagan presidency, and the fall of the Soviet Empire.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: HIST 0620 or 0602
  
  •  

    HIST 1600 - POSTWAR JAPAN


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    An exploration of the social, political, economic and industrial elements which allowed the Japanese to create an economic superpower on a resource poor archipelago. Using an historical framework, the course will concentrate on the post-World War II era.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1602 - RELIGIONS OF THE WORLD


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    A seminar that examines the origins, identities, and theological conceptions of the major non-Judeo/Christian religious traditions. The course of study includes the scriptures, cultural contexts and worship practices of these religions as well as the intimate relationship of religion to other aspects of human behavior.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1603 - JUDAISM, CHRISTIANITY AND ISLAM


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This is a study of the beliefs and practices of the three major Monotheistic religions. The course examines the historical origins, development, theological concepts and worship practices of what are sometimes called the ‘Abrahamic Faiths.’ It emphasizes the distinct character of each religion as well as variations within each, and seeks to discern continuity and differences among the three. This course is designed to be a companion to History/RELGST 1602, “Religions of the World,” to provide a more searching treatment of the Western religious traditions. The approach combines elements of a seminar, in which student preparation and participation are important, with lecture segments and also makes significant use of video and web-based resources.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1605 - RECONSTRUCTION AND REFORM, 1865-1916


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course examines the long-range impact of the Northern victory in the Civil War; the restructuring of the economy of the United States, business expansion, the rise of finance capitalism, and various reform movements.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1608 - NOTORIOUS WOMEN 1


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course examines scandalous episodes in 17th-20th century American history, emphasizing issues of sexuality and gender subversion; political and religious extremism; and violent passions leading to controversial and infamous acts. Unlike many courses, this one focuses on “fringe,” controversial, or disenfranchised persons, to explore how events and persons, despite their “abnormality,” shaped and reflected the cultural and political values of their day. Topics include witchcraft and the occult, utopian communities, religious and political radicals, changing ideas of gender roles and sexuality, and accused murderers. “Typical” women analyzed include Marie Laveau, the Salem “witches,” and Lizzie Borden. This course is reading-intensive, and depends on students’ active participation.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
    Course Requirements: PREQ: LOWER LEVEL HIST COURSE; PLAN: HIST
  
  •  

    HIST 1609 - NOTORIOUS WOMEN II


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course examines scandalous episodes in 16th-21th century American and world history, emphasizing issues of sexuality and gender subversion; political and religious extremism; and violent passions leading to controversial and infamous acts. Unlike many courses, this one focuses on “fringe,â€
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
    Course Requirements: PREQ: LOWER LEVEL HIST COURSE; PLAN: HISTORY
  
  •  

    HIST 1613 - PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF CHINA


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course traces the revolutionary process which brought the communist party of China to power. Changes which have occurred socially, politically, and economically are explored, as are the relations with the countries of Asia, the United States, and various international bodies.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1617 - UNITED STATES IN THE 1960’S


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course explores American politics, culture, and society in the 1960s. Topics include the “Camelot’s” years of the Kennedy administration, the great society, the Vietnam War at home, the civil rights movement and the rise of the new left and women’s liberation movements, rock and roll, the sexual revolution and the counterculture, and the emergence of new age spirituality.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: HIST 0620 or 0601
    Course Attributes: DSAS Historical Analysis General Ed. Requirement, SCI Polymathic Contexts: Soc/Behav. GE. Req.
  
  •  

    HIST 1620 - THE VIETNAM WAR


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course is designed to acquaint the student with American involvement in Southeast Asia, in particular with the second Indochina War. Some attempt will be made to provide a background of Vietnamese historical and cultural perspective. The major portion of the course will focus on American policy, at home and abroad, and the manner in which five American presidents tried to deal with the “Indochina problem”.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1624 - AGE OF REAGAN: 1980 & BEYOND


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course deals with the U.S. between World War II and the 21st century, with primary emphasis on the 1980s and 1990s. The struggle between Communism and the “Free World,” haunted by the specter of potential nuclear war, shadowed most aspects of U.S. political, cultural, and social life during these decades, and profoundly shaped entertainer-politician Ronald Reagan, who emerged as one of the U.S.’s most iconic presidents. This reading- and discussion-intensive course will discuss Reagan’s life, policies and philosophy; the emergence and significance of the New Left and the New Right; and changing ideas about race, family, and sexuality at the center of the “Culture Wars” of the 1980s and beyond. Topics include civil rights and race relations, changing family and gender roles, AIDS, popular culture, and American foreign policy. We also analyze how Reagan’s presidency shaped later political leaders in both major parties.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
    Course Requirements: PREW: LOWER LEVEL HIST COURSE; PLAN: HISTORY
  
  •  

    HIST 1679 - MEXICO


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Mexican history from the Aztecs to the present. We will discuss the conquest, the Colonial Era, the struggle for independence, nineteenth-century liberalism, the Porfirian dictatorship, the Twentieth-Century Revolution, the formation of a single party state, the temptations of socialism, the oil boom, the debt crisis, and the “crisis of the system” now being experienced by Mexico.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1774 - HISTORY OF CHRISTIANITY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    An examination of the foundations of Christianity in Roman times and its worldwide diffusion up to the present. The emergence of differing Christian identities, the experiences of Christians in various societies, and the role of Christianity in significant social and political developments in the West are emphasized.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1800 - DIRECTED READING


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 6
    The student undertakes a specified course of study, comparable in content to a special topics course, under the direct supervision of a faculty member.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Directed Studies
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1810 - SPECIAL TOPICS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Detailed analysis of a particular topic not covered by regularly scheduled courses.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1820 - DIRECTED RESEARCH


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 6
    The student undertakes a defined task of research on campus under the supervision of a faculty member of an appropriate department, and in which the fruits of the research are embodied in a thesis, extended paper, laboratory report, or other appropriate form.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Directed Studies
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1830 - INDEPENDENT STUDY


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 6
    The student undertakes, under specific conditions, an independent program of study, research, or creative activity usually off-campus and with less immediate and frequent guidance from the sponsoring faculty member than is typically provided in directed reading and directed research courses.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Independent Study
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis
  
  •  

    HIST 1855 - PUBLIC & APPLIED HISTORY INTERNSHIP


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will require the student to perform 126 hours of work for a museum, archives, historical society or government agency to gain experience in some field of public and applied history. The student will read books and articles as assigned by the instructor on a topic related to the internship, keep a journal of all work hours and experience, make a portfolio of any work they create. The student will write a reflective essay that incorporates the scholarship they engage and their work experience.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Internship
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
    Course Requirements: COREQ: HIST 0760
  
  •  

    HIST 1860 - EXPERIENTIAL LEARNING IN PUBLIC AND APPLIED HISTORY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    For students who do not meet the 2.5 overall gpa threshold for History 1850 Internship in Public & Applied History, or for students working independently on a special project. This course will require the student to perform 126 hours of instructor-supervised work on a public history project, conceived by the student and the instructor. The assignments will engage the student in a number of public history practices to further develop skills introduced in History 0750.
    Academic Career: Undergraduate
    Course Component: Directed Studies
    Grade Component: Letter Grade
    Course Requirements: PREQ: HIST 0760; PLAN: HISTORY
 

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