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- Textbook Information
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For capacities and available seats, go to Search for Sections.
23/FA Course | Faculty | Days | Comments/Requisites | Credits | Course Type | Location | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ACC - ACCOUNTING | ||||||||
ACC-201-01 Financial Accounting |
Hensley E |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
|
1.00 |
BAX 202
|
|||
ACC-201-02 Financial Accounting |
Foos J |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
|
1.00 |
BAX 214
|
|||
ACC-301-01 Intermediate Accounting I |
Hensley E |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
ACC-202
|
1.00 |
BAX 202
|
|||
ART - ART | ||||||||
ART-126-01 Studio Art Fundamentals |
Strader A |
M W
10:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN A131
|
||
ART-202-01 Art in Film |
Morton E |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
HAY 104
|
||
ART-209-01 20th and 21st Century Art |
Morton E |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN M140
|
||
ART-210-01 Comics and Graphic Novels |
Mong D |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
HAY 104
|
||
ART-223-01 Ceramics |
Strader A |
M W
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN A124
|
||
ART-227-01 Sculpture |
Weedman M |
TU TH
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN A124
|
||
ART-228-01 Painting: Mixed Media |
Mohl D |
M W
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN A131
|
||
ART-312-01 Post Modern Art & Culture |
Morton E |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
One course in Art History
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN A113
|
||
ART-331-01 Advanced Studio |
Mohl D |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
Two credits from ART-125,
ART-126, ART-223, ART-224, ART-225, ART-227, and ART-228. At least one credit must be from the 200 level.
Instructor permission required to join. This course is primarily
intended for senior Art majors and it is preferable that it be
taken in the fall semester of their senior year (and after they
have completed their 5 - 100/200 level art studio courses)
|
1.00 |
FIN A133
|
|||
ART-433-01 Senior Studio |
Mohl D |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
ART-330 or ART-331
This course is for senior Art majors exhibiting in the spring
senior show. The course should only be taken in the Fall if a
senior is finishing all required credits to graduate that
semester- and then returning in the spring to set up their
exhibit.
|
1.00 |
FIN A133
|
|||
ASI - ASIAN STUDIES | ||||||||
ASI-112-01 Martial Arts Film |
Healey C |
M F
02:10PM - 03:00PM W
02:10PM - 04:00PM |
This half-credit course traces major trends in Chinese martial
arts cinema, including works from mainland China, Taiwan, Hong
Kong, and beyond. We analyze films from multiple angles,
including aesthetics, historical context, production, and
circulation. We consider how films articulate diverse identities,
operating in relation to national and transnational cultural
institutions. All films include English subtitles. Film
screenings in class Wednesdays 2:10-4:00. Meets during the first
half-semester. See ASI-112 Korean Popular Culture for the second
half-semester course. Counts as an elective for Film and Digital
Media. No prerequisites.
|
0.50 | GCJD, LFA |
DET 109
DET 109
|
||
ASI-112-02 Korean Popular Culture |
Healey C |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
From media like Squid Game and Parasite to music groups like
Blackpink and BTS, the Korean Wave has taken the world by storm.
This half-credit course considers the production, circulation,
and consumption of Korean popular culture as a global phenomenon.
We analyze and contextualize popular music, film, television,
literature, material culture, and cuisine. Special attention is
paid to new media forms, soft power, and transnational networks
of cultural exchange. All readings in English. Meets during the
second half-semester. See ASI-112 Martial Arts Film for the first
half-semester course. Counts as an elective for Film and Digital
Media. No prerequisites.
|
0.50 | GCJD, LFA |
DET 109
|
||
ASI-112-03 Premodern China |
Healey C |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
This survey course introduces Chinese history and cultural
traditions from ancient times to 1911, outlining historical
trends such as Confucianism, Daoism, Buddhism, dynastic cycles,
literati culture, traditional gender roles, and interactions with
the West. We will analyze a variety of primary sources (in
translation), including poetry, fiction, philosophical writings,
historical records, and visual art. No pre-requisites.
ASI-112-03=HIS-260-01
|
1.00 | GCJD, HPR, LFA |
DET 112
|
||
ASI-196-01 Religion in Japanese Lit |
Blix D |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
2nd Half-Semester course.
REL-196-01=ASI-196-01=HUM-196-01
"Old pond- frog jumps in-sound of water." So runs the famous
haiku by Basho. Is it religious? For the Japanese, yes. In
Japan religion and art are arguably the same thing. In this
course we'll ask how and why. We'll study Japanese ideas about
art and religion (e.g. emptiness, solitude, "sublime beauty"),
and how they appear in Japanese literature. We'll read
selections from Japanese poetry (including haiku) drama, a
classic novel (The Tale of Genji), and some short stories by
Murakami and Kawabata.
|
0.50 | HPR, LFA |
MXI 109
|
||
ASI-277-01 Political Economy in East Asia |
Ye, H |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
This course is to introduce students to politics and the
political economy in East Asia. Japan, China, and the East Asian
Tigers, including South Korea, Taiwan, and Singapore, have
experienced economic success and political transitions in the
past decades. How do East Asian countries achieve "economic
miracles"? How do the state and society drive economic growth?
Why do East Asian countries establish regional economic
institutions to promote free trade? How does the region's
political economy influence the world? We will focus on the
development strategies of the countries in the region and discuss
the underlying theoretical logic that explains East Asia's
growth. In particular, students will be exposed to different
datasets, analyze the empirical evidence, and make cross-country
comparisons. This course will cover a range of topics, including
developmental state, East Asian regional integration, and the
relationship between the regional supply chain and the global
economy.
ASI-277-01=PSC-220-01=PPE-238-01
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 201
|
||
BIO - BIOLOGY | ||||||||
BIO-102-01 Plants & Human Affairs |
Ingram A |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 | SL |
HAY 319
|
||
BIO-102L-01 Plants & Human Affairs Lab |
Ingram A |
M
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Co-requisite: BIO-102
|
0.00 |
HAY 110
|
|||
BIO-102L-02 Plants & Human Affairs Lab |
Ingram A |
TU
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Co-requisite: BIO-102
|
0.00 |
HAY 110
|
|||
BIO-111-01 General Biology I |
Bost A, Walsh H, Wetzel E |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
Co-requisite: BIO-111L
|
1.00 | QL, SL |
HAY 104
|
||
BIO-111L-01 General Biol I Lab |
Bost A |
M
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Co-requisite: BIO-111
|
0.00 |
HAY 111
|
|||
BIO-111L-03 General Biol I Lab |
Walsh H |
W
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Co-requisite: BIO-111
|
0.00 |
HAY 111
|
|||
BIO-111L-04 General Biol I Lab |
Wetzel E |
TH
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Co-requisite: BIO-111
|
0.00 |
HAY 111
|
|||
BIO-211-01 Genetics |
Burton P |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
Prerequisite: BIO-112
|
1.00 | QL, SL |
HAY 003
|
||
BIO-211L-01 Genetics Lab |
Burton P |
TU
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Prerequisite: BIO-112
|
0.00 |
HAY 214
|
|||
BIO-211L-02 Genetics Lab |
Burton P |
W
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Prerequisite: BIO-112
|
0.00 |
HAY 214
|
|||
BIO-213-01 Ecology |
Carlson B |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Prerequisite: BIO-112
|
1.00 | QL, SL |
HAY 319
|
||
BIO-213L-01 Ecology Lab |
Carlson B |
W
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Prerequisite: BIO-112
|
0.00 |
HAY 103
|
|||
BIO-213L-02 Ecology Lab |
Carlson B |
TH
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Prerequisite: BIO-112
|
0.00 |
HAY 103
|
|||
BIO-325-01 Microbiology |
Bost A |
M W F
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
Prerequisite: BIO-211
|
1.00 | SL |
HAY 321
|
||
BIO-325L-01 Microbiology Lab |
Bost A |
TH
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Co-Requisite BIO-325
|
0.00 |
HAY 212
|
|||
BIO-401-01 Senior Seminar |
Carlson B, Burton P |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
|
1.00 |
HAY 319
|
|||
BLS - BLACK STUDIES | ||||||||
BLS-270-01 Postcolonial Literature |
Brewer A |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
In this course, we will focus on major Anglophone and Francophone
authors writing in and about formerly colonized territories such
as parts of the Caribbean, Senegal, Zimbabwe, South Africa,
India, and Ireland. We will focus on gender roles and race in
connection to the literary canon, and we will discuss a dialogue
between the center of the empire (London) and the "margins"
(British colonies). How did the authors describe conflicts
between assimilation and resistance in the colonial and
postcolonial milieu? How were the national, cultural, and
individual identities affected by decades of foreign imperial
presence? To understand and enjoy the texts, we will also study
the political context of European imperialism and the
anti-imperial resistance.
BLS-270-01=ENG-330-01=GEN-304-01
|
1.00 | GCJD, LFA |
CEN 216
|
||
BLS-270-02 School to Prison Pipeline |
Seltzer-Kelly D |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
"In the last decade, the punitive and overzealous tools and
approaches of the modern criminal justice system have seeped into
our schools, serving to remove children from mainstream
educational environments and funnel them onto a one-way path
toward prison.. The School-to-Prison Pipeline is one of the most
urgent challenges in education today."
(NAACP 2005)
In this course, we will examine the ways in which the U.S. system
of P-12 public education has become increasingly enmeshed with
the criminal justice system. As the ACLU has noted, school
disciplinary measures have become more rigid and more likely to
divert students toward local law enforcement agencies. Beyond the
area of school conduct issues, inequities that predict students'
success in our testing-focused educational system may also
predict students' likelihood of engagement with law enforcement
(eg: family income and educational levels, presence/absence of
learning exceptionalities, stereotyping based upon personal
and/or cultural identity, and wealth/poverty levels of schools
and neighborhoods). In this class, we will examine the underlying
policies and school-level practices that contribute to this
destructive pattern, along with interventions that have been
developed, such as greater attention to students' educational and
vocational needs, restorative justice approaches to behavioral
issues, and a focus on social-emotional learning.
Specific issues we will examine that are implicated in the
so-called "school-to-prison pipeline" include:
"Zero tolerance" disciplinary policies in schools that include
conduct, attire, and speech in using law enforcement approaches
and personnel;
Patterns of inclusion/exclusion related to personal and cultural
identity;
High-stakes testing, including its role in restricting curricula
and instructional practices ,as well as a focus on retention and
remediation through rote approaches to remedial instruction;
Restrictive approaches to curricula and classroom
instruction-often driven by standardized testing --that
disproportionately fail to engage students in higher-poverty
schools;
Lack of appropriate policies and practices for students with both
diagnosed and undiagnosed disabilities and exceptionalities; and
The ways in which underlying socioeconomic inequalities among
communities and their schools tend to exacerbate factors that
push students out of educational systems and toward the criminal
justice system.
BLS-270-02=EDU-230-02
|
1.00 | QL |
DET 109
|
||
BLS-270-03 World Music |
Makubuya J |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
BLS-270-03=MUS-102-01
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN M120
|
||
BLS-270-04 Color TV: Black Folk on TV |
Lake T |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
This course surveys the explosion of Black folk on TV during the
mid-1980s through 2000. We will spend less time on the 1980s in
order to devote time to shows developed during the two succeeding
decades. We will examine the rise of Black directors, writers,
and actors on television shows. Most of the time will be given to
TV shows which feature a Black cast and/or lead actor(s). We will
read cultural and literary theorists in order to understand the
narrative structures and modalities of cultural production at
work. Ultimately you should leave the course better able to
critically engage TV. Warning! We will watch a lot of TV.
BLS-270-04=ENG-370-01
|
1.00 |
CEN 216
|
|||
BLS-280-01 Decolonial Philosophy |
Montiel J |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
Pre-req: PHI-110 or PHI-242
Although the colonization of the Americas in 1492 represented a
paradigm shift in the ways that people conceived of science,
ethics, politics, and economics, its significance in shaping the
modern world has been largely ignored by Western European
philosophers. This obliviousness is not coincidental. According
to the Eurocentric view, modernity results from the historical
unfolding of Europe, and it represents a moment of rational
maturity such that human beings can self-govern. This course will
expose what decolonial philosopher Enrique Dussel calls the "myth
of modernity," which means that the Eurocentric view of modernity
not only emerges from but also serves to justify colonial
violence against non-European peoples. We will show that the
Eurocentric view of modernity relies on a developmentalist
conception of history which situates Western European peoples as
historically developed and non-European peoples as historically
backwards. The "myth of modernity" thus implies that while
Western European peoples can self-govern, non-European peoples
must be governed by others, thereby justifying colonial practices
of land dispossession, enslavement, and serfdom. We will also
explore the ways in which the "myth of modernity" informs the
self-conception of colonized peoples at the most intimate levels
of our racial, gendered, and sexual selves. We will end by
considering various liberation projects, including the option of
emancipatory violence. In addition to juxtaposing canonical
philosophical discourses about the idea of modernity alongside
decolonial discourses from the global south, we will also
incorporate literary works that capture the experience of
colonization and its implications for our conception of
modernity.
BLS-280-01=PHI-319-02=GHL-319-01=HSP-217-01
|
1.00 |
HAY 321
|
|||
BLS-401-01 Capstone Seminar |
Lake T |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
Prerequisite: BLS-201
|
1.00 |
CEN 215
|
|||
BUS - BUSINESS | ||||||||
BUS-400-01 Senior Capstone |
Koppelmann Z |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
Business Minor Seniors must take this course.
|
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
CHE - CHEMISTRY | ||||||||
CHE-101-01 Survey of Chemistry |
Wysocki L, Schmitt P |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
|
1.00 | QL, SL |
HAY 319
|
||
CHE-101L-01 Survey Chemistry Lab |
Schmitt P |
M
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
HAY 316
|
|||
CHE-111-01 General Chemistry I |
Taylor A, Kalb A |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
1.00 | QL, SL |
HAY 104
|
||
CHE-111-02 General Chemistry I |
Scanlon J |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
Freshman only
|
1.00 | QL, SL |
HAY 002
|
||
CHE-111L-01 General Chemistry Lab |
Scanlon J |
M
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
HAY 315
|
|||
CHE-111L-02 General Chemistry Lab |
Kalb A |
TU
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
HAY 315
|
|||
CHE-111L-03 General Chemistry Lab |
Taylor A |
W
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
HAY 315
|
|||
CHE-111L-04 General Chemistry Lab |
Kalb A |
TH
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
HAY 315
|
|||
CHE-221-01 Organic Chemistry I |
Wysocki L, Novak W |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
Prerequisite: CHE-111
|
1.00 | SL |
HAY 319
|
||
CHE-221L-02 Organic Chem I Lab |
Wysocki L |
W
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Prerequisite: CHE-111
|
0.00 |
HAY 314
|
|||
CHE-221L-03 Organic Chem I Lab |
Novak W |
TH
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Prerequisite: CHE-111
|
0.00 |
HAY 314
|
|||
CHE-351-01 Physical Chemistry |
Scanlon J |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
CHE-241 and MAT-112 (must be completed prior to taking this
course.
|
1.00 |
HAY 002
|
|||
CHE-351L-01 Physical Chem I Lab |
Scanlon J |
TU
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Co-Requisite: CHE-351,
Prerequisites: CHE-241 and MAT-112 |
0.00 |
HAY 202
|
|||
CHE-388-01 Special Problems |
Novak W |
M
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Pre-req: CHE-241
Advanced Biochemical Methods
This course is designed to provide students with an in-depth
understanding of advanced biochemical methods used in modern
research. Students will gain hands-on experience with laboratory
techniques such as DNA mutagenesis, protein purification, gel
electrophoresis, chromatography, and spectroscopy. In addition,
students will learn about the principles and applications of
various biochemical assays such as enzyme kinetics,
protein-protein interactions, and other biological processes.
This course will emphasize critical thinking, data analysis, and
scientific communication skills through a series of lab reports,
research papers, and oral presentations. This course does not
count towards the major if CHE487 or CHE488 is also taken.
Enrollment is by instructor permission.
|
0.50 |
HAY 211
|
|||
CHE-421-01 Advanced Organic Chemistry |
Kalb A |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
CHE-321 (must be completed prior to taking this course)
Building upon the basic principles and reactivity of organic
molecules that were discussed in the year-long organic chemistry
sequence, this course offers an in-depth analysis of the use of
small organic molecules to catalyze organic transformations.
Recent literature will be discussed while exploring the methods,
mechanisms, and synthetic applications of different
organocatalysts. An introduction to the field of enantioselective
catalysis will also be given. This one-half credit course meets
twice a week for the second half of the semester.
|
0.50 |
HAY 002
|
|||
CHE-431-01 Advanced Analytical Chemistry |
Schmitt P |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Prerequisite: CHE-331
This class explores data analysis in chemistry and the physical
sciences, with an emphasis on regression analysis and machine
learning techniques. Topics include, but are not limited to:
linear and nonlinear least squares regressions, principal
component analysis, liner discriminant analysis, artificial
neural networks, and digital filtering. The course will engage
heavily with the primary literature, and students will develop
basic proficiency in relevant aspects of programming.
Second-half semester course
|
0.50 |
HAY 002
|
|||
CHE-441-01 Advanced Inorganic Chemistry |
Kalb A |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
CHE-241 (must be completed prior to taking this class)
This course will delve more deeply into concepts introduced in
CHE 241, emphasizing structural principles, thermodynamics, and
kinetics of organometallic systems. Through reviewing recently
published literature, we will identify and discuss common motifs
that garner research interest within the field. Anaerobic
techniques for preparing and characterizing air-sensitive
complexes will be introduced, though there will be no scheduled
weekly laboratory period. This one-half credit course meets twice
a week for the first half of the semester.
|
0.50 |
HAY 002
|
|||
CHE-461-01 Advanced Biochemistry |
Taylor A |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
Prerequisites: CHE-361
Genetic engineering has transformed our ability to conduct
biological research-and alter organisms for use in agriculture
and medicine. This course will look in depth at the processes
used to introduce new genetic material into organisms and
techniques for altering gene expression and genes themselves,
including RNAi and CRISPR/Cas9. The course will focus on
genetically engineered foods, RNAi in medicine, and CRISPR/Cas9
in research, and use primary literature papers as the core
readings.
Pre-req: CHE-361 or Instructor permission.
Second-half semester course
|
0.50 |
HAY 321
|
|||
CHE-462-01 Biochemistry II |
Taylor A |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Prerequisite: CHE-361
First-half semester course
|
0.50 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
CHE-491-01 Integrative Chemistry |
Schmitt P |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
This senior capstone course will challenge students with the
application of fundamental principles of spectroscopy and
chemical instrumentation to the field of chemical imaging.
Chemical imaging is an ever-expanding area of advanced research,
and this course will focus primarily on Raman spectroscopy-based
and mass-spectrometry based methods applied to a wide variety of
analytes, from tissues analysis to pharmaceutical manufacturing.
In-depth exploration of these topics will connect overarching
themes in the major and provide a powerful launching point for
written comprehensive exam preparation. Critical engagement with
the primary literature and diverse modes of oral and written
presentation will be emphasized. This one-half credit course is
required of all chemistry majors and meets twice each week for
the first half of the semester. Instructor permission required
for enrollment.
|
0.50 |
HAY 002
|
|||
CHI - CHINESE | ||||||||
CHI-101-01 Elementary Chinese I |
Liu R |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 |
DET 211
|
|||
CHI-101L-02 Elementary Chinese I Lab |
C. Hsu |
TU
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 112
|
|||
CHI-101L-04 Elementary Chinese I Lab |
C. Hsu |
W
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 211
|
|||
CHI-201-01 Intermediate Chinese I |
Healey C |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
CHI-102,
or CHI-201 placement |
1.00 | WL |
DET 128
|
||
CHI-201L-01 Intermediate Chinese I Lab |
C. Hsu |
M
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
CHI-102,
or CHI-201 placement |
0.00 |
DET 211
|
|||
CHI-201L-02 Intermediate Chinese I Lab |
C. Hsu |
TU
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
CHI-102,
or CHI-201 placement |
0.00 |
DET 211
|
|||
CHI-301-01 Conversation & Composition |
Liu R |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
CHI-202,
or CHI-301 placement. |
1.00 | WL |
DET 226
|
||
CLA - CLASSICS | ||||||||
CLA-101-01 Classical Mythology |
Gorey M |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
DET 209
|
||
CLA-113-01 Sports in Antiquity |
Barnes R |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
The ancient cultures of Greece and Rome left lasting legacies not
only in philosophy and politics but also in sports and athletics.
In this class, students become acquainted with a diverse range of
ancient sports and recreational activities practiced by Greeks
and Romans. Through the engagement with ancient texts,
inscriptions, paintings, sculptures, and the hands-on re-creation
of ancient games, students not only observe the significant role
that these pastimes played in classical culture but also reflect
on the continued importance of sports and recreation in modern
society. Along the way, the class explores larger themes, such as
the role of ritual in sports, the nature of play, and the
question of professionalism versus amateurism, as well as issues
related to gender and ethics.
CLA-113-01=HIS-210-01
|
1.00 | HPR, LFA |
HAY 319
|
||
CLA-211-01 Death and Afterlife |
Campbell W |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
"Death and Afterlife: Greek, Roman, Jewish, and Christian
Conceptions" As individuals and within communities, we tend to
focus our energies on building a happy and secure future for
ourselves; yet in a real sense we live surrounded by death,
threatened by the impermanence of our relationships and by the
fragility of life on our planet. The fear of death and the dread
of what comes afterward is part of the human experience, both in
the ancient and modern world. There is a substantial ancient
literary tradition of "descending" to visit the underworld and
"ascending" to visit the heavenly; to observe, search, behold,
and, sometimes, to escape. However, these "places" are far from
static conceptions and the theologies of the afterlife develop in
notable ways throughout the Roman Imperial period. In this
course, we will go on our own "Tour of Heaven and Hell" and
explore the wide array of underworld and afterlife conceptions in
ancient Greek, Roman, Jewish, and Christian sources. Our core
questions in the class are: (1) How is the Underworld/Afterlife
accessed and who goes there? (2) What kind of experience is had
in the Underworld/Afterlife and why? (3) How does the concept of
the afterlife evolve over time and across textual traditions?
REL-290-01=CLA-211-01
|
1.00 |
CEN 215
|
|||
CLA-212-01 Ancient Christianity in Rome |
Nelson D |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
This course is dedicated to the study of Early Christianity as it
was manifested in one particular place, the deeply-charged and
long-standing imperial capital of Rome. This immersion course
addresses one central question with multiple off-shoots: How did
Christianity take shape in Rome? How did it emerge from, rebel
against, and engage with that city's deep past? Before
Constantine, what was the experience of early Christians? After
Constantine, how did the shape and character of the city (not to
mention its inhabitants) change? What did early adherents of
Christianity believe, and how were those beliefs negotiated,
enhanced, challenged, and made orthodox through visual and
material culture, especially religious architecture and its
decoration? What was the experience of practitioners of
traditional Greco-Roman religion after Christianity became the
default religion of the Empire?
In other words, our investigation will be about social history,
architecture, religious history and theology, and
art/iconography. It is about the realia of what people believed,
saw, experienced, and did. And the best way to get a sense of
those features of ancient life and belief is to visit the key
places themselves: the city of Rome and, as a complement to the
features of the urban experience that Rome lacks, its port city
of Ostia.
The immersion component of the course will occur November 17-25,
2023. One course credit. By application only.
REL-260-01 = CLA-212-01
|
1.00 | HPR, LFA |
CEN 300
|
||
CLA-240-01 Ancient Philosophy |
Rognlie D |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
CLA-240-01=PHI-240-01
|
1.00 | HPR, LFA |
CEN 215
|
||
COL - COLLOQUIUM | ||||||||
COL-401-01 Important Books |
Blix D, Mikek P |
W
07:30PM - 09:00PM |
Seniors only; a letter of application must be submitted to the
instructor[s]; admission to the course only by the consent of the
instructor[s]
|
1.00 | HPR, LFA |
CEN 304
|
||
CSC - COMPUTER SCIENCE | ||||||||
CSC-101-01 Intro to Computer Science |
Turner W |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 | QL |
HAY 003
|
||
CSC-101-02 Intro to Computer Science |
Turner W |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
|
1.00 | QL |
GOO 101
|
||
CSC-111-01 Intro to Programming |
Deng Q |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
Prerequisite: CSC-101,
CSC-106, or MAT-112; or permission of the instructor. |
1.00 | QL |
HAY 003
|
||
CSC-241-01 Intro to Machine Organization |
McKinney C |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
Prerequisite: CSC-111 with a minimum grade of C-.
|
1.00 | QL |
HAY 003
|
||
CSC-242-01 Theory of Programming Language |
Deng Q |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
Prerequisite: CSC-111
|
1.00 |
GOO 101
|
|||
CSC-271-01 Intro to Data Science |
Westphal C |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Pre-req: CSC-211
This course examines key elements of the data-to-knowledge
pipeline: gathering data from reliable sources; cleaning,
processing and visualizing data; analyzing data with appropriate
statistical tools; and making informed decisions. Using a variety
of computational and statistical tools, students will develop
practical data science skills in a collaborative, project-based
environment.
|
1.00 |
GOO 101
|
|||
CSC-338-01 Machine Learning |
McKinney C |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Pre-req: MAT-223 and CSC-111 with minimum grade of C-
Machine learning as a term was first coined in 1959 by Arthur
Samuel, based on work he did developing a computer checkers game.
The area has grown vastly since then, and is used for
applications from self-driving vehicles to ChatGPT. This course
will explore both the theory and practice of machine learning
models and algorithms.
CSC-338-01=MAT-338-01
|
1.00 |
HAY 003
|
|||
CSC-400-01 Senior Capstone |
McKinney C, Deng Q |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
Prerequisite: CSC-211 with a minimum grade of C-
|
1.00 |
GOO 101
|
|||
DV3 - DIVISION III | ||||||||
DV3-252-01 Stats Soc Sciences |
Dunaway E |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
First-half semester course
|
0.50 | QL |
BAX 214
|
||
ECO - ECONOMICS | ||||||||
ECO-101-02 Principles of Economics |
Adhikary S |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 202
|
||
ECO-101-03 Principles of Economics |
Adhikary S |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 311
|
||
ECO-101-04 Principles of Economics |
Sanders, Jr. R |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
|
1.00 | BSC |
DET 212
|
||
ECO-205-01 History of Economic Thought |
Snow N |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
ECO-205-01=HIS-236-01=PPE-265-01
|
1.00 | BSC, HPR |
BAX 201
|
||
ECO-235-01 Health Economics |
Adhikary S |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
ECO-101
Meeting days & times TBD
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 212
|
||
ECO-253-01 Intro to Econometrics |
Dunaway E |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
Prerequisites: ECO-101 with a minimum grade of C-,
MAT-111 with a minimum grade of C-, One of the following courses or combinations with minimum grade(s) of C-: DV3-252, or PSC-300, or MAT-253 and MAT-254, or PSY-201 and PSY-202 |
1.00 | BSC, QL |
HAY 003
|
||
ECO-262-01 Financial Markets & Inst |
Sanders, Jr. R |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
Pre-requisite: ECO-101
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 202
|
||
ECO-277-01 Political Economy of Crisis |
D'Amico D |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
Prerequisite: ECO-101
What are the proper and efficient roles of governments, markets,
and civil society organizations towards resolving the challenges
of crises? Students will learn and gain proficiency in the
theoretical approaches to understanding the political economy of
crises. What are the predictable processes and outcomes
associated with private and collective action responses to
crises? How do different communities and societies relatively
endure and respond to often swift, unexpected, and devastating
changes in their political, material and social conditions that
citizens live within? Students will survey a wide variety of
informative case studies across contexts such as wars, nation
building in weak and failed states, natural disasters, and
pandemic diseases.
PPE-258-01=ECO-277-01
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 114
|
||
ECO-277-02 Behavioral Economics |
Dunaway E |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
Prerequisite: ECO-101
Behavioral Economics, a relatively new field in economic theory,
attempts to bridge the divide between the classical microeconomic
model and what we observe in the real world. In this class, we
will explore concepts like mental accounting (or why my bank
account never seems to have as much money in it as I remember),
hyperbolic discounting (or why I keep hitting the snooze button
on my alarm clock), reciprocity (or why I charge less to people I
know better), and prospect theory (or why I weigh my fear of
getting a C on an exam much more than my joy of getting an A on
it), among other topics.
ECO-277-02=PPE-258-02
|
1.00 | BSC |
HAY 001
|
||
ECO-291-01 Intermediate Micro Theory |
Burnette J |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
ECO-101 with a minimum grade of C-,
and MAT-111, MAT-112 or MAT-223 with a minimum grade of C- |
1.00 | BSC |
DET 209
|
||
ECO-292-01 Intermediate Macro |
Mikek P |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
ECO-101 with a minimum grade of C-,
and MAT-111, MAT-112 or MAT-223 with a minimum grade of C- |
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 311
|
||
ECO-358-01 Growth & Inequality in Latin |
Mikek P |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
Prerequisites: ECO-101 with a minimum grade of C-
ECO-238-01=HSP-277-01=PPE-358-01
|
1.00 | BSC, GCJD |
BAX 201
|
||
ECO-401-01 Senior Seminar |
Burnette J |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
Prerequisite: ECO-251,
and a minimum grade of C- in ECO-253, ECO-291, and ECO-292 |
1.00 |
BAX 212
|
|||
EDU - EDUCATION | ||||||||
EDU-101-01 Intro Child & Adolescent Devel |
Pittard M |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
|
1.00 | BSC |
DET 209
|
||
EDU-203-01 Adolescent Literacy Developmnt |
Pittard M |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 |
DET 209
|
|||
EDU-250-01 Civic Literacy & Democracy |
Seltzer-Kelly D |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
DET 109
|
||
EDU-314-01 Theory & Prac of Peer Tutoring |
Koppelmann Z |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
Prerequisites: FRT-101 and FRC-101
EDU-314-01=ENG-314
|
1.00 | LS |
BAX 212
|
||
EDU-370-01 Curriculum Design |
Seltzer-Kelly D |
M W
02:10PM - 03:25PM |
n this course, we will study the process of curriculum design for
P12 classrooms from a historic and philosophic perspective, and
on a practical level. Students will learn about the process
through which curricula are created for core content and elective
classes, including grade-level considerations related to child
development and sequencing of content across grade, as well as
larger social and cultural influences that can help to shape the
focus of the content taught in public schools in the U.S. Factors
including diversity and inclusion as well as accommodation for
disability will be included in our study. Depending upon student
interest, selected global comparisons may be studied as well.
Students' assignments early in the semester will include analysis
and discussion of the materials used to structure curriculum
design. The latter portion of the semester will be devoted to
students' individual development of curriculum materials for a
P12 content area of their choice. Classroom placements in local
schools for opportunities to assist in the classroom and teach
selected lessons will be an option, subject to availability.
Instructor permission required
This course satisfies the Curriculum and Pedagogy requirement for
the Education Studies minor, or may be taken for elective credit.
|
1.00 |
DET 112
|
|||
ENG - ENGLISH | ||||||||
ENG-101-03 Composition |
Brewer A |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
|
1.00 |
MXI 109
|
|||
ENG-101-04 Composition |
Whitney J |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
1.00 |
CEN 300
|
|||
ENG-101-05 Composition |
Benedicks C |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 |
DET 112
|
|||
ENG-105-01 Intro to Poetry |
Whitney J |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
First-half semester course
|
0.50 | LFA |
CEN 215
|
||
ENG-106-01 Intro to Short Fiction |
Whitney J |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
Second-half semester course
|
0.50 | LFA |
CEN 215
|
||
ENG-110-01 Intro to Creative Writing |
Freeze E |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
|
1.00 | LS |
CEN 216
|
||
ENG-180-01 Comics and Graphic Novels |
Mong D |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
Dismissed once as kids' fare or shrugged off as sub-literate--"in
the hierarchy of applied arts," Art Spiegelman once wrote, comic
books surpass only "tattoo art and sign painting"--comics today
are enjoying their Renaissance. In 2015, comics and graphic novel
sales topped $1 billon, a 20-year high. Award-winning writers now
moonlight for Marvel (Roxanne Gay, Ta-Nehisi Coates) or pen
essays on Peanuts (Jonathan Franzen). Superheroes dominate the
big screen. In this class, we'll explore this deceptively simple
medium as it develops its special abilities. We'll use Scott
McCloud's Understanding Comics, a critical text that is itself a
comic, to become smart readers of sequential art. Hillary Chute's
book Why Comics? will help us to frame comics's enduring subject
matters: sex, the suburbs, disasters, and superheroes. Readings
might include Alison Bechdel's Fun Home, selection from the
Hernandez Brothers' Love and Rockets, Spiegelman's Maus, Lynda
Barry's One! Hundred! Demons!, and works by Daniel Clowes, Harvey
Pekar, R. Crumb, Ebony Flowers, Aline Kominsky-Crumb, and others.
The course is open to all students; underclassmen are encouraged
to enroll. There will be capes and tights.
ENG-180-01=ART-210-01
|
1.00 | LFA |
HAY 104
|
||
ENG-210-01 Writing for Serious Games |
Freeze E |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
Did you know games could be serious? In this course, you will
learn about how to write games for purposes other than
entertainment. Serious games may be used for education, training,
or as information delivery systems. You will learn how to gamify
tasks in a number of different contexts, using game and level
design to write for clients or institutions looking for an
engaging way to teach, inspire, and motivate users. This course
will lead you through all the steps of serious game development,
from concept to delivery, working both individually and as a
team. As a creative writing workshop course, you will also
benefit from receiving detailed feedback on your games from your
professor and peers.
|
1.00 | LS |
LIB LGL
|
||
ENG-237-01 English Literature 1800-1900 |
Lamberton J |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
CEN 300
|
||
ENG-270-01 Literature and Masculinity |
Freeze E |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
This course will explore how contemporary literature impacts and
shapes masculinity. Students will read novels, short stories,
poetry, creative nonfiction, and theory to ask how contemporary
texts reify or challenge gender norms. Are definitions of
masculinity expanding, creating spaces for men that didn't exist
before? Or are they contracting? Or both? We will grapple with
these questions, using theory to help us read and interpret texts
as well as understand the complex cultural forces that shape
masculinity today.
ENG-270-01=GEN-270-01
|
1.00 | LFA |
CEN 215
|
||
ENG-297-01 Intro to the Study of Lit |
Brewer A |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
CEN 304
|
||
ENG-310-01 The Revolutionary Stage |
Cherry J |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN TGRR
|
||
ENG-312-01 Advanced Workshop in Poetry |
Mong D |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
At least one other creative writing course,
or permission of the instructor.
Despite this course's stated pre-requisite, any student
interested in enrolling is encouraged to email Dr. Mong
(mongd@wabash.edu) for an exemption.
|
1.00 | LS |
LIB LSEM
|
||
ENG-314-01 Theory & Prac of Peer Tutoring |
Koppelmann Z |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
Prerequisites: FRT-101 and FRC-101
ENG-314-01=EDU-314-01
|
1.00 | LS |
BAX 212
|
||
ENG-330-01 Postcolonial Literature |
Brewer A |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
In this course, we will focus on major Anglophone and Francophone
authors writing in and about formerly colonized territories such
as parts of the Caribbean, Senegal, Zimbabwe, South Africa,
India, and Ireland. We will focus on gender roles and race in
connection to the literary canon, and we will discuss a dialogue
between the center of the empire (London) and the "margins"
(British colonies). How did the authors describe conflicts
between assimilation and resistance in the colonial and
postcolonial milieu? How were the national, cultural, and
individual identities affected by decades of foreign imperial
presence? To understand and enjoy the texts, we will also study
the political context of European imperialism and the
anti-imperial resistance.
ENG-330-01=BLS-270-01=GEN-304-01
|
1.00 | GCJD, LFA |
CEN 216
|
||
ENG-370-01 Color TV: Black Folk on TV |
Lake T |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
Prerequisite: one course credit in English Literature at
Wabash,
or permission of the instructor.
This course surveys the explosion of Black folk on TV during the
mid-1980s through 2000. We will spend less time on the 1980s in
order to devote time to shows developed during the two succeeding
decades. We will examine the rise of Black directors, writers,
and actors on television shows. Most of the time will be given to
TV shows which feature a Black cast and/or lead actor(s). We will
read cultural and literary theorists in order to understand the
narrative structures and modalities of cultural production at
work. Ultimately you should leave the course better able to
critically engage TV. Warning! We will watch a lot of TV.
ENG-370-01=BLS-270-04
|
1.00 |
CEN 216
|
|||
ENG-411-01 Business & Technical Writing |
Pavlinich E |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
Prerequisite: FRC-101 Enduring Questions,
and junior or senior standing |
1.00 | LS |
BAX 114
|
||
ENG-497-01 Seminar in English Lit |
Whitney J |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
The Younger Romantics: Byron and the Shelleys
This course will examine the lives and literary works of three
authors from the British Romantic period: Lord Byron, Percy
Shelley, and Mary Shelley. In the early nineteenth century, Lord
Byron was a celebrity among poets. Along with Percy and Mary
Shelley, the three formed an important "literary circle" that
contributed much to British Romanticism and the canon of
literature more generally. We will focus on the major works they
produced and examine the highly scandalous lifestyles they led in
order to develop a deeper understanding of their significance to
English literature. In addition to literature, this course will
expose students to different critical and theoretical frameworks
as well. Course assignments will include short reading quizzes, a
group oral presentation, several papers, and a final capstone
project.
|
1.00 |
CEN 304
|
|||
ENG-498-01 Capstone Portfolio |
Mong D |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
0.50 | LS |
LIB LSEM
|
||
ENS - ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES | ||||||||
ENS-400-01 Environmental Studies Capstone |
Carlson B |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
One credit from BIO-102,
BIO-103, or BIO-213. One credit from ECO-234, EDU-310, PHI-215, ART-210 (Art & the Environment), or HUM-277 (Literature & the Environment).
All seniors minoring in Environmental Studies should enroll in
ENS-400. Meeting times and locations will be arranged with the
instructor.
|
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
FRE - FRENCH | ||||||||
FRE-101-01 Elementary French I |
Altergott R |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
|
1.00 |
DET 211
|
|||
FRE-101L-01 Elementary French 1 Lab |
L. Miellet |
M
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 226
|
|||
FRE-101L-02 Elementary French 1 Lab |
L. Miellet |
M
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 226
|
|||
FRE-101L-03 Elementary French 1 Lab |
L. Miellet |
TU
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 226
|
|||
FRE-101L-04 Elementary French 1 Lab |
L. Miellet |
TU
02:40PM - 03:30PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 226
|
|||
FRE-103-01 Accelerated Elementary French |
Fhunsu D |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
|
1.00 | WL |
DET 212
|
||
FRE-103L-01 Accelerated Elem French Lab |
L. Miellet |
TH
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 226
|
|||
FRE-103L-02 Accelerated Elem French Lab |
L. Miellet |
TH
02:40PM - 03:30PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 211
|
|||
FRE-103L-03 Accelerated Elem French Lab |
L. Miellet |
F
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 226
|
|||
FRE-201-01 Intermediate French |
Fhunsu D |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
Prerequisite: FRE-102,
FRE-103 or FRE-201 placement |
1.00 | WL |
DET 111
|
||
FRE-201L-01 Intermediate French Lab |
L. Miellet |
W
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 226
|
|||
FRE-201L-02 Intermediate French Lab |
L. Miellet |
M
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 226
|
|||
FRE-277-01 Sound and Literature in French |
Altergott R |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Can we recover the sounds of Paris prior to sound recording? Why
were church bells silenced during the French Revolution, and how
did the meaning of this sound become secularized in the
countryside? What types of sources are researchers using to
restore the sonic aspects of the Notre Dame cathedral since the
disastrous fire in April 2019? This course will take up these and
other questions about the role of sound in the construction of
French cultural and political identities. Drawing from key
concepts in Sound Studies, we will explore the evolving
soundscapes across France and the French colonial empire. Through
poetry and prose from classic French and Francophone writers such
as Charles Baudelaire, Frantz Fanon, Gustave Flaubert, and
Proust, we will study how authors have used literature to
preserve the sounds of history before and after sound recording,
and listen to the earliest recorded human voice, the cries of
Parisian street vendors, and the sounds of war from the medieval
era to the present.
FRE-277-01=MUS-104-01
|
1.00 | LFA |
DET 128
|
||
FRE-301-01 Conversation & Composition |
Altergott R |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
Prerequisite: FRE-202,
or FRE-301 placement |
1.00 | WL |
DET 220
|
||
FRT - FRESHMAN TUTORIALS | ||||||||
FRT-101-01 Film: Documenting Failure |
Mohl D |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 |
FIN M120
|
|||
FRT-101-02 Science and Pseudoscience |
Gunther K |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 |
BAX 311
|
|||
FRT-101-03 The Wabash Mission |
Pittard M |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 |
DET 209
|
|||
FRT-101-04 Can We Unite? |
Himsel S |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 |
BAX 212
|
|||
FRT-101-05 What Kind of Man? |
Olofson E |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 |
BAX 301
|
|||
FRT-101-06 Food Label Controversies |
Gelbman S |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 |
BAX 201
|
|||
FRT-101-07 Can You Keep a Secret? |
Turner W |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 |
GOO 006
|
|||
FRT-101-08 Food in the Liberal Arts |
Warner R |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 |
BAX 202
|
|||
FRT-101-09 Life Worth Living |
Nelson D |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 |
CEN 300
|
|||
FRT-101-10 Once Upon a Time |
Vogel H |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 |
DET 111
|
|||
FRT-101-11 The Score: Lang of Film Music |
Abbott M |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
"The Score: Understanding the Secret Language of Film Music"
Movie soundtracks are America's classical music. For nearly 100
years, Broadway and Hollywood and composers have shaped and
defined our most memorable experiences at the movies. Through
screenings, readings, and discussions, we will study these great
composers and scrutinize their work to better understand how
music operates on a special channel of communication. We will pay
special attention to musicals and explore how they have adapted
to changing times and audiences. A unique feature of this course
will be tracking the evolution of a musical staged by Prof.
Abbott during the semester. Students will have special access to
the design, rehearsal, and performance elements of this show as
it progresses through the semester. If you can read music or have
a little music theory under your belt, your experience may be
enhanced. However, a simple curiosity about film music is
perfectly sufficient to succeed in this Tutorial.
|
1.00 |
LIB LGL
|
|||
FRT-101-12 The Kids Are Alright |
Snow N |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 |
LIB LSEM
|
|||
FRT-101-13 From Farm to Table |
Novak W |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 |
HAY 001
|
|||
FRT-101-14 Caesar Builds Wabash |
Hartnett J |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 |
DET 109
|
|||
FRT-101-15 The Office: Modern Workplace |
Williams S |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 |
FIN M140
|
|||
FRT-101-16 The American Road Trip |
Mong D |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 |
MXI 214
|
|||
FRT-101-17 Life on the Edge of the Map |
Benedicks C |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 |
CEN 304
|
|||
FRT-101-18 It's About Time |
Krause D |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 |
HAY 321
|
|||
GEN - GENDER STUDIES | ||||||||
GEN-101-01 Intro to Gender Studies |
Pavlinich E |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
|
1.00 | HPR, LFA |
BAX 101
|
||
GEN-105-01 Fatherhood |
Olofson E |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
PSY-105-01 = GEN-105-01
|
1.00 | BSC |
CEN 216
|
||
GEN-200-01 Philosophy of Gender |
Rognlie D |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
GEN-200-01=PHI-216-01=PPE-216-01
|
1.00 |
CEN 300
|
|||
GEN-270-01 Literature and Masculinity |
Freeze E |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
This course will explore how contemporary literature impacts and
shapes masculinity. Students will read novels, short stories,
poetry, creative nonfiction, and theory to ask how contemporary
texts reify or challenge gender norms. Are definitions of
masculinity expanding, creating spaces for men that didn't exist
before? Or are they contracting? Or both? We will grapple with
these questions, using theory to help us read and interpret texts
as well as understand the complex cultural forces that shape
masculinity today.
GEN-270-01=ENG=270-01
|
1.00 | LFA, LS |
CEN 215
|
||
GEN-304-01 Postcolonial Literature |
Brewer A |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Pre-Req: 1 Wabash Literature course.
In this course, we will focus on major Anglophone and Francophone
authors writing in and about formerly colonized territories such
as parts of the Caribbean, Senegal, Zimbabwe, South Africa,
India, and Ireland. We will focus on gender roles and race in
connection to the literary canon, and we will discuss a dialogue
between the center of the empire (London) and the "margins"
(British colonies). How did the authors describe conflicts
between assimilation and resistance in the colonial and
postcolonial milieu? How were the national, cultural, and
individual identities affected by decades of foreign imperial
presence? To understand and enjoy the texts, we will also study
the political context of European imperialism and the
anti-imperial resistance.
GEN-304-01=ENG-330-01=BLS-270-01
|
1.00 | GCJD, LFA |
CEN 216
|
||
GEN-304-02 Rebels, Yuppies and Punks |
Pliego Campos N |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Pre-Req: 1 Wabash Literature course.
This course introduces students to the history of the Global
1980s (1979-1991) with attention to the origins, developments,
and consequences of youth as an idea and lived experience in the
world. The course asks how people around the world understood
youth and how youth interacted with the political, economic, and
health changes that shaped the decade. Students will examine how
young people responded politically, economically, and culturally
to international, national, and local events. Special attention
will be given to Latin American youth, in particular from Mexico.
As such, students will study the interactions between youth,
nationality, class, gender, sexuality, and ethnicity/race.
GEN-304-02=HIS-300-01=HSP-300-01
|
1.00 |
BAX 114
|
|||
GER - GERMAN | ||||||||
GER-101-01 Elementary German I |
van der Kolk J |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
|
1.00 |
DET 211
|
|||
GER-101-02 Elementary German I |
van der Kolk J |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
|
1.00 |
DET 112
|
|||
GER-101L-01 Elementary German I Lab |
M. Kramer |
M
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 220
|
|||
GER-101L-03 Elementary German I Lab |
M. Kramer |
W
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 112
|
|||
GER-101L-04 Elementary German I Lab |
M. Kramer |
TH
09:45AM - 10:35AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 226
|
|||
GER-101L-05 Elementary German I Lab |
M. Kramer |
TH
02:40PM - 03:30PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 220
|
|||
GER-101L-06 Elementary German I Lab |
M. Kramer |
F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 220
|
|||
GER-201-01 Intermediate German |
Tucker B |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
Prerequisite: GER-102,
or GER-201 placement |
1.00 | WL |
DET 111
|
||
GER-201L-01 Intermediate German Lab |
M. Kramer |
TU
09:45AM - 10:35AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 226
|
|||
GER-201L-04 Intermediate German Lab |
M. Kramer |
W
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 128
|
|||
GER-301-01 Conversation & Composition |
van der Kolk J |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
Prerequisite: GER-202,
or GER-301 placement |
1.00 | WL |
DET 211
|
||
GER-313-01 Studies in German Literature |
Tucker B |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Prerequisites: GER-301 and GER-302
|
1.00 | LFA |
DET 211
|
||
GHL - GLOBAL HEALTH | ||||||||
GHL-219-01 Drugs & Society in Modern Hist |
Rhoades M |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
HIS 200-01: Drugs and Society Modern History
What is a drug? This course examines the history of drugs in
society by first asking what a drug or intoxicant might be. The
class will then consider how different societies have accepted or
rejected drugs based on their usefulness or danger to the social
order. We will examine changing cultural attitudes toward drugs,
the rise of modern drug regulation, and the development of the
pharmaceutical drug. For example, why did drinking coffee and tea
become an accepted activity, but smoking opium was increasingly
frowned upon during the nineteenth century? Why did Viagra become
medically acceptable but mercury fell out of favor to treat
disease in the 20th century?
Key topics will include:
The growth and regulation of the opium trade in the 19th century
The cultural, economic, and social factors shaping alcohol
policies in the late 19th and early 20th centuries
The medicalization of drug use and the development of the
pharmaceutical industry
The impact of drug regulation and the emergence of the global war
on drugs in the 20th century
The historical interpretations of Cannabis, Alcohol (Tequila,
Absinthe), Meth, Viagra, Chocolate, etc.
This course is suitable for all students with an interest in
history, sociology, and public health. By the end of the course,
students will have developed critical thinking and analytical
skills to better understand historical relationships between
drugs and society. There is no immersion trip associated with
this course but to be blunt, in addition to short assignments and
two exams, students will have a daily dose of reading and
discussion.
GHL-219-01=HIS-200-02
|
1.00 |
BAX 202
|
|||
GHL-235-01 Health Economics |
Adhikary S |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
ECO-101
Meeting days & times TBD
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 212
|
||
GHL-277-01 Epidemiology |
Hodges T |
M W
02:10PM - 03:50PM |
|
1.00 | QL |
HAY 319
|
||
GHL-310-01 Decolonial Philosophy |
Montiel J |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
Pre-req: PHI-110 or PHI-242
Although the colonization of the Americas in 1492 represented a
paradigm shift in the ways that people conceived of science,
ethics, politics, and economics, its significance in shaping the
modern world has been largely ignored by Western European
philosophers. This obliviousness is not coincidental. According
to the Eurocentric view, modernity results from the historical
unfolding of Europe, and it represents a moment of rational
maturity such that human beings can self-govern. This course will
expose what decolonial philosopher Enrique Dussel calls the "myth
of modernity," which means that the Eurocentric view of modernity
not only emerges from but also serves to justify colonial
violence against non-European peoples. We will show that the
Eurocentric view of modernity relies on a developmentalist
conception of history which situates Western European peoples as
historically developed and non-European peoples as historically
backwards. The "myth of modernity" thus implies that while
Western European peoples can self-govern, non-European peoples
must be governed by others, thereby justifying colonial practices
of land dispossession, enslavement, and serfdom. We will also
explore the ways in which the "myth of modernity" informs the
self-conception of colonized peoples at the most intimate levels
of our racial, gendered, and sexual selves. We will end by
considering various liberation projects, including the option of
emancipatory violence. In addition to juxtaposing canonical
philosophical discourses about the idea of modernity alongside
decolonial discourses from the global south, we will also
incorporate literary works that capture the experience of
colonization and its implications for our conception of
modernity.
GHL-310-01=PHI-319-02=BLS-280-01=HSP-217-01
|
1.00 |
HAY 321
|
|||
GHL-310-02 Covid on the Brain |
Schmitzer-Torbert N |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
Pre-req: PSY-204,
NSC-204, PSY-233, PSY-235 OR BIO-111
COVID-19, a novel coronavirus, produces flu-like symptoms in many
individuals, and has been a major health risk globally since
2020. During the pandemic, the risk of mortality and stress on
medical infrastructure were the primary public health concerns.
However, even for individuals who experience mild COVID or
recover after a COVID infection, many will experience a range of
symptoms such as fatigue, loss of smell, 'brain fog', etc., which
suggest an impact of COVID-19 on the nervous system. As COVID-19
infections continue, a better understanding of the effects of
COVID-19 on the brain will be a critical part of the effort to
reduce the burden and suffering associated with this condition.
In this course, we will consider the neurological impacts of
COVID-19, including long COVID, and the state of current research
into treatments and prevention strategies.
1st half semester
PSY-310-01=GHL-310-02=NSC-310-01
|
0.50 |
BAX 312
|
|||
GHL-400-01 Capstone in Global Health |
Wetzel E |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
Prereq: BIO-177,PSC-201/SOC-201,
and DV1-277. |
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
GRK - GREEK | ||||||||
GRK-101-01 Beginning Greek I |
Gorey M |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
|
1.00 |
HAY 001
|
|||
GRK-101L-01 Beginning Greek I Lab |
Gorey M |
TU
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
|
0.00 |
HAY 002
|
|||
GRK-101L-02 Beginning Greek I Lab |
Gorey M |
TU
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
|
0.00 |
HAY 002
|
|||
GRK-201-01 Intermediate Greek I |
Barnes R |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
Prerequisites: GRK-101 and GRK-102
|
1.00 | WL, LFA |
DET 128
|
||
GRK-302-01 Advanced Greek Reading: Prose |
Day J |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
GRK-201
|
1.00 | WL, LFA |
DET 128
|
||
HIS - HISTORY | ||||||||
HIS-101-01 World History to 1500 |
Warner R, Pliego Campos N |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
MXI 109
|
||
HIS-101-02 World History to 1500 |
Royalty B |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
BAX 202
|
||
HIS-200-01 Digitizing Immigration History |
Levy A |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
How has digital technology affected our understanding of the
past? In this course, we will examine the ways in which the
Internet has dramatically changed the creation and consumption of
historical knowledge. With a focus on the history of immigration,
this course will interrogate search engines, explore digital
archives, and look under the hoods of mapping, textual analysis,
network visualization, and crowdsourcing projects. Throughout,
students will consider the methodological implications of doing
immigration history online, including the ethical challenges of
sharing immigrant stories and reducing human lives to data. The
course will follow digital history's call to collaboratively play
- and sometimes fail - with technology, concluding the semester
with an online group research project related to the history of
immigration.
HIS-200-01=HSP-250-01
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 305
|
||
HIS-200-02 Drugs & Society in Modern Hist |
Rhoades M |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
What is a drug? This course examines the history of drugs in
society by first asking what a drug or intoxicant might be. The
class will then consider how different societies have accepted or
rejected drugs based on their usefulness or danger to the social
order. We will examine changing cultural attitudes toward drugs,
the rise of modern drug regulation, and the development of the
pharmaceutical drug. For example, why did drinking coffee and tea
become an accepted activity, but smoking opium was increasingly
frowned upon during the nineteenth century? Why did Viagra become
medically acceptable but mercury fell out of favor to treat
disease in the 20th century?
Key topics will include:
The growth and regulation of the opium trade in the 19th century
The cultural, economic, and social factors shaping alcohol
policies in the late 19th and early 20th centuries
The medicalization of drug use and the development of the
pharmaceutical industry
The impact of drug regulation and the emergence of the global war
on drugs in the 20th century
The historical interpretations of Cannabis, Alcohol (Tequila,
Absinthe), Meth, Viagra, Chocolate, etc.
This course is suitable for all students with an interest in
history, sociology, and public health. By the end of the course,
students will have developed critical thinking and analytical
skills to better understand historical relationships between
drugs and society. There is no immersion trip associated with
this course but to be blunt, in addition to short assignments and
two exams, students will have a daily dose of reading and
discussion.
HIS-200-02=GHL-219-01
|
1.00 | HPR |
BAX 202
|
||
HIS-200-03 The End of the World |
Royalty B |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
From ancient Rome to Waco, Texas, Jewish and Christian groups
have shared visions of the end of the world. This course will
study the history of these communities from Roman antiquity to
medieval Europe to recent apocalyptic movements. Using the
lenses of social and cultural history, we will examine how these
apocalyptic ideas have been shaped by historical events and how
groups have interacted with, and often changed, society.
HIS-200-03=REL-272-01
|
1.00 | HPR |
BAX 114
|
||
HIS-200-04 European Music Before 1750 |
Ables M |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
HIS-200-04=MUS-205-01
|
1.00 | HPR |
FIN M140
|
||
HIS-210-01 Sports in Antiquity |
Barnes R |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
The ancient cultures of Greece and Rome left lasting legacies not
only in philosophy and politics but also in sports and athletics.
In this class, students become acquainted with a diverse range of
ancient sports and recreational activities practiced by Greeks
and Romans. Through the engagement with ancient texts,
inscriptions, paintings, sculptures, and the hands-on re-creation
of ancient games, students not only observe the significant role
that these pastimes played in classical culture but also reflect
on the continued importance of sports and recreation in modern
society. Along the way, the class explores larger themes, such as
the role of ritual in sports, the nature of play, and the
question of professionalism versus amateurism, as well as issues
related to gender and ethics.
HIS-210-01=CLA-113-01
|
1.00 | HPR, LFA |
HAY 319
|
||
HIS-230-01 Holocaust: His/Pol/Represe |
Hollander E |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 |
GOO 310
|
|||
HIS-236-01 History of Economic Thought |
Snow N |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
ECO-205-01=HIS-236-01=PPE-265-01
|
1.00 | BSC, HPR |
BAX 201
|
||
HIS-241-01 United States to 1865 |
Warner R |
M W F
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
MXI 109
|
||
HIS-260-01 Premodern China |
Healey C |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
This survey course introduces Chinese history and cultural
traditions from ancient times to 1911, outlining historical
trends such as Confucianism, Daoism, Buddhism, dynastic cycles,
literati culture, traditional gender roles, and interactions with
the West. We will analyze a variety of primary sources (in
translation), including poetry, fiction, philosophical writings,
historical records, and visual art. No pre-requisites.
HIS-260-01=ASI-112-03
|
1.00 | GCJD, HPR, LFA |
DET 112
|
||
HIS-300-01 Rebels, Yuppies and Punks |
Pliego Campos N |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
One previous course in History
This course introduces students to the history of the Global
1980s (1979-1991) with attention to the origins, developments,
and consequences of youth as an idea and lived experience in the
world. The course asks how people around the world understood
youth and how youth interacted with the political, economic, and
health changes that shaped the decade. Students will examine how
young people responded politically, economically, and culturally
to international, national, and local events. Special attention
will be given to Latin American youth, in particular from Mexico.
As such, students will study the interactions between youth,
nationality, class, gender, sexuality, and ethnicity/race.
HIS-300-01=GEN-304-02=HSP-300-01
|
1.00 | HPR |
BAX 114
|
||
HIS-300-02 A Murderous History |
Rhoades M |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
One previous course in History
What can a murder case tell us about a society and its culture?
Does the victim matter in different ways to different societies?
Do trials always convict the culprit? Who does the law protect,
ultimately? Do forms of communication shape public opinions of
crime and criminality? In this seminar, students will read about
famous (or infamous) murder cases drawn from European, British,
and American history. The criminal cases covered in class will
address the sensational nature of crimes of strangulation and
dismemberment, but they will also delve into the social,
political, and cultural interpretations of those crimes. From
Jack the Ripper to the O.J. Simpson trial, students will read
about policing, crime, and criminal activity in the 19th and 20th
centuries. The course will encourage students to think critically
about the cultural and societal forces that have shaped the ways
in which murder has been understood and punished.
Key themes include:
The definitions and understandings of murder in the 19th and 20th
centuries
The rise of forensic science and its impact on investigations
The relationship between murder and broader social and cultural
trends, including urbanization, immigration, and class struggles
The representation of murder in literature, film, and media
This course is good for students interested in history,
criminology, media, and cultural change. Coursework will include
several short writing assignments and a final project where
students will use English-language newspapers to research a
little-known murder and write about its historical context, from
initial report and social reactions, to legal resolution.
|
1.00 | HPR |
BAX 212
|
||
HIS-497-01 Philosophy & Craft of History |
Royalty B |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
|
1.00 |
BAX 311
|
|||
HIS-498-01 Research Seminar |
Pliego Campos N, Rhoades M |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
1.00 |
BAX 301
|
|||
HSP - HISPANIC STUDIES | ||||||||
HSP-217-01 Decolonial Philosophy |
Montiel J |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
Pre-req PHI-110 or PHI-242
Although the colonization of the Americas in 1492 represented a
paradigm shift in the ways that people conceived of science,
ethics, politics, and economics, its significance in shaping the
modern world has been largely ignored by Western European
philosophers. This obliviousness is not coincidental. According
to the Eurocentric view, modernity results from the historical
unfolding of Europe, and it represents a moment of rational
maturity such that human beings can self-govern. This course will
expose what decolonial philosopher Enrique Dussel calls the "myth
of modernity," which means that the Eurocentric view of modernity
not only emerges from but also serves to justify colonial
violence against non-European peoples. We will show that the
Eurocentric view of modernity relies on a developmentalist
conception of history which situates Western European peoples as
historically developed and non-European peoples as historically
backwards. The "myth of modernity" thus implies that while
Western European peoples can self-govern, non-European peoples
must be governed by others, thereby justifying colonial practices
of land dispossession, enslavement, and serfdom. We will also
explore the ways in which the "myth of modernity" informs the
self-conception of colonized peoples at the most intimate levels
of our racial, gendered, and sexual selves. We will end by
considering various liberation projects, including the option of
emancipatory violence. In addition to juxtaposing canonical
philosophical discourses about the idea of modernity alongside
decolonial discourses from the global south, we will also
incorporate literary works that capture the experience of
colonization and its implications for our conception of
modernity.
HSP-217-01=PHI-319-02=BLS-280-01=GHL-310-01
|
1.00 |
HAY 321
|
|||
HSP-250-01 Digitizing Immigration History |
Levy A |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
How has digital technology affected our understanding of the
past? In this course, we will examine the ways in which the
Internet has dramatically changed the creation and consumption of
historical knowledge. With a focus on the history of immigration,
this course will interrogate search engines, explore digital
archives, and look under the hoods of mapping, textual analysis,
network visualization, and crowdsourcing projects. Throughout,
students will consider the methodological implications of doing
immigration history online, including the ethical challenges of
sharing immigrant stories and reducing human lives to data. The
course will follow digital history's call to collaboratively play
- and sometimes fail - with technology, concluding the semester
with an online group research project related to the history of
immigration.
HSP-250-01=HIS-200-01
|
1.00 |
CEN 305
|
|||
HSP-277-01 Growth & Inequality in Latin |
Mikek P |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
ECO-101
|
1.00 | BSC, GCJD |
BAX 201
|
||
HSP-300-01 Rebels, Yuppies and Punks |
Pliego Campos N |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
One previous course in History at Wabash
This course introduces students to the history of the Global
1980s (1979-1991) with attention to the origins, developments,
and consequences of youth as an idea and lived experience in the
world. The course asks how people around the world understood
youth and how youth interacted with the political, economic, and
health changes that shaped the decade. Students will examine how
young people responded politically, economically, and culturally
to international, national, and local events. Special attention
will be given to Latin American youth, in particular from Mexico.
As such, students will study the interactions between youth,
nationality, class, gender, sexuality, and ethnicity/race.
HSP-300-01=HIS-300-01=GEN-304-02
|
1.00 |
BAX 114
|
|||
HSP-400-01 Senior Capstone |
Warner R |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
|
1.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
HUM - HUMANITIES | ||||||||
HUM-196-01 Religion in Japanese Lit |
Blix D |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 | HPR, LFA |
MXI 109
|
||
LAT - LATIN | ||||||||
LAT-101-01 Beginning Latin I |
Hartnett J |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
|
1.00 |
DET 111
|
|||
LAT-101L-01 Beginning Latin Lab |
Hartnett J |
TU
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 111
|
|||
LAT-101L-02 Beginning Latin Lab |
Hartnett J |
TU
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 111
|
|||
LAT-201-01 Intermediate Latin I |
Gorey M |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
Prerequisite: LAT-102,
or placement in LAT-201 |
1.00 | WL, LFA |
DET 111
|
||
LAT-301-01 Advanced Latin Reading: Poetry |
Barnes R |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
Prerequisite: LAT-201,
or LAT-301 placement |
1.00 | WL, LFA |
DET 128
|
||
MAT - MATHEMATICS | ||||||||
MAT-100-01 Math Modeling and Precalculus |
Westphal C |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
Enrollment by Instructor Permission only
|
1.00 | QL |
HAY 001
|
||
MAT-100-02 Math Modeling and Precalculus |
Westphal C |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
Enrollment by Instructor Permission Only
|
1.00 | QL |
HAY 001
|
||
MAT-108-01 Intro to Discrete Structures |
Rosenblum A |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
|
1.00 | QL |
GOO 104
|
||
MAT-111-01 Calculus I |
Akhunov T |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
MAT-100 with a minimum grade of C-,
or MAT-111 placement, or permission of the instructor |
1.00 | QL |
BAX 214
|
||
MAT-111-02 Calculus I |
Rosenblum A |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
MAT-100 with a minimum grade of C-,
or MAT-111 placement, or permission of the instructor |
1.00 | QL |
GOO 101
|
||
MAT-111-03 Calculus I |
Akhunov T |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
MAT-100 with a minimum grade of C-,
or MAT-111 placement, or permission of the instructor |
1.00 | QL |
BAX 214
|
||
MAT-111-04 Calculus I |
Poffald E |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
MAT-100 with a minimum grade of C-,
or MAT-111 placement, or permission of the instructor |
1.00 | QL |
GOO 101
|
||
MAT-112-01 Calculus II |
Ansaldi K |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
Prerequisite: MAT-110 or MAT-111 with a minimum grade of C-,
or MAT-112 placement
|
1.00 | QL |
HAY 003
|
||
MAT-223-01 Linear Algebra |
Ansaldi K |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
Prerequisite: MAT-112 with a minimum grade of C-,
or MAT-223 placement. |
1.00 | QL |
HAY 003
|
||
MAT-225-01 Multivariable Calculus |
Rosenblum A |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
MAT-112 with a minimum grade of C-,
and MAT-223 |
1.00 | QL |
GOO 101
|
||
MAT-251-01 Mathematical Finance |
Akhunov T |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
Prerequisite: MAT-112
Second-half semester course
|
0.50 |
BAX 214
|
|||
MAT-252-01 Mathematical Interest Theory |
Akhunov T |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
Prerequisite: MAT-112
First-half semester course.
|
0.50 |
BAX 214
|
|||
MAT-332-01 Abstract Algebra II |
Ansaldi K |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
Prerequisite: MAT-331
|
1.00 |
GOO 006
|
|||
MAT-333-01 Funct Real Variable I |
Poffald E |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
Prerequisite: MAT-223
|
1.00 |
GOO 006
|
|||
MAT-338-01 Machine Learning |
McKinney C |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Pre-req: MAT-223 and CSC-111,
minimum grade C-
Machine learning as a term was first coined in 1959 by Arthur
Samuel, based on work he did developing a computer checkers game.
The area has grown vastly since then, and is used for
applications from self-driving vehicles to ChatGPT. This course
will explore both the theory and practice of machine learning
models and algorithms.
MAT-338-01=CSC-338-01
|
1.00 |
HAY 003
|
|||
MSL - MILITARY SCIENCE & LEADERSHIP | ||||||||
MSL-001-01 Leadership Lab (ROTC) |
Staff, Jump J |
TH
03:00PM - 05:20PM |
This is a course for ROTC students at the campus of Purdue
University and follows Purdue's term dates. Purdue's Fall
semester dates are August 21 - December 9, 2023. Purdue's Fall
break is October 9-10, 2023 (Monday - Tuesday) and their
Thanksgiving break is November 22-25, 2023 (Wednesday -
Saturday).
|
0.00 |
OFF XXX
|
|||
MSL-101-01 Intro to the Army (ROTC) |
Staff, Jump J |
TH
01:30PM - 02:20PM |
This is a course for ROTC students at the campus of Purdue
University and follows Purdue's term dates. Purdue's Fall
semester dates are August 21 - December 9, 2023. Purdue's Fall
break is October 9-10, 2023 (Monday - Tuesday) and their
Thanksgiving break is November 22-25, 2023 (Wednesday -
Saturday).
|
0.00 |
OFF XXX
|
|||
MSL-201-01 Leadership & Ethics (ROTC) |
Staff, Jump J |
TU TH
12:30PM - 01:20PM |
This is a course for ROTC students at the campus of Purdue
University and follows Purdue's term dates. Purdue's Fall
semester dates are August 21 - December 9, 2023. Purdue's Fall
break is October 9-10, 2023 (Monday - Tuesday) and their
Thanksgiving break is November 22-25, 2023 (Wednesday -
Saturday).
|
0.00 |
OFF XXX
|
|||
MSL-301-01 Leadrship/Prob Solving (ROTC) |
Staff, Jump J |
TU TH
01:30PM - 02:45PM |
This is a course for ROTC students at the campus of Purdue
University and follows Purdue's term dates. Purdue's Fall
semester dates are August 21 - December 9, 2023. Purdue's Fall
break is October 9-10, 2023 (Monday - Tuesday) and their
Thanksgiving break is November 22-25, 2023 (Wednesday -
Saturday).
|
0.00 |
OFF XXX
|
|||
MSL-401-01 Leadership & Managemnt (ROTC) |
Staff, Jump J |
TU TH
10:30AM - 11:45AM |
This is a course for ROTC students at the campus of Purdue
University and follows Purdue's term dates. Purdue's Fall
semester dates are August 21 - December 9, 2023. Purdue's Fall
break is October 9-10, 2023 (Monday - Tuesday) and their
Thanksgiving break is November 22-25, 2023 (Wednesday -
Saturday).
|
0.00 |
OFF XXX
|
|||
MUS - MUSIC | ||||||||
MUS-052-01 Chamber Orchestra (No Credit) |
Abel A |
W
04:15PM - 05:45PM |
|
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MUS-053-01 Glee Club (No Credit) |
Williams S |
M TU W TH
04:15PM - 06:00PM |
|
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MUS-055-01 Jazz Ensemble (no Credit) |
Pazera C |
TU
07:00PM - 09:00PM |
|
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MUS-056-01 Wamidan Wld Music Ens (No Cr) |
Makubuya J |
W F
05:00PM - 06:00PM |
|
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MUS-102-01 World Music |
Makubuya J |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
MUS-102-01=BLS-270-03
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN M120
|
||
MUS-104-01 Sound and Literature in French |
Altergott R |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Can we recover the sounds of Paris prior to sound recording? Why
were church bells silenced during the French Revolution, and how
did the meaning of this sound become secularized in the
countryside? What types of sources are researchers using to
restore the sonic aspects of the Notre Dame cathedral since the
disastrous fire in April 2019? This course will take up these and
other questions about the role of sound in the construction of
French cultural and political identities. Drawing from key
concepts in Sound Studies, we will explore the evolving
soundscapes across France and the French colonial empire. Through
poetry and prose from classic French and Francophone writers such
as Charles Baudelaire, Frantz Fanon, Gustave Flaubert, and
Proust, we will study how authors have used literature to
preserve the sounds of history before and after sound recording,
and listen to the earliest recorded human voice, the cries of
Parisian street vendors, and the sounds of war from the medieval
era to the present.
|
1.00 | LFA |
DET 128
|
||
MUS-107-01 Basic Theory and Notation |
Ables M |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN M120
|
||
MUS-153-01 Glee Club |
Williams S |
M TU W TH
04:15PM - 06:00PM |
|
0.50 | LFA |
TBA TBA
|
||
MUS-160-01 Beginning Applied Music |
Norton D |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
MUS-107 or departmental exam,
or instructor permission |
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MUS-160-03 Beginning Applied Music |
Everett C |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
MUS-107 or departmental exam,
or instructor permission |
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MUS-160-04 Beginning Applied Music |
C. Pingel |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
MUS-107 or departmental exam,
or instructor permission |
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MUS-160-05 Beginning Applied Music |
Abel A |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
MUS-107 or departmental exam,
or instructor permission |
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MUS-160-06 Beginning Applied Music |
L. Guentert |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
MUS-107 or departmental exam,
or instructor permission |
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MUS-187-01 Voice Music Lessons |
C. Pingel |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
|
0.00-1.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MUS-201-01 Music Theory I |
Williams S |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
MUS-107 or permission of instructor,
MUS-201L |
1.00 | LFA |
FIN M140
|
||
MUS-201L-01 Music Theory I Lab |
Williams S |
M W
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
MUS-201 previously or concurrently,
MUS-107 previously, or permission of instructor |
0.00 |
FIN M140
|
|||
MUS-205-01 European Music Before 1750 |
Ables M |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN M140
|
||
MUS-224-01 Global Persp Music Cul & Id |
Makubuya J |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN M140
|
||
MUS-260-01 Intermediate Applied Music I |
Staff |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
Prerequisite: Take MUS-161,
or two semesters of MUS-160. |
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MUS-360-01 Intermediate Applied Music II |
Staff |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
Prerequisite: take MUS-261 or two semesters of MUS-260.
|
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MUS-460-01 Advanced Applied Music |
Staff |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
Prerequisite: take MUS-361,
or two semesters of MUS-360. |
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
NSC - NEUROSCIENCE | ||||||||
NSC-310-01 Covid on the Brain |
Schmitzer-Torbert N |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
Pre-req: PSY-204,
NSC-204, PSY-233, PSY-235 OR BIO-111
COVID-19, a novel coronavirus, produces flu-like symptoms in many
individuals, and has been a major health risk globally since
2020. During the pandemic, the risk of mortality and stress on
medical infrastructure were the primary public health concerns.
However, even for individuals who experience mild COVID or
recover after a COVID infection, many will experience a range of
symptoms such as fatigue, loss of smell, 'brain fog', etc., which
suggest an impact of COVID-19 on the nervous system. As COVID-19
infections continue, a better understanding of the effects of
COVID-19 on the brain will be a critical part of the effort to
reduce the burden and suffering associated with this condition.
In this course, we will consider the neurological impacts of
COVID-19, including long COVID, and the state of current research
into treatments and prevention strategies.
1st half semester
PSY-310-01=GHL-310-01=NSC-310-01
|
0.50 |
BAX 312
|
|||
OCS - OFF CAMPUS STUDY | ||||||||
OCS-01-01 Off Campus Study |
Staff |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
|
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
PE - PHYSICAL EDUCATION | ||||||||
PE-011-01 Advanced Fitness |
Brumett K |
M W F
06:00AM - 07:15AM |
|
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
PE-011-02 Advanced Fitness |
Martin J |
M W F
06:30AM - 07:30AM |
|
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
PHI - PHILOSOPHY | ||||||||
PHI-109-02 Philosophy of Sports |
Rognlie D |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
This course provides an introduction to fundamental questions in
the field of the philosophy of sport. Engaging metaphysics,
phenomenology, ethics, and social and political philosophy,
students will ponder such questions as: What is sport? What is
the value of sport? What does sport reveal about the relation of
our mind and body? Of our identity? Of our freedom? Is sport an
arena for social justice? These questions will be examined using
a diverse set of tools ranging from ancient Greek philosophy to
contemporary trans feminist philosophy and philosophy of race.
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 216
|
||
PHI-215-01 Environmental Philosophy |
Gower J |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
PHI-215-01=PPE-215-01
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 304
|
||
PHI-216-01 Philosophy of Gender |
Rognlie D |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
PHI-216-01=GEN-200-01=PPE-216-01
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 300
|
||
PHI-218-01 Philosophy of Commerce |
Montiel J |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
PHI-218-01=PPE-218-01
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 215
|
||
PHI-240-01 Ancient Philosophy |
Rognlie D |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
PHI-240-01=CLA-240-01
|
1.00 | HPR, LFA |
CEN 215
|
||
PHI-269-01 Knowledge and Skepticism |
Carlson M |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
Here are some things that I take myself to know. The world around
me is real, and not merely a simulation. The universe is billions
of years old, and did not come into existence five minutes ago.
Antarctica is a continent, but the Arctic is not. There are 215
Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives. The sun will
rise tomorrow. But how do I know those things? What reliable
information can I really have about the world around me? These
questions are made particularly pressing by the existence of
philosophical skepticism, according to which it is impossible for
us to know what the world around us is actually like. Despite
skepticism's absurd appearance, it is of enduring interest
because of the power of the arguments in favor of it. Thus, to
study skepticism, we will direct most of our attention to the
careful study of arguments. The arguments we study will come from
classic and contemporary philosophical works, and we will study
them by using software called MindMup to map their structure.
This will put us in a position to understand and evaluate these
skeptical arguments, with an eye toward determining how we can
have knowledge of the world around us.
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 300
|
||
PHI-319-02 Decolonial Philosophy |
Montiel J |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
Pre-req: PHI-110 or PHI-242
Although the colonization of the Americas in 1492 represented a
paradigm shift in the ways that people conceived of science,
ethics, politics, and economics, its significance in shaping the
modern world has been largely ignored by Western European
philosophers. This obliviousness is not coincidental. According
to the Eurocentric view, modernity results from the historical
unfolding of Europe, and it represents a moment of rational
maturity such that human beings can self-govern. This course will
expose what decolonial philosopher Enrique Dussel calls the "myth
of modernity," which means that the Eurocentric view of modernity
not only emerges from but also serves to justify colonial
violence against non-European peoples. We will show that the
Eurocentric view of modernity relies on a developmentalist
conception of history which situates Western European peoples as
historically developed and non-European peoples as historically
backwards. The "myth of modernity" thus implies that while
Western European peoples can self-govern, non-European peoples
must be governed by others, thereby justifying colonial practices
of land dispossession, enslavement, and serfdom. We will also
explore the ways in which the "myth of modernity" informs the
self-conception of colonized peoples at the most intimate levels
of our racial, gendered, and sexual selves. We will end by
considering various liberation projects, including the option of
emancipatory violence. In addition to juxtaposing canonical
philosophical discourses about the idea of modernity alongside
decolonial discourses from the global south, we will also
incorporate literary works that capture the experience of
colonization and its implications for our conception of
modernity.
PHI-319-02=BLS-280-01=GHL-319-01=HSP-217-01
|
1.00 | HPR |
HAY 321
|
||
PHI-345-01 Continental Philosophy |
Gower J |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
Prerequisite: PHI-240 (or taken concurrently),
and PHI-242 |
1.00 |
CEN 304
|
|||
PHI-449-01 Senior Seminar |
Carlson M |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 |
CEN 305
|
|||
PHY - PHYSICS | ||||||||
PHY-109-01 Physics I - Algebra |
Tompkins N |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 | QL, SL |
GOO 104
|
||
PHY-109L-01 Physics I - Algebra Lab |
Tompkins N |
M
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
GOO 201
|
|||
PHY-109L-02 Physics I - Algebra Lab |
Tompkins N |
TU
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
GOO 201
|
|||
PHY-111-01 Physics I - Calculus |
Krause D |
M W F
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
Prerequisites: MAT-110 or MAT-111,
or placement into MAT-111 with concurrent registration, or placement into MAT-112 or MAT-223 |
1.00 | QL, SL |
GOO 104
|
||
PHY-111L-01 Physics I - Calculus Lab |
Krause D |
W
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
GOO 201
|
|||
PHY-111L-02 Physics I - Calculus Lab |
Krause D |
TH
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
GOO 201
|
|||
PHY-209-01 Intro Thermal Phy & Relativity |
Brown J |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
Prerequisites: PHY-112 with a minimum grade of C-,
and MAT-112 |
1.00 | QL, SL |
GOO 305
|
||
PHY-209L-01 Thermal Physics Lab |
Brown J |
TU
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Prerequisites: PHY-112 and MAT-112
|
0.00 |
GOO 306
|
|||
PHY-277-01 Astrophysics |
Ross G |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Pre-req: MAT-112 and PHY-112
This course serves as an introduction to astrophysics for
students who have completed the two-semester calculus-based
physics sequence. Topics include stellar properties and their
measurement, structure, formation and evolution of stars, the
interstellar medium and galaxies, and cosmology.
|
1.00 |
GOO 305
|
|||
PHY-310-01 Classical Mechanics |
Brown J |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
PHY-112 with a minimum grade of C- and
MAT-224,
or permission of instructor |
1.00 |
GOO 305
|
|||
PHY-315-01 Quantum Mechanics |
Krause D |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
PHY-210 with a minimum grade of C-,
MAT-223, and MAT-224 |
1.00 | QL |
GOO 313
|
||
PHY-381-01 Advanced Laboratory I |
Brown J |
TH
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Prerequisite: PHY-210
|
0.50 |
GOO 306
|
|||
PHY-382-01 Advanced Laboratory II |
Tompkins N |
TH
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Prerequisite: PHY-381
|
0.50 |
GOO 305
|
|||
PHY-400-01 Senior Seminar |
Tompkins N |
M
06:30PM - 08:30PM |
PHY-210
|
0.50 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
PPE - PHILOSOPHY POLITICS ECONOMICS | ||||||||
PPE-215-01 Environmental Philosophy |
Gower J |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
PPE-215-01=PHI-215-01
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 304
|
||
PPE-216-01 Philosophy of Gender |
Rognlie D |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 300
|
||
PPE-218-01 Philosophy of Commerce |
Montiel J |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
PPE-218-01=PHI-218-01
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 215
|
||
PPE-238-01 Political Economy in East Asia |
Ye, H |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
This course is to introduce students to politics and the
political economy in East Asia. Japan, China, and the East Asian
Tigers, including South Korea, Taiwan, and Singapore, have
experienced economic success and political transitions in the
past decades. How do East Asian countries achieve "economic
miracles"? How do the state and society drive economic growth?
Why do East Asian countries establish regional economic
institutions to promote free trade? How does the region's
political economy influence the world? We will focus on the
development strategies of the countries in the region and discuss
the underlying theoretical logic that explains East Asia's
growth. In particular, students will be exposed to different
datasets, analyze the empirical evidence, and make cross-country
comparisons. This course will cover a range of topics, including
developmental state, East Asian regional integration, and the
relationship between the regional supply chain and the global
economy.
PPE-238-01=PSC-220-01=ASI-277-01
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 201
|
||
PPE-238-02 Political Ecology |
M. Harvey |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
This course focuses on some fundamental questions for our
political moment. To what degree are our political and economic
institutions shaped by the physical spaces we inhabit, and the
web of non-human life that we share the world with? Is a
democratic future compatible with an assumption of human
exceptionalism in nature, and can a sustainable future for
humanity be achieved? In essence, this course examines how
ecology (geographic place, environment, and non-human life)
shapes and constrains our political lives. Over the course of the
term, we will critically engage with texts from political theory,
sociology, geography, and environmental science, to interrogate
how our relationships with nature impact our understandings of
democracy, justice, and equality. Particular emphasis will be
focused on two core themes: the compatibility of democracy with
equitable climate justice, and the political consideration of the
non-human and material elements of Earthly nature.
Will count as an elective for ENS minor.
PSC-230-01=PPE-238-02
|
1.00 |
BAX 212
|
|||
PPE-255-01 Health Economics |
Adhikary S |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
ECO-101
Meeting days & times TBD
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 212
|
||
PPE-258-01 Political Economy of Crisis |
D'Amico D |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
ECO-101
What are the proper and efficient roles of governments, markets,
and civil society organizations towards resolving the challenges
of crises? Students will learn and gain proficiency in the
theoretical approaches to understanding the political economy of
crises. What are the predictable processes and outcomes
associated with private and collective action responses to
crises? How do different communities and societies relatively
endure and respond to often swift, unexpected, and devastating
changes in their political, material and social conditions that
citizens live within? Students will survey a wide variety of
informative case studies across contexts such as wars, nation
building in weak and failed states, natural disasters, and
pandemic diseases.
PPE-258-01=ECO-277
|
1.00 |
BAX 114
|
|||
PPE-258-02 Behavioral Economics |
Dunaway E |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
ECO-101
ECO-277-02=PPE-258-02
|
1.00 |
HAY 001
|
|||
PPE-265-01 History of Economic Thought |
Snow N |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
ECO-205-01=HIS-236-01=PPE-265-01
|
1.00 | BSC, HPR |
BAX 201
|
||
PPE-329-02 Decolonial Philosophy |
Montiel J |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
Although the colonization of the Americas in 1492 represented a
paradigm shift in the ways that people conceived of science,
ethics, politics, and economics, its significance in shaping the
modern world has been largely ignored by Western European
philosophers. This obliviousness is not coincidental. According
to the Eurocentric view, modernity results from the historical
unfolding of Europe, and it represents a moment of rational
maturity such that human beings can self-govern. This course will
expose what decolonial philosopher Enrique Dussel calls the "myth
of modernity," which means that the Eurocentric view of modernity
not only emerges from but also serves to justify colonial
violence against non-European peoples. We will show that the
Eurocentric view of modernity relies on a developmentalist
conception of history which situates Western European peoples as
historically developed and non-European peoples as historically
backwards. The "myth of modernity" thus implies that while
Western European peoples can self-govern, non-European peoples
must be governed by others, thereby justifying colonial practices
of land dispossession, enslavement, and serfdom. We will also
explore the ways in which the "myth of modernity" informs the
self-conception of colonized peoples at the most intimate levels
of our racial, gendered, and sexual selves. We will end by
considering various liberation projects, including the option of
emancipatory violence. In addition to juxtaposing canonical
philosophical discourses about the idea of modernity alongside
decolonial discourses from the global south, we will also
incorporate literary works that capture the experience of
colonization and its implications for our conception of
modernity.
PHI-319-02=BLS-280-01=GHL-319-01=HSP-217-01=PPE-329-02
|
1.00 |
HAY 321
|
|||
PPE-333-01 Constitutional Law |
Himsel S |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
Sophomores, Juniors and Seniors only. PPE-333-01=PSC-313-01
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 212
|
||
PPE-338-01 Capitalism and Its Critics |
Harvey M |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
Capitalism is a philosophical concept, a mode of economic
organization, a moral foundation for political freedom, and a
contested source of struggle and oppression. In this course, we
examine the historical trajectory of capitalism as a
socio-economic system, its interactions with democratic politics,
various arguments against capitalism with proposed alternative
modes of societal organization, and the role that capitalism
should (or should not) play in contemporary political crises. How
do historical and contemporary theories of capitalist and
anti-capitalist politics shape our understanding of the world?
What role does capitalism play in shaping political, social, and
environmental outcomes today - and are those outcomes similar for
all political citizens? Is there a future for capitalism in
global society, and if not, what might such an alternative future
look like? This course will be focused on critical readings of
historical and modern texts in political thought, exploring the
historical development of capitalist/anti-capitalist ideologies,
how they intersect with our contemporary political lives, and
texts that envision what our economic futures could (or should)
look like.
PSC-330-01=PPE-338-01
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 201
|
||
PPE-358-01 Growth and Inequality in Latin |
Mikek P |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
Prerequisites: ECO-101 with a minimum grade of C- and one
200 level ECO course with a minimum grade of D,
OR with the consent of the instructor |
1.00 | BSC, GCJD |
BAX 201
|
||
PPE-400-01 Senior Seminar for PPE |
Snow N, Liou, Y |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
Prerequisites: PPE-200 with a minimum grade of C-,
and at least one 300-level PPE course, or permission of the instructor |
1.00 |
BAX 301
|
|||
PSC - POLITICAL SCIENCE | ||||||||
PSC-111-01 Intro to Amer Govt & Politics |
Gelbman S |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
|
1.00 | BSC |
MXI 109
|
||
PSC-121-01 Intro to Comparative Politics |
Hollander E |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 114
|
||
PSC-131-01 Intro to Political Theory |
Harvey M |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 212
|
||
PSC-141-01 Intro to Intn'l Relations |
Ye, H |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 202
|
||
PSC-220-01 Political Economy in East Asia |
Ye, H |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
This course is to introduce students to politics and the
political economy in East Asia. Japan, China, and the East Asian
Tigers, including South Korea, Taiwan, and Singapore, have
experienced economic success and political transitions in the
past decades. How do East Asian countries achieve "economic
miracles"? How do the state and society drive economic growth?
Why do East Asian countries establish regional economic
institutions to promote free trade? How does the region's
political economy influence the world? We will focus on the
development strategies of the countries in the region and discuss
the underlying theoretical logic that explains East Asia's
growth. In particular, students will be exposed to different
datasets, analyze the empirical evidence, and make cross-country
comparisons. This course will cover a range of topics, including
developmental state, East Asian regional integration, and the
relationship between the regional supply chain and the global
economy.
PSC-220-01=PPE-238-01=ASI-277-01
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 201
|
||
PSC-230-01 Political Ecology |
Harvey M |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
This course focuses on some fundamental questions for our
political moment. To what degree are our political and economic
institutions shaped by the physical spaces we inhabit, and the
web of non-human life that we share the world with? Is a
democratic future compatible with an assumption of human
exceptionalism in nature, and can a sustainable future for
humanity be achieved? In essence, this course examines how
ecology (geographic place, environment, and non-human life)
shapes and constrains our political lives. Over the course of the
term, we will critically engage with texts from political theory,
sociology, geography, and environmental science, to interrogate
how our relationships with nature impact our understandings of
democracy, justice, and equality. Particular emphasis will be
focused on two core themes: the compatibility of democracy with
equitable climate justice, and the political consideration of the
non-human and material elements of Earthly nature.
Will count as an elective for ENS minor.
PSC-230-01=PPE-238-02
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 212
|
||
PSC-240-01 Political Violence |
Liou, Y |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
Most conflicts today take place within states - either between
governments and civilians or among different groups in the
country. This course combines theories from international
relations and comparative politics to examine a broad range of
topics related to political violence. We will discuss various
forms of domestic con?icts, including antigovernment protests,
riots, state repression, civil war, terrorism, coups, electoral
violence, and conflict-related sexual violence. We will also
investigate the aftermath of conflicts and international
interventions in these conflicts. This class is not a history
class or a class on current events. Though current and historical
events will be discussed, your grade will not depend on your rote
memorization of these events. Instead, the focus will be on
understanding the underlying interests of important actors for
political conflicts, the arenas in which these actors interact,
and the rules which govern their interactions.
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 201
|
||
PSC-300-01 Research/Stats Political Sci |
Hollander E |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 | BSC, QL |
GOO 006
|
||
PSC-313-01 Constitutional Law |
Himsel S |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
Sophomores, Juniors and Seniors only. PSC-313-01=PPE-333-01
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 212
|
||
PSC-328-01 Holocaust: His/Pol/Represe |
Hollander E |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 | BSC |
DET 112
|
||
PSC-330-01 Capitalism and Its Critics |
Harvey M |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
Capitalism is a philosophical concept, a mode of economic
organization, a moral foundation for political freedom, and a
contested source of struggle and oppression. In this course, we
examine the historical trajectory of capitalism as a
socio-economic system, its interactions with democratic politics,
various arguments against capitalism with proposed alternative
modes of societal organization, and the role that capitalism
should (or should not) play in contemporary political crises. How
do historical and contemporary theories of capitalist and
anti-capitalist politics shape our understanding of the world?
What role does capitalism play in shaping political, social, and
environmental outcomes today - and are those outcomes similar for
all political citizens? Is there a future for capitalism in
global society, and if not, what might such an alternative future
look like? This course will be focused on critical readings of
historical and modern texts in political thought, exploring the
historical development of capitalist/anti-capitalist ideologies,
how they intersect with our contemporary political lives, and
texts that envision what our economic futures could (or should)
look like.
PSC-330-01=PPE-338-01
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 201
|
||
PSY - PSYCHOLOGY | ||||||||
PSY-101-01 Introduction to Psychology |
Horton R |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 101
|
||
PSY-101-02 Introduction to Psychology |
Bost P |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
Freshmen only section
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 101
|
||
PSY-105-01 Fatherhood |
Olofson E |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
PSY-105-01 = GEN-105-01
|
1.00 | BSC |
CEN 216
|
||
PSY-110-01 Psychology of Mindfulness |
Schmitzer-Torbert N |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
Mindfulness has become increasingly popular in programs to help
support health and wellness. Studies of mindfulness programs have
focused on a range of potential benefits, from stress reduction
and managing blood pressure, to helping with substance abuse and
sleep quality. In this course, we will examine the psychology of
mindfulness, focusing on common mindfulness programs. We will
consider how mindfulness today (which is often presented as set
of secular tools) has roots in several contemplative traditions.
Class activities will be divided between active participation in
components of an established mindfulness program for stress
reduction, and on examining psychological research on
effectiveness and mechanisms of mindfulness.
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 114
|
||
PSY-201-01 Research Methods & Stats I |
Horton R |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
Prerequisite: PSY-101
|
1.00 | BSC, QL |
BAX 214
|
||
PSY-202-01 Research Methods & Stats II |
Schmitzer-Torbert N |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Prerequisite: PSY-201
|
1.00 | BSC, QL |
BAX 214
|
||
PSY-220-01 Child Development |
Olofson E |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
Prerequisite: PSY-101 or PSY-105
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 301
|
||
PSY-231-01 Cognition |
Bost P |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
Prerequisite: PSY-201.
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 301
|
||
PSY-232-01 Sensation and Perception |
Gunther K |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
Prerequisite: NSC-204,
PSY-204, BIO-101 or BIO-111 |
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 312
|
||
PSY-301-01 Literature Review |
Gunther K |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
Prerequisite: PSY-201
|
1.00 |
BAX 312
|
|||
PSY-310-01 Covid on the Brain |
Schmitzer-Torbert N |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
Pre-req: PSY-204,
NSC-204, PSY-233, PSY-235 OR BIO-111
COVID-19, a novel coronavirus, produces flu-like symptoms in many
individuals, and has been a major health risk globally since
2020. During the pandemic, the risk of mortality and stress on
medical infrastructure were the primary public health concerns.
However, even for individuals who experience mild COVID or
recover after a COVID infection, many will experience a range of
symptoms such as fatigue, loss of smell, 'brain fog', etc., which
suggest an impact of COVID-19 on the nervous system. As COVID-19
infections continue, a better understanding of the effects of
COVID-19 on the brain will be a critical part of the effort to
reduce the burden and suffering associated with this condition.
In this course, we will consider the neurological impacts of
COVID-19, including long COVID, and the state of current research
into treatments and prevention strategies.
1st half semester
PSY-310-01=GHL-310-01=NSC-310-01
|
0.50 |
BAX 312
|
|||
PSY-322-01 Research in Social Psychology |
Horton R |
TU
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
Prerequisite: PSY-202 and PSY-222
|
0.50 |
BAX 311
|
|||
PSY-495-01 Senior Project |
Gunther K |
W
04:15PM - 05:00PM |
Prerequisite: PSY-202,
and PSY-301 (may be taken concurrently) |
0.50 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
PSY-495-02 Senior Project |
Bost P |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
Prerequisite: PSY-202,
and PSY-301 (may be taken concurrently) |
0.50 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
PSY-495-03 Senior Project |
Horton R |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
Prerequisite: PSY-202,
and PSY-301 (may be taken concurrently) |
0.50 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
PSY-495-04 Senior Project |
Olofson E |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
Prerequisite: PSY-202,
and PSY-301 (may be taken concurrently) |
0.50 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
PSY-495-05 Senior Project |
Schmitzer-Torbert N |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
Prerequisite: PSY-202,
and PSY-301 (may be taken concurrently) |
0.50 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
REL - RELIGION | ||||||||
REL-103-01 Islam & the Religions of India |
Blix D |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 216
|
||
REL-141-01 Hebrew Bible/Old Testament |
Campbell W |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 216
|
||
REL-171-01 History Christianity to Reform |
Nelson D |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 216
|
||
REL-181-01 Religion in America |
Smith E |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
HAY 001
|
||
REL-196-01 Religion in Japanese Lit |
Blix D |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
2nd half semester course
REL-196-01=ASI-196-01=HUM-196-01
"Old pond- frog jumps in-sound of water." So runs the famous
haiku by Basho. Is it religious? For the Japanese, yes. In
Japan religion and art are arguably the same thing. In this
course we'll ask how and why. We'll study Japanese ideas about
art and religion (e.g. emptiness, solitude, "sublime beauty"),
and how they appear in Japanese literature. We'll read
selections from Japanese poetry (including haiku) N? drama, a
classic novel (The Tale of Genji), and some short stories by
Murakami and Kawabata.
|
0.50 | HPR, LFA |
MXI 109
|
||
REL-240-01 Why Was the Bible Written? |
Campbell W |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
"The Word of God: Prophecy and Writing in Ancient Judaism"
This class will focus on the notion of the "Word of the Lord" by
considering the history of prophecy in the Hebrew Bible/Old
Testatment and the varying conceptions of "scripture" in the
Second Temple Period. We will begin with the rise of prophecy
during the era of the kings and investigate the core themes of
the prophets in their shifting historical contexts. What are the
different types of prophets found within the Hebrew Bible/Old
Testatment? What role did the prophets play within their larger
society? What is the nature of prophecy and in what sense is it
the "word of the Lord"? We will then trace the idea of a written
"word of God" in texts like Exodus, Chronicles, and Ezra in order
to situate how writing itself and the written Law of Moses in
particular focalized the idea of the "word" into a physical text.
Finally, we will look at the array of conceptions of written
scripture in the Jewish tradition up until the first century CE.
Here we will explore ancient notions of scripture by considering
how the Hebrew Bible/Old Testatment was rewritten, expanded,
summarized, interpreted, and otherwise handled.
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 305
|
||
REL-260-01 Ancient Christianity in Rome |
Nelson D |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
This course is dedicated to the study of Early Christianity as it
was manifested in one particular place, the deeply-charged and
long-standing imperial capital of Rome. This immersion course
addresses one central question with multiple off-shoots: How did
Christianity take shape in Rome? How did it emerge from, rebel
against, and engage with that city's deep past? Before
Constantine, what was the experience of early Christians? After
Constantine, how did the shape and character of the city (not to
mention its inhabitants) change? What did early adherents of
Christianity believe, and how were those beliefs negotiated,
enhanced, challenged, and made orthodox through visual and
material culture, especially religious architecture and its
decoration? What was the experience of practitioners of
traditional Greco-Roman religion after Christianity became the
default religion of the Empire?
In other words, our investigation will be about social history,
architecture, religious history and theology, and
art/iconography. It is about the realia of what people believed,
saw, experienced, and did. And the best way to get a sense of
those features of ancient life and belief is to visit the key
places themselves: the city of Rome and, as a complement to the
features of the urban experience that Rome lacks, its port city
of Ostia.
The immersion component of the course will occur November 17-25,
2023. One course credit. By application only.
REL-260-01 = CLA-212-01
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 300
|
||
REL-272-01 The End of the World |
Royalty B |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
From ancient Rome to Waco, Texas, Jewish and Christian groups
have shared visions of the end of the world. This course will
study the history of these communities from Roman antiquity to
medieval Europe to recent apocalyptic movements. Using the
lenses of social and cultural history, we will examine how these
apocalyptic ideas have been shaped by historical events and how
groups have interacted with, and often changed, society.
HIS-200-03=REL-272-01
|
1.00 | HPR |
BAX 114
|
||
REL-272-02 Catholicism in Modern America |
Smith E |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
This course introduces students to the history of Catholicism in
America from 1850 (when Catholicism became the nation's largest
religious denomination) to present day. We will consider themes
of migration, mission, education, politics, and religious life.
Students will think critically about the diversity of Catholicism
in terms of gender, race, class, and ethnicity, and will examine
the relationship between American and global Catholicism.
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 304
|
||
REL-275-01 Religion and Science |
Blix D |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
1st half semester course
Are religion and science in conflict with each other? In
agreement? How or why, one way or the other? These are our
questions. We'll do two main things in this course. First,
we'll take a careful look at the different "ways of knowing" that
are characteristic of science and religion, respectively.
Second, we'll look at several models for thinking critically and
responsibly about how they are related. Readings will include
selections from Bertolt Brecht, Alan Lightman, Jacob Bronowski,
Adam Frank, and others, as well as some classic texts in the
history of science.
|
0.50 | HPR |
MXI 109
|
||
REL-280-01 Religion and the Body |
Smith E |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
This course explores how American religious leaders and
denominations have defined, transgressed, and challenged ideas
about the body. Students will learn about the relationship
between disability, race, gender, sexuality, and religion in
American's past and present. Using creative source bases,
methods, and interpretive frameworks, we will think critically
about how power and representation (in the archives, media,
political discourse, and everyday life) shape our understanding
of religion and bodies.
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 304
|
||
REL-290-01 Death and Afterlife |
Campbell W |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
"Death and Afterlife: Greek, Roman, Jewish, and Christian
Conceptions" As individuals and within communities, we tend to
focus our energies on building a happy and secure future for
ourselves; yet in a real sense we live surrounded by death,
threatened by the impermanence of our relationships and by the
fragility of life on our planet. The fear of death and the dread
of what comes afterward is part of the human experience, both in
the ancient and modern world. There is a substantial ancient
literary tradition of "descending" to visit the underworld and
"ascending" to visit the heavenly; to observe, search, behold,
and, sometimes, to escape. However, these "places" are far from
static conceptions and the theologies of the afterlife develop in
notable ways throughout the Roman Imperial period. In this
course, we will go on our own "Tour of Heaven and Hell" and
explore the wide array of underworld and afterlife conceptions in
ancient Greek, Roman, Jewish, and Christian sources. Our core
questions in the class are: (1) How is the Underworld/Afterlife
accessed and who goes there? (2) What kind of experience is had
in the Underworld/Afterlife and why? (3) How does the concept of
the afterlife evolve over time and across textual traditions?
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 215
|
||
REL-490-01 Sr. Sem: Nature & Study of Rel |
Blix D |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 305
|
||
RHE - RHETORIC | ||||||||
RHE-101-01 Public Speaking |
Long B |
M W F
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
1.00 | LS |
FIN S206
|
||
RHE-101-02 Public Speaking |
DeVinney D |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
1.00 | LS |
FIN S206
|
||
RHE-101-03 Public Speaking |
Proszek J |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
|
1.00 | LS |
FIN S206
|
||
RHE-370-01 Digital Rhetoric |
Proszek J |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
Have you ever wondered how fantasy football, Twitch, YikYak, and
Craigslist are connected? Did you know that with every snap you
send or Netflix recommendation that you watch you are engaging in
rhetoric? In today's technologically mediated world, digital and
non-digital spaces, performances, and socio-cultural norms are
increasingly intertwined. Students in this course will study
digital rhetoric theories, methods, and practices to better
understand how these spaces, performances, and norms construct
and negotiate meaning through multimedia. We will study digital
rhetoric through a variety of technologies, platforms, and
networks-particularly those linked to/through the Internet. Our
assignments and in-class discussions will culminate in a
semester-long literature review of an original student-research
proposal that contributes to the scholarly investigation of
digital rhetoric as a critical cultural practice.
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN S206
|
||
RHE-497-01 Senior Seminar |
Drury J, Abbott J |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
Must have taken RHE-320 and RHE-350.
|
1.00 |
CEN 305
|
|||
SPA - SPANISH | ||||||||
SPA-201-01 Intermediate Spanish |
Enriquez Ornelas J |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
Prerequisite: SPA-102 or SPA-103,
or SPA-201 placement |
1.00 | WL |
DET 111
|
||
SPA-201-03 Intermediate Spanish |
Hardy J |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
Prerequisite: SPA-102 or SPA-103,
or SPA-201 placement |
1.00 | WL |
DET 211
|
||
SPA-201L-01 Intermediate Spanish Lab |
A. Ruiz Portero, M. Oviedo Pruano |
M
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 128
|
|||
SPA-201L-04 Intermediate Spanish Lab |
A. Ruiz Portero, M. Oviedo Pruano |
TU
02:40PM - 03:30PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 112
|
|||
SPA-201L-05 Intermediate Spanish Lab |
A. Ruiz Portero, M. Oviedo Pruano |
W
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 128
|
|||
SPA-201L-06 Intermediate Spanish Lab |
A. Ruiz Portero, M. Oviedo Pruano |
W
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 212
|
|||
SPA-202-01 Span Lang & Hispanic Cultures |
Greenhalgh M |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
Prerequisite: SPA-201,
or SPA-202 placement |
1.00 | WL |
DET 209
|
||
SPA-202L-02 Span Lang/Hisp Cultures Lab |
A. Ruiz Portero, M. Oviedo Pruano |
TH
02:40PM - 03:30PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 112
|
|||
SPA-202L-03 Span Lang/Hisp Cultures Lab |
A. Ruiz Portero, M. Oviedo Pruano |
F
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 128
|
|||
SPA-301-01 Conversation & Composition |
Greenhalgh M |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Prerequisite: SPA-202,
or SPA-301 placement |
1.00 | WL, GCJD |
DET 220
|
||
SPA-302-01 Intro to Literature |
Rogers D |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
Prerequisite: SPA-301 or SPA-321,
or SPA-302 placement. |
1.00 | LFA |
DET 209
|
||
SPA-311-01 Survey of Spanish Linguistics |
Hardy J |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
SPA-301 or SPA-321,
and SPA-302, SPA 302
This course will provide an overview of the basic concepts and
methodology used in Spanish Linguistics. It will provide students
with the tools of linguistic analysis and apply them to the study
of Spanish. Attention is given to different levels of analysis in
linguistics, including morphology, syntax, phonetics, phonology,
language variation (dialects), and language change over time.
Class time will be divided between lecture, problem-solving
exercises, discussion, and student presentations.
|
1.00 | LS |
DET 212
|
||
SPA-313-01 Studies in Hispanic Literature |
Enriquez Ornelas J |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
SPA-301 or SPA-321,
Take SPA-302
In this course students will develop their Spanish speaking,
listening, reading, and writing skills by learning about the
diverse experiences of U.S. Latinx communities represented in
contemporary literature. Students will learn a wide range of
concepts such as nationalism, Latino/a, Latin@, Latinx, hybrid
identities, acculturation, process of assimilation, bilingualism,
and AfroLatinidad. Students will also examine how religious and
socioeconomic backgrounds shape perceptions on race, gender, and
sexuality. The course will also include a variety of in-class
and extra-class activities such as traveling to local businesses
within the Crawfordsville area. These cultural experiences and
out of class performance activities will grant students a unique
opportunity to be exposed to the local Latinx culture all while
practicing their Spanish skills.
|
1.00 |
DET 212
|
|||
SPA-401-01 Spanish Senior Seminar |
Rogers D, Greenhalgh M |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
Prerequisite: SPA-302
|
1.00 |
DET 212
|
|||
THE - THEATER | ||||||||
THE-104-01 Introduction to Film |
Cherry J |
M F
02:10PM - 03:00PM W
02:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN M120
FIN M120
|
||
THE-106-01 Stagecraft |
Vogel D |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN TGRR
|
||
THE-203-01 Costume Design |
Bear A |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN TGRR
|
||
THE-207-01 Directing |
Abbott M |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
Prerequisite: THE-105
|
1.00 |
FIN TGRR
|
|||
THE-212-01 The Revolutionary Stage |
Cherry J |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN TGRR
|
||
THE-498-01 Senior Seminar |
Cherry J |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
1.00 |
FIN TGRR
|
[show more]