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Course Sections | Registrar

Term Section Name Status Dept. Location Dates Days Times Comments/Requisites Faculty Course Type Capacity Enrolled/
Available/
Waitlist
Credits
25/FA
ACC-201-01
Financial Accounting
OPEN
Accounting
BAX 202
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
  • Hensley, Ed
22 21 / 1 / 0 1.00
25/FA
ACC-201-02
Financial Accounting
OPEN
Accounting
BAX 214
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
  • Foos, Jack
22 19 / 3 / 0 1.00
25/FA
ART-103-01
Greek Art & Archaeology
OPEN
cross-listed with
CLA-103-01
Art
HAY 104
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
  • Kopestonsky, Theodora
LFA 30 12 / 1 / 0 1.00
25/FA
ART-126-01
Studio Art Fundamentals
OPEN
Art
FIN A133
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W
10:00AM-11:50AM
  • Strader, Annie
LFA 14 9 / 5 / 0 1.00
25/FA
ART-202-01
Art in Film
OPEN
Art
FIN M120
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
  • Morton, Elizabeth
LFA 36 32 / 4 / 0 1.00
25/FA
ART-225-01
Drawing Animation
OPEN
Art
FIN A133
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
1:10PM-3:00PM
In this drawing animation course, students will not only develop their drawing skills but learn how to bring their drawings to life with simple, 2D collage animation techniques. Using Adobe After Effects and Photoshop software, the class will create a series of short, visually experimental animations using various traditional physical drawing media and flatbed scanners. Although it is certainly possible to try, this class does not focus on traditional hand-drawn animation methods of creating multiple drawn frames to create the illusion of movement, (it's much easier and less time-consuming than that to animate a drawing in After Effects.) No previous drawing or software editing experience is required for this course.

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  • Mohl, Damon
LFA 10 9 / 1 / 0 1.00
25/FA
ART-228-01
Painting: Mixed Media
OPEN
Art
FIN A131
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • Mohl, Damon
LFA 12 8 / 4 / 0 1.00
25/FA
ASI-112-01
Manga and Anime
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-171-01
Asian Studies
CEN 215
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
  • Whitney, Julian
LFA 30 6 / 2 / 0 1.00
25/FA
ASI-196-01
Religion & Japanese Literature
OPEN
cross-listed with
REL-296-01
Asian Studies
CEN 305
10/20/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
"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. 亚洲通'll study Japanese ideas about art and religion (e.g. emptiness, solitude, "sublime beauty"), and how they appear in Japanese literature. 亚洲通'll read selections from Japanese poetry (including haiku), No drama, a classic novel (The Tale of Genji), and some short stories by Murakami and Kawabata.

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  • Blix, David
HPR, LFA 20 3 / 5 / 0 0.50
25/FA
ASI-277-01
Trade Politics
CLOSED
cross-listed with
PPE-238-01, PSC-240-01
Asian Studies
BAX 101
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
rade politics are a complex nexus of domestic and international politics, economic conditions, global and regional institutions, business interests, and civil society. This course aims to provide an understanding of trade politics in the Asia-Pacific region - the largest market and manufacturing base in the world. The course introduces the latest developments in the Pacific Rim by reviewing the current status of global trade. This course has three main modules. First, the Trade in Goods module explains what trade looks like, how global trade works, and the barriers to trade. 亚洲通 will synthesize your understanding of trade by discussing advanced topics like global value chains and trade wars. Second, the Trade in Services and Digital Trade module introduces trade without physical existence. 亚洲通 will also address the recent controversies about trade (de-)regulations. The third module analyzes trade politics within and beyond the Asia-Pacific countries. In the end, students will learn about the top-down and bottom-up decision-making processes for trade policies. There are no prerequisites for this class. Students should be ready for active participation in student-oriented learning.

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  • Ye, Huei-Jyun
BSC, GCJD, QL 23 1 / -- / 0 1.00
25/FA
BIO-111-01
General Biology I
OPEN
Biology
HAY 104
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
  • Bost, Anne
  • Burton, Patrick
  • Walsh, Heidi
QL, SL 80 62 / 18 / 0 1.00
25/FA
BIO-111L-01
General Biol I Lab
OPEN
Biology
HAY 111
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • Burton, Patrick
20 15 / 5 / 0 0.00
25/FA
BIO-111L-02
General Biol I Lab
OPEN
Biology
HAY 111
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • Bost, Anne
20 19 / 1 / 0 0.00
25/FA
BIO-111L-03
General Biol I Lab
OPEN
Biology
HAY 111
8/27/25- 12/20/25
W
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • Burton, Patrick
20 9 / 11 / 0 0.00
25/FA
BIO-111L-04
General Biol I Lab
OPEN
Biology
HAY 111
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TH
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • Walsh, Heidi
20 19 / 1 / 0 0.00
25/FA
BIO-326L-01
Parasitology Lab
OPEN
Biology
HAY 101
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • 亚洲通tzel, Eric
16 9 / 7 / 0 0.00
25/FA
BIO-326L-02
Parasitology Lab
OPEN
Biology
HAY 101
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TH
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • 亚洲通tzel, Eric
16 7 / 9 / 0 0.00
25/FA
BLS-270-01
Law & Literature
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-270-01
Black Studies
CEN 305
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM
ENG-270-01=BLS-270-01 What does reading literature teach us about the connections between race and the law? How can legal and literary works be read to understand issues of race and justice? In this class, we will discuss how literature (both fiction and non-fiction) examines the way the law negotiates and reinforces systems of race, bias, and racism. 亚洲通 will think about the ways that a literary text depicts the law and encourages us to be effective critics of the law. Assigned reading materials include Bryan Stevenson's Just Mercy, Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye, Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird, and legal writings by writers such as Michelle Alexander and Cheryl Harris. Assignments will include reading quizzes, short papers, oral presentations on the readings, a midterm, and a final exam. Students interested in attending law school or doing work in public policy in the future are highly encouraged to take the course.

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  • Whitney, Julian
GCJD, LFA 20 9 / 4 / 0 1.00
25/FA
BLS-270-02
African American Stories
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-310-01
Black Studies
HAY 104
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
BLS-270-02=ENG-310-01 African American Stories in Print and Film. Zora Neale Hurston's novel, Their Eyes 亚洲通re Watching God, Amiri Baraka's play, Dutchman, Toni Morrison's classic novel, Beloved, and Colson Whitehead's award-winning book, The Underground Railroad, are all African American authors whose work have been made into movies. In this course students will read and analyze African American literature in tandem with film adaptations. Students will be introduced to Literary Studies and Film Studies, through a Black Studies perspective.

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  • Lake, Tim
GCJD, LFA 20 10 / 3 / 0 1.00
25/FA
BLS-280-01
Harlem and Paris
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-300-01
Black Studies
BAX 212
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
Harlem Renaissance and Black Ex-Patriots in Paris In this seminar, students will study the U.S. Harlem Renaissance and the experiences of Black ex-patriots in 1920s Paris. During the post-war period, African American artists, writers, and intellectuals redefined Black identity and artistic expression in the United States, while others sought creative and personal freedom abroad. Paris, in particular, became a refuge for many Black Americans disillusioned by racial prejudice in the U.S. This migration was sparked in part by the presence of United States infantry bands that played--and played jazz--during World War I. The arrival of jazz in France ushered in Jazz Age Paris, where figures like Josephine Baker, Ada "Bricktop" Smith, Sidney Bechet, Coleman Hawkins, and Benny Carter transformed the city's cultural landscape. Parisian clubs became legendary spaces where music and ideas mingled, drawing major talents worldwide and offering artists more freedom than in the United States. Throughout the course, students will read historical monographs that provide context for this era, including Paris Noir: African Americans in the City of Light, Negrophilia: Avant-Garde Paris and Black Culture in the 1920s, Making Jazz French: Music and Modern Life in Interwar Paris, and Harlem in Montmartre: A Paris Jazz Story Between the Great Wars. The course will also examine American literature from the period, such as Invisible Man, The Souls of Black Folk, and Sweat. Discussions and readings will focus on the influence of jazz in Paris and that of the Harlem Renaissance to draw connections between Harlem and Paris as the global centers of Black modernism that shaped Black artistic and intellectual history in the early 20th century.

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  • Rhoades, Michelle
HPR 15 0 / 14 / 0 1.00
25/FA
CHE-101-01
Survey of Chemistry
OPEN
Chemistry
HAY 319
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Novak, Wally
  • Kalb, Annah
QL, SL 48 45 / 3 / 0 1.00
25/FA
CHE-101L-02
Survey Chemistry Lab
OPEN
Chemistry
HAY 315
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • Kalb, Annah
16 13 / 3 / 0 0.00
25/FA
CHE-102-01
Forensic Chemistry
OPEN
Chemistry
HAY 319
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
Forensic Chemistry. The continued popularity of crime scene analysis dramas and literary whodunits reflect society's fascination with criminal investigation. This introductory survey course in chemistry will focus on the theme of forensic science. Designed for non-science concentrators, this class explores the historical and philosophical developments in chemistry, as well as applications of chemical principles to criminalistics in the laboratory setting. Topics include the development of the atomic theory of matter, atomic structure, chemical bonding, thermodynamics, the chemistry of life (organic and biochemistry), and forensic analysis. In addition, the course will explore the role of forensics in law enforcement, data ethics, bias, and issues relating to equity and social justice. Some elementary mathematics will be used. Class meetings are complemented by a required laboratory activity each week. Partially fulfills the College laboratory science requirement, but cannot be combined with CHE-101 or CHE-111 to complete this distribution requirement. This course does not satisfy major or minor requirements for chemistry or those for the biochemistry major. Only one course from CHE-101, CHE-102, or CHE-111 may be counted toward the total number of credits required for graduation.

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  • Porter, Lon
QL, SL 15 13 / 2 / 0 1.00
25/FA
CHE-102L-01
Forensic Chemistry Lab
OPEN
Chemistry
HAY 202
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TH
1:10PM-4:00PM
Forensic Chemistry. The continued popularity of crime scene analysis dramas and literary whodunits reflect society's fascination with criminal investigation. This introductory survey course in chemistry will focus on the theme of forensic science. Designed for non-science concentrators, this class explores the historical and philosophical developments in chemistry, as well as applications of chemical principles to criminalistics in the laboratory setting. Topics include the development of the atomic theory of matter, atomic structure, chemical bonding, thermodynamics, the chemistry of life (organic and biochemistry), and forensic analysis. In addition, the course will explore the role of forensics in law enforcement, data ethics, bias, and issues relating to equity and social justice. Some elementary mathematics will be used. Class meetings are complemented by a required laboratory activity each week. Partially fulfills the College laboratory science requirement, but cannot be combined with CHE-101 or CHE-111 to complete this distribution requirement. This course does not satisfy major or minor requirements for chemistry or those for the biochemistry major. Only one course from CHE-101, CHE-102, or CHE-111 may be counted toward the total number of credits required for graduation.

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  • Porter, Lon
15 13 / 2 / 0 0.00
25/FA
CHE-111-01
General Chemistry I
OPEN
Chemistry
HAY 104
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM
  • Taylor, Ann
  • Scanlon, Joe
QL, SL 64 56 / 8 / 0 1.00
25/FA
CHE-111-02
General Chemistry I
OPEN
Chemistry
DET 209
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM
Incoming Freshmen only.
  • Porter, Lon
QL, SL 21 19 / 2 / 0 1.00
25/FA
CHE-111L-01
General Chemistry Lab
OPEN
Chemistry
HAY 316
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • Porter, Lon
17 13 / 4 / 0 0.00
25/FA
CHE-111L-04
General Chemistry Lab
OPEN
Chemistry
HAY 316
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TH
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • Taylor, Ann
17 16 / 1 / 0 0.00
25/FA
CHE-111L-05
General Chemistry Lab
OPEN
Chemistry
HAY 315
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TH
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • Novak, Wally
14 13 / 1 / 0 0.00
25/FA
CHE-388-01
Adv Methods in Organic Chem
OPEN
Chemistry
TBA TBA
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TBA
TBA-TBA
Enrollment is instructor permission. This course is designed to provide students with an in-depth understanding of advanced methods used in modern organic chemistry research. Students will gain hands-on experience with laboratory techniques necessary for working with air-sensitive, organic, and aqueous reaction conditions, as well as methods of purification and analysis like chromatography and spectroscopy. In addition, students will learn about the application of organic chemistry principles to the synthesis of small molecule fluorescent dyes. This course will emphasize critical thinking, creative problem solving, data analysis, and scientific communication skills through maintaining a detailed laboratory notebook, a cumulative research report, weekly technical discussions, and oral presentations. This course does not count towards the major if CHE487 or CHE488 is also taken. Enrollment is by instructor permission.

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  • Wysocki, Laura
4 1 / 3 / 0 0.50
25/FA
CHI-101-01
Elementary Chinese I
OPEN
Chinese
DET 211
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
8:00AM-9:15AM
Successful completion of both CHI-101 and CHI-102 in combination will fulfill the World Languages distribution requirement.
  • Liu, Ruihua
20 9 / 11 / 0 1.00
25/FA
CHI-101L-03
Elementary Chinese I Lab
OPEN
Chinese
DET 226
8/27/25- 12/20/25
W
9:10AM-10:00AM
  • Wang, I Rui
4 3 / 1 / 0 0.00
25/FA
CLA-103-01
Greek Art & Archaeology
OPEN
cross-listed with
ART-103-01
Classics
HAY 104
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
  • Kopestonsky, Theodora
LFA 30 17 / 1 / 0 1.00
25/FA
CLA-113-01
Rome in America
CLOSED
cross-listed with
HIS-210-01
Classics
DET 109
8/27/25- 10/15/25
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
CLA-113-01=HIS-210-01 During the debates over the ratification of America's Constitution, some of the most influential Founding Fathers wrote under classical pseudonyms like Publius, Brutus, and Cato. In fact, when Europeans first arrived in the Americas, they often looked to historical models from the ancient past to make sense of the "New World." Chief among these was the example of Ancient Rome, which profoundly influenced the colonial societies that took shape in the wake of English, Spanish, and Portuguese conquests. This course will examine the history of Ancient Rome and its reception in the Americas. 亚洲通 will focus on historical episodes in which debates about Rome and its legacy played a key role, ranging from the founding of the American Republic to the Spanish conquest of Mexico. This is a first-half semester course. If students register in this section, they cannot take the second-half semester course that is the same (i.e. students cannot take both CLA-113-01 and CLA-113-02)

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  • Gorey, Matthew
HPR, LFA 20 16 / -- / 0 0.50
25/FA
CLA-113-02
Rome in America
CLOSED
cross-listed with
HIS-210-02
Classics
DET 109
10/20/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
CLA-113-02=HIS-210-02 During the debates over the ratification of America's Constitution, some of the most influential Founding Fathers wrote under classical pseudonyms like Publius, Brutus, and Cato. In fact, when Europeans first arrived in the Americas, they often looked to historical models from the ancient past to make sense of the "New World." Chief among these was the example of Ancient Rome, which profoundly influenced the colonial societies that took shape in the wake of English, Spanish, and Portuguese conquests. This course will examine the history of Ancient Rome and its reception in the Americas. 亚洲通 will focus on historical episodes in which debates about Rome and its legacy played a key role, ranging from the founding of the American Republic to the Spanish conquest of Mexico. This is a second-half semester course. If students register in this section, they cannot take the first-half semester course that is the same. (i.e. students cannot take both CLA-113-01 and CLA-113-02)

[show more]

  • Gorey, Matthew
HPR, LFA 20 13 / -- / 0 0.50
25/FA
CLA-240-01
Ancient Philosophy
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHI-240-01
Classics
CEN 215
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Trott, Adriel
HPR, LFA 30 15 / 7 / 0 1.00
25/FA
CSC-101-01
Intro to Computer Science
OPEN
Computer Science
GOO 101
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
8:00AM-8:50AM
  • McKinney, Colin
QL 24 20 / 4 / 0 1.00
25/FA
DV3-252-01
Stats for Social Sciences
OPEN
Division III
BAX 214
8/27/25- 10/15/25
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
First-Half semester course.
  • Byun, Christie
QL 26 20 / 6 / 0 0.50
25/FA
DV3-252-02
Stats for Social Sciences
OPEN
Division III
BAX 214
8/27/25- 10/15/25
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
First-Half semester course.
  • Bhattacharjee, Sharbani
QL 30 13 / 17 / 0 0.50
25/FA
ECO-101-01
Principles of Economics
OPEN
Economics
BAX 114
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
  • Dunaway, Eric
BSC 26 25 / 1 / 0 1.00
25/FA
ECO-101-02
Principles of Economics
OPEN
Economics
BAX 114
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Dunaway, Eric
BSC 26 24 / 2 / 0 1.00
25/FA
ECO-101-03
Principles of Economics
OPEN
Economics
BAX 214
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
  • Saha, Sujata
BSC 30 28 / 2 / 0 1.00
25/FA
ECO-101-04
Principles of Economics
OPEN
Economics
BAX 311
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
3:10PM-4:00PM
  • Bhattacharjee, Sharbani
BSC 30 28 / 2 / 0 1.00
25/FA
EDU-203-01
Adolescent Literacy Developmnt
OPEN
Education Studies
DET 209
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
  • Pittard, Michele
LS 18 13 / 5 / 0 1.00
25/FA
EDU-245-01
Arts Integration
OPEN
Education Studies
MXI 214
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
This course examines selected educational interventions that have been implemented and evaluated at local and/or state levels,with a focus upon the ways in which educational research into these strategies is used to guide and modify school and classroom practices. Selected practices for each course offering may include approaches to curricula and pedagogy, and/or classroom management. Each topical course offering will examine a specific approach to classroom learning and/or educational engagement and development. Students will examine and analyze study findings to interpret and explain the ways in which the selected practice shows the ability to affect K12 students' learning, engagement,and overall behaviors in schools and classrooms.

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  • Seltzer-Kelly, Deborah
BSC 18 7 / 11 / 0 1.00
25/FA
ENG-110-01
Intro to Creative Writing
OPEN
English
CEN 215
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
  • Freeze, Eric
LS 24 22 / 2 / 0 1.00
25/FA
ENG-171-01
Manga and Anime
OPEN
cross-listed with
ASI-112-01
English
CEN 215
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
  • Whitney, Julian
LFA 30 22 / 2 / 0 1.00
25/FA
ENG-213-01
Fiction Workshop
OPEN
English
CEN 300
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
8:00AM-9:15AM
  • Freeze, Eric
LS 15 9 / 6 / 0 1.00
25/FA
ENG-235-01
Intro to Shakespeare
OPEN
English
CEN 215
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
  • Benedicks, Crystal
LFA 25 12 / 13 / 0 1.00
25/FA
ENG-270-01
Law and Literature
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-270-01
English
CEN 305
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM
ENG-270-01=BLS-270-01 What does reading literature teach us about the connections between race and the law? How can legal and literary works be read to understand issues of race and justice? In this class, we will discuss how literature (both fiction and non-fiction) examines the way the law negotiates and reinforces systems of race, bias, and racism. 亚洲通 will think about the ways that a literary text depicts the law and encourages us to be effective critics of the law. Assigned reading materials include Bryan Stevenson's Just Mercy, Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye, Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird, and legal writings by writers such as Michelle Alexander and Cheryl Harris. Assignments will include reading quizzes, short papers, oral presentations on the readings, a midterm, and a final exam. Students interested in attending law school or doing work in public policy in the future are highly encouraged to take the course.

[show more]

  • Whitney, Julian
GCJD, LFA 20 7 / 4 / 0 1.00
25/FA
FRE-101-01
Elementary French I
OPEN
French
DET 211
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM
Successful completion of both FRE-101 and FRE-102 in combination will fulfill the World Languages distribution requirement.
  • Fouchereaux, Claire
20 11 / 9 / 0 1.00
25/FA
FRE-101L-01
Elementary French 1 Lab
OPEN
French
DET 226
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M
8:00AM-8:50AM
  • Barwicki, Thomas
5 3 / 2 / 0 0.00
25/FA
FRE-101L-02
Elementary French 1 Lab
OPEN
French
DET 226
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M
3:10PM-4:00PM
  • Barwicki, Thomas
5 4 / 1 / 0 0.00
25/FA
FRE-101L-03
Elementary French 1 Lab
OPEN
French
DET 226
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU
8:00AM-8:50AM
  • Barwicki, Thomas
5 3 / 2 / 0 0.00
25/FA
FRE-101L-04
Elementary French 1 Lab
OPEN
French
DET 212
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU
2:40PM-3:30PM
  • Barwicki, Thomas
5 1 / 4 / 0 0.00
25/FA
FRE-201L-01
Intermediate French Lab
OPEN
French
DET 226
8/27/25- 12/20/25
W
8:00AM-8:50AM
  • Barwicki, Thomas
5 3 / 2 / 0 0.00
25/FA
FRE-201L-02
Intermediate French Lab
OPEN
French
DET 212
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TH
2:40PM-3:30PM
  • Barwicki, Thomas
5 2 / 3 / 0 0.00
25/FA
FRE-201L-03
Intermediate French Lab
OPEN
French
DET 226
8/27/25- 12/20/25
F
8:00AM-8:50AM
  • Barwicki, Thomas
5 0 / 5 / 0 0.00
25/FA
GEN-104-01
Intro to Philosophy: Nature
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHI-104-01
Gender Studies
CEN 216
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM
PHI-104-01=GEN-104-01
  • Trott, Adriel
GCJD, HPR 24 13 / 1 / 0 1.00
25/FA
GEN-105-01
Fatherhood
OPEN
cross-listed with
PSY-105-01
Gender Studies
CEN 216
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
  • Olofson, Eric
BSC 40 14 / 2 / 0 1.00
25/FA
GER-101-01
Elementary German I
OPEN
German
DET 212
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
Successful completion of both GER-101 and GER-102 in combination will fulfill the World Languages distribution requirement.
  • Ewing, Leah
16 10 / 6 / 0 1.00
25/FA
GER-101-02
Elementary German I
OPEN
German
DET 212
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM
Successful completion of both GER-101 and GER-102 in combination will fulfill the World Languages distribution requirement.
  • Ewing, Leah
16 14 / 2 / 0 1.00
25/FA
GER-101L-01
Elementary German I Lab
OPEN
German
DET 220
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M
9:00AM-9:50AM
  • Schroeder, Jan
6 4 / 2 / 0 0.00
25/FA
GER-101L-02
Elementary German I Lab
OPEN
German
DET 128
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU
1:10PM-2:00PM
  • Schroeder, Jan
6 5 / 1 / 0 0.00
25/FA
GER-101L-03
Elementary German I Lab
OPEN
German
DET 220
8/27/25- 12/20/25
W
8:00AM-8:50AM
  • Schroeder, Jan
6 4 / 2 / 0 0.00
25/FA
GER-101L-04
Elementary German I Lab
OPEN
German
DET 226
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TH
9:45AM-10:35AM
  • Schroeder, Jan
6 5 / 1 / 0 0.00
25/FA
GER-101L-06
Elementary German I Lab
OPEN
German
DET 220
8/27/25- 12/20/25
F
9:00AM-9:50AM
  • Schroeder, Jan
6 0 / 6 / 0 0.00
25/FA
GER-201L-01
Intermediate German Lab
OPEN
German
DET 226
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU
9:45AM-10:35AM
  • Schroeder, Jan
5 3 / 2 / 0 0.00
25/FA
GER-201L-02
Intermediate German Lab
OPEN
German
DET 112
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU
2:40PM-3:30PM
  • Schroeder, Jan
5 3 / 2 / 0 0.00
25/FA
GER-201L-03
Intermediate German Lab
OPEN
German
DET 128
8/27/25- 12/20/25
W
2:10PM-3:00PM
  • Schroeder, Jan
5 4 / 1 / 0 0.00
25/FA
GER-201L-04
Intermediate German Lab
OPEN
German
DET 128
8/27/25- 12/20/25
W
3:10PM-4:00PM
  • Schroeder, Jan
5 2 / 3 / 0 0.00
25/FA
GHL-219-01
Drugs & Society in Modern Hist
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-200-01
Global Health
BAX 202
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
HIS 200: 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 cultures have accepted or rejected drugs based on their usefulness or danger to the social order. 亚洲通 will examine changing cultural attitudes toward drugs, the rise of modern drug regulation, and the development of pharmaceutical drugs. 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 Drugs and Sports The cultural, economic, and social factors shaping alcohol policies in the late 19th and early 20th centuries The medicalization of drug use 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 suits all students interested in history, sociology, and public health. By the end of the course, students will have developed critical thinking and analytical skills better to understand the historical relationships between drugs and various communities. 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.

[show more]

  • Rhoades, Michelle
HPR 25 5 / 3 / 0 1.00
25/FA
GHL-232-01
Disability and Politics
CLOSED
cross-listed with
PPE-232-01, PSC-232-01
Global Health
CEN 215
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
PSC-232-01=GHL-232-01=PPE-232-01
  • McCrary, Lorraine
BSC, GCJD 18 1 / -- / 0 1.00
25/FA
GHL-277-01
Epidemiology
OPEN
Global Health
HAY 002
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
  • 亚洲通tzel, Eric
QL 16 6 / 10 / 0 1.00
25/FA
GRK-101-01
Beginning Greek I
OPEN
Greek
DET 112
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM
  • Kopestonsky, Theodora
20 6 / 14 / 0 1.00
25/FA
GRK-101L-01
Beginning Greek I Lab
OPEN
Greek
DET 112
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU
TBA-TBA
The lab time will be determined by the students'availability
  • Kopestonsky, Theodora
20 6 / 14 / 0 0.00
25/FA
HIS-101-02
World History to 1500
OPEN
History
DET 109
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
  • Levy, Aiala
HPR 30 28 / 2 / 0 1.00
25/FA
HIS-200-01
Drugs & Society in Modern Hist
OPEN
cross-listed with
GHL-219-01
History
BAX 202
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
HIS 200: 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 cultures have accepted or rejected drugs based on their usefulness or danger to the social order. 亚洲通 will examine changing cultural attitudes toward drugs, the rise of modern drug regulation, and the development of pharmaceutical drugs. 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 Drugs and Sports The cultural, economic, and social factors shaping alcohol policies in the late 19th and early 20th centuries The medicalization of drug use 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 suits all students interested in history, sociology, and public health. By the end of the course, students will have developed critical thinking and analytical skills better to understand the historical relationships between drugs and various communities. 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.

[show more]

  • Rhoades, Michelle
HPR 25 17 / 3 / 0 1.00
25/FA
HIS-200-02
Apocalypse From Rome to Waco
OPEN
cross-listed with
REL-290-01
History
BAX 114
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
HIS-200-02=REL-290-01 How will the world end? When will the world end? Will the world end at all? On Saturday March 25, 2023, Donald Trump held a rally in Waco, Texas. Why there? Last January, the Doomsday Clock moved closer to midnight for the first time in two years. Wars in Israel and Palestine have renewed fundamentalists' focus on the return of Jesus. What does this all mean? This course will study the history of how these questions have been posed and answered from Jewish and Christian communities in the ancient Mediterranean world to Christians in medieval Europe to contemporary America. Using the lenses of social and cultural history, we will examine how these apocalyptic ideologies have been shaped by historical events and how subgroups have interacted with, and often changed, society.

[show more]

  • Royalty, Bob
HPR 25 9 / 15 / 0 1.00
25/FA
HIS-201-01
Big History
OPEN
History
BAX 202
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
8:00AM-9:15AM
  • Warner, Rick
  • Levy, Aiala
HPR 45 38 / 7 / 0 1.00
25/FA
HIS-210-01
Rome in America
CLOSED
cross-listed with
CLA-113-01
History
DET 109
8/27/25- 10/15/25
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
This is a first-half semester course. If students register in this section, they cannot take the second-half semester course that is the same. During the debates over the ratification of America's Constitution, some of the most influential Founding Fathers wrote under classical pseudonyms like Publius, Brutus, and Cato. In fact, when Europeans first arrived in the Americas, they often looked to historical models from the ancient past to make sense of the "New World." Chief among these was the example of Ancient Rome, which profoundly influenced the colonial societies that took shape in the wake of English, Spanish, and Portuguese conquests. This course will examine the history of Ancient Rome and its reception in the Americas. 亚洲通 will focus on historical episodes in which debates about Rome and its legacy played a key role, ranging from the founding of the American Republic to the Spanish conquest of Mexico.

[show more]

  • Gorey, Matthew
HPR, LFA 20 4 / -- / 0 0.50
25/FA
HIS-210-02
Rome in America
CLOSED
cross-listed with
CLA-113-02
History
DET 109
10/20/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
This is a second-half semester course. If students register in this section, they cannot take the first-half semester course that is the same. During the debates over the ratification of America's Constitution, some of the most influential Founding Fathers wrote under classical pseudonyms like Publius, Brutus, and Cato. In fact, when Europeans first arrived in the Americas, they often looked to historical models from the ancient past to make sense of the "New World." Chief among these was the example of Ancient Rome, which profoundly influenced the colonial societies that took shape in the wake of English, Spanish, and Portuguese conquests. This course will examine the history of Ancient Rome and its reception in the Americas. 亚洲通 will focus on historical episodes in which debates about Rome and its legacy played a key role, ranging from the founding of the American Republic to the Spanish conquest of Mexico.

[show more]

  • Gorey, Matthew
HPR, LFA 20 7 / -- / 0 0.50
25/FA
HIS-210-03
Trojan War: Fact Or Fiction?
CLOSED
cross-listed with
CLA-113-03
History
HAY 321
8/27/25- 10/15/25
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
CLA-113-03=HIS-210-03 Homer's Iliad and the Odyssey - epic poems about the Trojan War and Odysseus' homeward journey - stood at the heart of ancient Greek culture. Before they were written down, however, bards sung them around campfires for half a millennium. Those intervening centuries saw climate change, famine, disease, massive movements of population, and the collapse of major civilizations around the Eastern Mediterranean. And so this course investigates the archaeological record to ask: Do the Iliad and the Odyssey mirror such events or are they merely stories? What historical truths do the poems reflect? And how has the work of Wabash students and faculty contributed to our knowledge? This is a first-half semester course. If students register in this section, they cannot take the second-half semester course that is the same (i.e. students cannot take both CLA-113-03 and CLA-113-04)

[show more]

  • Day, Leslie
  • Perry, Julia
HPR, LFA 15 7 / -- / 0 0.50
25/FA
HIS-210-04
Trojan War: Fact Or Fiction?
OPEN
cross-listed with
CLA-113-04
History
HAY 321
10/20/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
CLA-113-04=HIS-210-04 Homer's Iliad and the Odyssey - epic poems about the Trojan War and Odysseus' homeward journey - stood at the heart of ancient Greek culture. Before they were written down, however, bards sung them around campfires for half a millennium. Those intervening centuries saw climate change, famine, disease, massive movements of population, and the collapse of major civilizations around the Eastern Mediterranean. And so this course investigates the archaeological record to ask: Do the Iliad and the Odyssey mirror such events or are they merely stories? What historical truths do the poems reflect? And how has the work of Wabash students and faculty contributed to our knowledge? This is a first-half semester course. If students register in this section, they cannot take the second-half semester course that is the same (i.e. students cannot take both CLA-113-03 and CLA-113-04)

[show more]

  • Day, Leslie
  • Perry, Julia
HPR, LFA 15 2 / 4 / 0 0.50
25/FA
HIS-230-01
Beatles, a Cultural History
CLOSED
cross-listed with
MUS-104-01
History
BAX 114
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
The four lads from Liverpool were arguably the most significant cultural event of the mid-20th c, from popular music to fashion, politics, and religion. This immersion course will study the Beatles in their social, political and cultural context, from post-war Britain of the 1940s, through the economic and social recovery of the 50s, and the swinging and turbulent 60s. 亚洲通 will use a range of methods including social and cultural history as well as musicology. After extensive study of the history and music of the period, we will travel to Liverpool and London during Thanksgiving recess to visit Beatles' sites and key historical museums such as the International Slavery Museum in Liverpool and the Imperial War Museum in London.

[show more]

  • Royalty, Bob
HPR, LFA 16 8 / -- / 0 1.00
25/FA
HIS-241-01
United States to 1865
OPEN
History
BAX 202
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Calhoun, Jake
HPR 30 24 / 6 / 0 1.00
25/FA
LAT-101L-01
Beginning Latin Lab
OPEN
Latin
DET 111
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU
8:25AM-9:15AM
  • Hartnett, Jeremy
25 15 / 10 / 0 0.00
25/FA
LAT-101L-02
Beginning Latin Lab
OPEN
Latin
DET 111
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU
2:40PM-3:30PM
  • Hartnett, Jeremy
25 7 / 18 / 0 0.00
25/FA
MAT-108-01
Intro to Discrete Structures
OPEN
Math
GOO 104
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
  • Rosenblum, Alison
QL 28 23 / 5 / 0 1.00
25/FA
MSL-001-01
Leadership Lab (ROTC)
OPEN
Military Science & Leadership
TBA TBA
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TH
3:00PM-5:20PM
This is an ROTC course held on the campus of Purdue University. It meets on Purdue's academic calendar. Fall Semester 2025 at Purdue is from August 25 - December 13, 2025.
  • Jump, Jon
12 7 / 5 / 0 0.00
25/FA
MSL-101-01
Introduction to the Army
OPEN
Military Science & Leadership
TBA TBA
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TH
1:30PM-2:20PM
This is an ROTC course held on the campus of Purdue University. It meets on Purdue's academic calendar. Fall Semester 2025 at Purdue is from August 25 - December 13, 2025.
  • Jump, Jon
8 1 / 7 / 0 0.00
25/FA
MSL-201-01
Leadership and Ethics
OPEN
Military Science & Leadership
TBA TBA
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
10:30AM-11:20AM
This is an ROTC course held on the campus of Purdue University. It meets on Purdue's academic calendar. Fall Semester 2025 at Purdue is from August 25 - December 13, 2025.
  • Jump, Jon
8 0 / 8 / 0 0.00
25/FA
MSL-201-02
Leadership and Ethics
OPEN
Military Science & Leadership
TBA TBA
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
1:30PM-2:20PM
  • Jump, Jon
8 4 / 4 / 0 0.00
25/FA
MSL-301-01
Training Management & Function
OPEN
Military Science & Leadership
TBA TBA
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
10:30AM-11:45AM
This is an ROTC course held on the campus of Purdue University. It meets on Purdue's academic calendar. Fall Semester 2025 at Purdue is from August 25 - December 13, 2025.
  • Jump, Jon
8 1 / 7 / 0 0.50
25/FA
MSL-301-02
Training Management & Function
OPEN
Military Science & Leadership
TBA TBA
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
1:30PM-2:45PM
This is an ROTC course held on the campus of Purdue University. It meets on Purdue's academic calendar. Fall Semester 2025 at Purdue is from August 25 - December 13, 2025.
  • Jump, Jon
8 1 / 7 / 0 0.50
25/FA
MUS-101-01
Music in Society: A History
OPEN
Music
FIN M120
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
  • Hernandez, Juan
LFA 30 26 / 4 / 0 1.00
25/FA
MUS-104-01
Beatles, a Cultural History
CLOSED
cross-listed with
HIS-230-01
Music
BAX 114
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
The four lads from Liverpool were arguably the most significant cultural event of the mid-20th c, from popular music to fashion, politics, and religion. This immersion course will study the Beatles in their social, political and cultural context, from post-war Britain of the 1940s, through the economic and social recovery of the 50s, and the swinging and turbulent 60s. 亚洲通 will use a range of methods including social and cultural history as well as musicology. After extensive study of the history and music of the period, we will travel to Liverpool and London during Thanksgiving recess to visit Beatles' sites and key historical museums such as the International Slavery Museum in Liverpool and the Imperial War Museum in London.

[show more]

  • Royalty, Bob
HPR, LFA 16 8 / -- / 0 1.00
25/FA
MUS-130-01
Musicianship
OPEN
Music
FIN M140
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
  • Yun, Sean
LFA 20 3 / 17 / 0 1.00
25/FA
MUS-130L-01
Musicianship Lab
OPEN
Music
FIN M140
8/27/25- 12/20/25
W
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Yun, Sean
LFA 20 3 / 17 / 0 0.00
25/FA
MUS-142-01
Chamber Orchestra
OPEN
Music
FIN CONC
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M
4:15PM-5:45PM
  • Abel, Alfred
30 4 / 26 / 0 0.25
25/FA
MUS-143-01
Glee Club
OPEN
Music
FIN CONC
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
4:15PM-6:00PM
  • Hernandez, Juan
60 22 / 38 / 0 0.25
25/FA
MUS-144-01
Jazz Ensemble
OPEN
Music
FIN CONC
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU
7:00PM-9:00PM
  • Pazera, Christopher
30 7 / 23 / 0 0.25
25/FA
MUS-145-01
Mariachi Ensemble
OPEN
Music
FIN CONC
8/27/25- 12/20/25
SU
12:00PM-2:00PM
  • Maceda Vela, Ivan
4 / 0 / 0 0.25
25/FA
MUS-187-01
Independent Study
OPEN
Music
TBA TBA
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TBA
TBA-TBA
  • Staff
0 / 0 / 0 0.00-1.00
25/FA
MUS-204-01
Music of Christianity
OPEN
cross-listed with
REL-195-01
Music
FIN M140
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
MUS-204-01=REL-195-01 This course considers examines the relationship between different kinds of music and Christianity. 亚洲通'll discuss examples from chant in Medieval monasteries to Contemporary Christian pop music, using the music to examine the societal, political, and aesthetic priorities of specific times and places in history. 亚洲通 will also consider the concept of "sacred music" in a broad sense, examining how its definitions have changed over time.

[show more]

  • Ables, Mollie
HPR, LFA 20 11 / 4 / 0 1.00
25/FA
MUS-204-02
Sound & Music Design
OPEN
cross-listed with
THE-219-01
Music
FIN M138
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
  • Abbott, Mike
LFA 8 4 / 1 / 0 1.00
25/FA
MUS-220-01
Approaches to Music & Culture
OPEN
Music
FIN M140
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
  • Ables, Mollie
LFA 25 5 / 20 / 0 1.00
25/FA
NSC-310-01
Physiology
CLOSED
cross-listed with
BIO-315-01
Neuroscience
HAY 104
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
Students taking 25/FA NSC-310 must also sign up for NSC-310L. This course is by Instructor consent.
  • Walsh, Heidi
19 3 / -- / 0 1.00
25/FA
NSC-310L-01
Physiology Lab
CLOSED
cross-listed with
BIO-315L-01
Biology
HAY 212
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU
1:10PM-4:00PM
Students taking 25/FA NSC-310 must also sign up for NSC-310L. This course is by Instructor consent.
  • Walsh, Heidi
19 3 / -- / 0 0.00
25/FA
PE-011-01
Advanced Fitness
OPEN
Physical Education
ATH FIELD
8/27/25- 10/15/25
M W F
6:00AM-7:15AM
  • Brumett, Kyle
  • Perry, Julia
17 / 0 / 0 0.00
25/FA
PE-011-02
Advanced Fitness
OPEN
Physical Education
ATH FIELD
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M TU W TH
4:20PM-5:20PM
F
6:30AM-7:30AM
  • Del Gallo, Daniel
  • Perry, Julia
39 / 0 / 0 0.00
25/FA
PHI-104-01
Intro to Philosophy: Nature
OPEN
cross-listed with
GEN-104-01
Philosophy
CEN 216
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM
PHI-104-01=GEN-104-01
  • Trott, Adriel
GCJD, HPR 24 10 / 1 / 0 1.00
25/FA
PHI-109-01
Introduction to Philosophy
OPEN
Philosophy
GOO 104
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
Could a computer genuinely think? Are we in a simulation? Is there a God? Are we free to choose how we will act in the world? What do we owe to one another, and to ourselves? Is it really a good idea to think critically, or should we trust what experts tell us? Could a banana duct-taped to a wall really be a work of art? How would you go about answering these questions? Philosophers think through these questions, and many others, by developing and critiquing arguments for possible answers to them. This course will serve as an introduction to philosophy via an in-depth study of philosophical arguments such as these. In the course, you will learn to use argument-mapping software to clearly and precisely articulate the structure of philosophical arguments so that you can understand and evaluate them more effectively. In addition to introducing you to some fascinating philosophical topics, this course will greatly improve your skills in reading and writing texts (including articles and papers for other classes!) that contain arguments.

[show more]

  • Carlson, Matthew
HPR 25 22 / 3 / 0 1.00
25/FA
PHI-218-01
Philosophy of Commerce
OPEN
cross-listed with
PPE-218-01
Philosophy
BAX 101
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
PHI-218-01=PPE-218-01
  • Montiel, Jorge
HPR 30 21 / 2 / 0 1.00
25/FA
PHI-240-01
Ancient Philosophy
OPEN
cross-listed with
CLA-240-01
Philosophy
CEN 215
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Trott, Adriel
HPR, LFA 30 8 / 7 / 0 1.00
25/FA
PHI-269-01
Knowledge and Skepticism
OPEN
Philosophy
CEN 300
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
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 211 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.

[show more]

  • Carlson, Matthew
HPR 20 10 / 10 / 0 1.00
25/FA
PHY-109L-02
Physics I - Algebra Lab
OPEN
Physics
GOO 201
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • Ross, Gaylon
20 17 / 3 / 0 0.00
25/FA
PHY-111L-01
Physics I - Calculus Lab
OPEN
Physics
GOO 201
8/27/25- 12/20/25
W
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • Brown, Jim
20 14 / 6 / 0 0.00
25/FA
PHY-111L-02
Physics I - Calculus Lab
OPEN
Physics
GOO 201
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TH
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • Brown, Jim
20 16 / 4 / 0 0.00
25/FA
PPE-215-01
Environmental Philosophy
CLOSED
cross-listed with
PHI-215-01
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
DET 209
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Busk, Larry
HPR 18 11 / -- / 0 1.00
25/FA
PPE-218-01
Philosophy of Commerce
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHI-218-01
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
DET 111
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
PHI-218-01=PPE-218-01
  • Montiel, Jorge
HPR 30 7 / 2 / 0 1.00
25/FA
PPE-228-01
Philosophy of Education
CLOSED
cross-listed with
BLS-287-01, EDU-201-01
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
MXI 109
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W
2:10PM-3:25PM
  • Seltzer-Kelly, Deborah
HPR 18 2 / -- / 0 1.00
25/FA
PPE-232-01
Disability and Politics
CLOSED
cross-listed with
GHL-232-01, PSC-232-01
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
CEN 215
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
PSC-232-01=GHL-232-01=PPE-232-01
  • McCrary, Lorraine
BSC, GCJD 18 7 / -- / 0 1.00
25/FA
PPE-238-01
Trade Politics
CLOSED
cross-listed with
ASI-277-01, PSC-240-01
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
BAX 101
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
Trade politics are a complex nexus of domestic and international politics, economic conditions, global and regional institutions, business interests, and civil society. This course aims to provide an understanding of trade politics in the Asia-Pacific region - the largest market and manufacturing base in the world. The course introduces the latest developments in the Pacific Rim by reviewing the current status of global trade. This course has three main modules. First, the Trade in Goods module explains what trade looks like, how global trade works, and the barriers to trade. 亚洲通 will synthesize your understanding of trade by discussing advanced topics like global value chains and trade wars. Second, the Trade in Services and Digital Trade module introduces trade without physical existence. 亚洲通 will also address the recent controversies about trade (de-)regulations. The third module analyzes trade politics within and beyond the Asia-Pacific countries. In the end, students will learn about the top-down and bottom-up decision-making processes for trade policies. There are no prerequisites for this class. Students should be ready for active participation in student-oriented learning.

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  • Ye, Huei-Jyun
BSC, GCJD, QL 23 8 / -- / 0 1.00
25/FA
PPE-329-01
Democracy and Its Critics
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHI-319-01
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
DET 112
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
PHI-319-01=PPE-329-01 Winston Churchill famously said that democracy was the worst form of government - except for all the others. In this course, we will examine the love-hate relationship between political thought and democratic power. 亚洲通 will explore various theories of democracy, as well as old and new criticisms of popular rule. Our two guiding questions will be: what is democracy, and is it a good idea?

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  • Busk, Larry
20 11 / 5 / 0 1.00
25/FA
PPE-333-01
Constitutional Law
CLOSED
cross-listed with
PSC-313-01
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
BAX 212
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
8:00AM-9:15AM
PSC-313-01=PPE-333-01. This course is only open to Sophomores, Juniors and Seniors.
  • Himsel, Scott
BSC 20 7 / -- / 0 1.00
25/FA
PPE-337-01
Research/Stats Political Sci
OPEN
cross-listed with
PSC-300-01
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
HAY 002
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
PSC-300-01=PPE-337-01
  • Hollander, Ethan
BSC, QL 15 6 / 1 / 0 1.00
25/FA
PPE-338-01
Conflict, War, and Peace
OPEN
cross-listed with
PSC-347-01
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
BAX 202
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
PSC-347-01=PPE-338-01
  • Liou, Ryan
BSC, GCJD 15 6 / 3 / 0 1.00
25/FA
PPE-351-01
Game Theory
OPEN
cross-listed with
ECO-241-01
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
BAX 114
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
  • Burnette, Joyce
BSC, QL 30 6 / 7 / 0 1.00
25/FA
PSC-240-01
Trade Politics
CLOSED
cross-listed with
ASI-277-01, PPE-238-01
Political Science
BAX 101
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
Trade politics are a complex nexus of domestic and international politics, economic conditions, global and regional institutions, business interests, and civil society. This course aims to provide an understanding of trade politics in the Asia-Pacific region - the largest market and manufacturing base in the world. The course introduces the latest developments in the Pacific Rim by reviewing the current status of global trade. This course has three main modules. First, the Trade in Goods module explains what trade looks like, how global trade works, and the barriers to trade. 亚洲通 will synthesize your understanding of trade by discussing advanced topics like global value chains and trade wars. Second, the Trade in Services and Digital Trade module introduces trade without physical existence. 亚洲通 will also address the recent controversies about trade (de-)regulations. The third module analyzes trade politics within and beyond the Asia-Pacific countries. In the end, students will learn about the top-down and bottom-up decision-making processes for trade policies. There are no prerequisites for this class. Students should be ready for active participation in student-oriented learning.

[show more]

  • Ye, Huei-Jyun
BSC, GCJD, QL 23 16 / -- / 0 1.00
25/FA
PSC-300-01
Research/Stats Political Sci
OPEN
cross-listed with
PPE-337-01
Political Science
HAY 002
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
PSC-300-01=PPE-337-01
  • Hollander, Ethan
BSC, QL 15 8 / 1 / 0 1.00
25/FA
PSY-101-01
Introduction to Psychology
OPEN
Psychology
BAX 101
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM
  • Schmitzer-Torbert, Neil
BSC 40 35 / 5 / 0 1.00
25/FA
PSY-101-02
Introduction to Psychology
OPEN
Psychology
BAX 101
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
Incoming Freshmen only
  • Horton, Bobby
BSC 40 32 / 8 / 0 1.00
25/FA
PSY-105-01
Fatherhood
OPEN
cross-listed with
GEN-105-01
Psychology
CEN 216
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
  • Olofson, Eric
BSC 40 24 / 2 / 0 1.00
25/FA
PSY-110-01
Mindfulness and Health
OPEN
Psychology
BAX 212
10/20/25- 12/20/25
M W F
3:10PM-4:00PM
2nd half semester course. 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 focus on the psychology of stress and focus on developing mindfulness through practices drawn from Mindfulness-based Stress Reduction (MBSR), adapted for the college classroom. 亚洲通 will also consider how mindfulness today (which is often presented as set of secular tools) has roots in several contemplative traditions. Class activities will focus heavily on active participation in components MBSR and application of mindfulness to our daily life.

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  • Schmitzer-Torbert, Neil
BSC 25 14 / 11 / 0 0.50
25/FA
PSY-214-01
Psychology and Law
OPEN
Psychology
CEN 215
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
  • Bost, Preston
BSC 25 23 / 2 / 0 1.00
25/FA
REL-103-01
Islam & the Religions of India
OPEN
cross-listed with
REL-103-01SR
Religion
CEN 216
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Blix, David
HPR 45 34 / 11 / 0 1.00
25/FA
REL-103-01SR
Islam & the Religions of India
OPEN
cross-listed with
REL-103-01
Religion
CEN 216
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Blix, David
HPR 5 3 / 2 / 0 1.00
25/FA
REL-141-01
Hebrew Bible/Old Testament
OPEN
Religion
CEN 216
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
  • Campbell, Warren
HPR 50 37 / 13 / 0 1.00
25/FA
REL-171-01
History Christianity to Reform
OPEN
Religion
CEN 216
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM
  • Nelson, Derek
HPR 50 20 / 30 / 0 1.00
25/FA
REL-181-01
Religion in America
OPEN
Religion
GOO 104
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Baer, Jonathan
HPR 50 21 / 29 / 0 1.00
25/FA
REL-195-01
Music of Christianity
OPEN
cross-listed with
MUS-204-01
Religion
FIN M140
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
MUS-204-01=REL-195-01 This course considers examines the relationship between different kinds of music and Christianity. 亚洲通'll discuss examples from chant in Medieval monasteries to Contemporary Christian pop music, using the music to examine the societal, political, and aesthetic priorities of specific times and places in history. 亚洲通 will also consider the concept of "sacred music" in a broad sense, examining how its definitions have changed over time.

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  • Ables, Mollie
HPR, LFA 20 5 / 4 / 0 1.00
25/FA
REL-260-01
Economy in Early Christianity
OPEN
Religion
CEN 216
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
"All they asked was that we should continue to remember the poor" (Gal 2:10). In this course, we will work to remember the poor in the ancient world, working mostly with Jewish and Christian texts from antiquity, before thinking about contemporary initiatives to address poverty. 亚洲通 will consider the legal traditions regarding poverty in the Hebrew Bible, the economic context of the early Jesus movement, the Roman economy, the Pauline "collection", the institutionalization of alms giving, the moral and theological significance given to wealth and poverty, and the economic language used to structure theological concepts like salvation.

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  • Campbell, Warren
HPR 20 19 / 1 / 0 1.00
25/FA
REL-272-01
Christianity and Fatherhood
OPEN
Religion
DET 212
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
How have Christians understood and practiced fatherhood throughout church history? What principles and sources of authority have guided men and families as they have sought to live out their faith in this area? This course examines Christian convictions and customs in relation to fatherhood in Scripture and the early church, and then primarily in western church history, with particular focus on the American context. What has fatherhood looked like among Christians? How have they viewed and raised their children, and to what ends? What shapes might fatherhood take in the contemporary world?

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  • Baer, Jonathan
HPR 20 19 / 1 / 0 1.00
25/FA
REL-274-01
Changing the World & the Self
OPEN
Religion
BAX 212
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
Some people want to change the world for the better on the basis of their faith. Some people want to develop their own self and interior life on the basis of their faith. But what about the person who wants to do both? This course proposes that each of those goals works better if pursued in tandem with the other. The class blends discussion of key texts with other innovative activities. 亚洲通 will visit churches who do extraordinary things in service to the common good and in hopes that social transformation can happen. All students will also participate in one weekend retreat where we can have longer conversations over campfires and hikes to get to a deeper level of understanding what part of the social fabric we want to work on. This course has no prerequisites, but it does require that students who take it commit to serious thought about who they want to be as a man, a father, a husband, a worker, on the one hand, and what kind of of society they want their kids, their spouse, their co-workers and their fellow man to live in. Readings will include classics from the Christian theological tradition such as Reinhold Niebuhr, Martin Luther, Dorothy Day, Thomas Aquinas, and Howard Thurman, as well as some biblical passages. 亚洲通 will also read philosophers and sociologists about what kinds of social transformation is possible and under which conditions. Finally, we will look at some voices from outside the Christian tradition in Islam, Judaism, and political theory.

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  • Nelson, Derek
HPR 25 10 / 15 / 0 1.00
25/FA
REL-275-01
Religion and Science
OPEN
Religion
CEN 305
8/27/25- 10/15/25
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
Are religion and science in conflict with each other? In agreement? How or why, one way or the other? These are our questions. 亚洲通'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. This is a first-half semester course.

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  • Blix, David
HPR 20 11 / 9 / 0 0.50
25/FA
REL-280-01
Sects and Cults in America
OPEN
Religion
CEN 305
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
This course investigates the beliefs and practices of new, marginal, and dissenting American religious groups, which are often labeled "sects" or "cults." 亚洲通 will draw upon the sociology of religion to understand these terms and new religious movements and reformist groups in general. Primarily, we will focus on the history, theology, and practices of groups such as Mormons, Pentecostals, Branch Davidians, the Peoples Temple, Scientology, and the New Age movement.

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  • Baer, Jonathan
HPR 20 8 / 12 / 0 1.00
25/FA
REL-290-01
Apocalypse From Rome to Waco
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-200-02
Religion
BAX 114
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
HIS-200-02=REL-290-01 How will the world end? When will the world end? Will the world end at all? On Saturday March 25, 2023, Donald Trump held a rally in Waco, Texas. Why there? Last January, the Doomsday Clock moved closer to midnight for the first time in two years. Wars in Israel and Palestine have renewed fundamentalists' focus on the return of Jesus. What does this all mean? This course will study the history of how these questions have been posed and answered from Jewish and Christian communities in the ancient Mediterranean world to Christians in medieval Europe to contemporary America. Using the lenses of social and cultural history, we will examine how these apocalyptic ideologies have been shaped by historical events and how subgroups have interacted with, and often changed, society.

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  • Royalty, Bob
HPR 25 1 / 15 / 0 1.00
25/FA
REL-296-01
Religion & Japanese Literature
OPEN
cross-listed with
ASI-196-01
Religion
CEN 305
10/20/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
"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. 亚洲通'll study Japanese ideas about art and religion (e.g. emptiness, solitude, "sublime beauty"), and how they appear in Japanese literature. 亚洲通'll read selections from Japanese poetry (including haiku), No drama, a classic novel (The Tale of Genji), and some short stories by Murakami and Kawabata. This is a second-half semester course.

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  • Blix, David
HPR, LFA 20 12 / 5 / 0 0.50
25/FA
RHE-220-01
Persuasion
OPEN
Rhetoric
FIN S206
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
  • Khan, Azmat
LS 20 18 / 2 / 0 1.00
25/FA
RHE-320-01
Classical Rhetoric
OPEN
Rhetoric
HAY 001
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
This course is by Instructor permission.
  • Mehltretter, Sara
LFA 16 15 / 1 / 0 1.00
25/FA
RHE-320-02
Classical Rhetoric
OPEN
Rhetoric
HAY 001
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
This course is by Instructor permission.
  • Mehltretter, Sara
LFA 16 11 / 5 / 0 1.00
25/FA
SPA-101L-03
Elementary Spanish I Lab
OPEN
Spanish
DET 128
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU
8:00AM-8:50AM
  • Villegas, Abigail
  • Alvarado Inca, Anarella
6 5 / 1 / 0 0.00
25/FA
SPA-103-01
Accelerated Elementary Spanish
OPEN
Spanish
DET 112
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
  • Boyd, Beth
WL 18 11 / 7 / 0 1.00
25/FA
SPA-103-02
Accelerated Elementary Spanish
OPEN
Spanish
DET 211
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM
  • Boyd, Beth
WL 18 13 / 5 / 0 1.00
25/FA
SPA-103L-02
Accelerated Elem Spanish Lab
OPEN
Spanish
DET 128
8/27/25- 12/20/25
W
8:00AM-8:50AM
  • Villegas, Abigail
  • Alvarado Inca, Anarella
6 4 / 2 / 0 0.00
25/FA
SPA-103L-03
Accelerated Elem Spanish Lab
OPEN
Spanish
DET 220
8/27/25- 12/20/25
W
3:10PM-4:00PM
  • Villegas, Abigail
  • Alvarado Inca, Anarella
6 3 / 3 / 0 0.00
25/FA
SPA-103L-04
Accelerated Elem Spanish Lab
OPEN
Spanish
DET 226
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TH
8:00AM-8:50AM
  • Villegas, Abigail
  • Alvarado Inca, Anarella
6 5 / 1 / 0 0.00
25/FA
SPA-103L-05
Accelerated Elem Spanish Lab
OPEN
Spanish
DET 111
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TH
2:40PM-3:30PM
  • Villegas, Abigail
  • Alvarado Inca, Anarella
6 5 / 1 / 0 0.00
25/FA
SPA-103L-06
Accelerated Elem Spanish Lab
OPEN
Spanish
DET 220
8/27/25- 12/20/25
F
8:00AM-8:50AM
  • Villegas, Abigail
  • Alvarado Inca, Anarella
6 1 / 5 / 0 0.00
25/FA
SPA-201L-01
Intermediate Spanish Lab
OPEN
Spanish
DET 220
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M
8:00AM-8:50AM
  • Villegas, Abigail
  • Alvarado Inca, Anarella
6 5 / 1 / 0 0.00
25/FA
SPA-201L-02
Intermediate Spanish Lab
OPEN
Spanish
DET 128
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M
3:10PM-4:00PM
  • Villegas, Abigail
  • Alvarado Inca, Anarella
6 5 / 1 / 0 0.00
25/FA
SPA-201L-04
Intermediate Spanish Lab
OPEN
Spanish
DET 209
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU
2:40PM-3:30PM
  • Villegas, Abigail
  • Alvarado Inca, Anarella
6 5 / 1 / 0 0.00
25/FA
SPA-201L-05
Intermediate Spanish Lab
OPEN
Spanish
DET 111
8/27/25- 12/20/25
W
8:00AM-8:50AM
  • Villegas, Abigail
  • Alvarado Inca, Anarella
6 3 / 3 / 0 0.00
25/FA
SPA-201L-06
Intermediate Spanish Lab
OPEN
Spanish
DET 226
8/27/25- 12/20/25
W
3:10PM-4:00PM
  • Villegas, Abigail
  • Alvarado Inca, Anarella
6 5 / 1 / 0 0.00
25/FA
SPA-202L-01
Span Lang/Hisp Cultures Lab
OPEN
Spanish
DET 220
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TH
8:00AM-8:50AM
  • Villegas, Abigail
  • Alvarado Inca, Anarella
6 5 / 1 / 0 0.00
25/FA
SPA-202L-02
Span Lang/Hisp Cultures Lab
OPEN
Spanish
DET 209
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TH
2:40PM-3:30PM
  • Villegas, Abigail
  • Alvarado Inca, Anarella
6 5 / 1 / 0 0.00
25/FA
SPA-202L-03
Span Lang/Hisp Cultures Lab
OPEN
Spanish
DET 128
8/27/25- 12/20/25
F
8:00AM-8:50AM
  • Villegas, Abigail
  • Alvarado Inca, Anarella
6 5 / 1 / 0 0.00
25/FA
THE-101-01
Introduction to Theater
OPEN
Theater
FIN EXP
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
  • Vogel, Heidi
LFA 30 26 / 4 / 0 1.00
25/FA
THE-103-01
Lighting Design
OPEN
Theater
FIN TGRR
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
This course will introduce tudents to the art of theatrical lighting design. Students will come to understand the basics of contemporary lighting technology, learn the history of theatrical lighting, and get hands-on experience by creating and executing a lighting design for a mainstage production. From the use of color theory and the psychological effects of light to angle theories and drafting, the process of creating lighting environments for theatre, music, and dance performances has applications far beyond the stage; lighting design is a critical element in film and digital media production as well as interior design and architecture. This course is appropriate for first-year students.

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  • Rosa, Bailey
LFA 12 10 / 2 / 0 1.00
25/FA
THE-104-01
Introduction to Film
OPEN
Theater
FIN CONC
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M F
2:10PM-3:00PM
W
2:10PM-4:00PM
  • Cherry, Jim
LFA 40 38 / 2 / 0 1.00
25/FA
THE-105-01
Introduction to Acting
OPEN
Theater
FIN EXP
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
  • Vogel, Heidi
LFA 16 11 / 5 / 0 1.00
25/FA
THE-202-01
Intro to Scenic Design
OPEN
Theater
FIN TGRR
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
  • Vogel, David
LFA 12 8 / 4 / 0 1.00
25/FA
THE-203-01
Costume Design
OPEN
Theater
FIN TGRR
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
8:00AM-9:15AM
  • Thompson, Brandon
LFA 12 6 / 6 / 0 1.00
25/FA
THE-212-01
The Revolutionary Stage
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-310-02
Theater
FIN TGRR
8/27/25- 12/20/25
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM
THE-212-01=ENG-310-01
  • Cherry, Jim
LFA 15 3 / 11 / 0 1.00
25/FA
THE-219-01
Sound & Music Design
OPEN
cross-listed with
MUS-204-02
Theater
FIN M138
8/27/25- 12/20/25
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
  • Abbott, Mike
LFA 8 3 / 1 / 0 1.00
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