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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
26/SP
ACC-202-01
Management Accounting
OPEN
Accounting
BAX 202
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
ACC-201
  • Hensley, Ed
60 35 / 25 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ART-104-01
Roman Art & Archaeol
WAITLISTED
cross-listed with
ART-104-01SR, CLA-104-01, CLA-104-01SR
Art
DET 209
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
ART-104-01 is for freshmen, sophomores and juniors only.
  • Gorey, Matthew
LFA 30 11 / 0 / 3 1.00
26/SP
ART-104-01SR
Roman Art & Archaeol
CLOSED
cross-listed with
ART-104-01, CLA-104-01, CLA-104-01SR
Art
DET 209
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
ART-104-01SR is for seniors only.
  • Gorey, Matthew
LFA 10 6 / -- / 0 1.00
26/SP
ART-125-01
Drawing
OPEN
Art
FIN A113
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • Mohl, Damon
LFA 12 11 / 1 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ART-202-01
Art in Film
WAITLISTED
Art
FIN M120
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
  • Morton, Elizabeth
LFA 35 35 / 0 / 5 1.00
26/SP
ART-209-01
20th and 21st Century Art
OPEN
Art
FIN M120
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
  • Morton, Elizabeth
LFA 15 14 / 1 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ART-210-01
Art & the Environment
WAITLISTED
Art
FIN M120
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
This course explores the intersection of art and the environment, providing students with an understanding of how global artists have creatively engaged with environmental issues. The course locates contemporary practice within historical and cultural contexts while focusing on the Anthropocene and its effect on the late-20th to 21st century. By examining various artistic mediums, including visual arts, land art, performance art, and multimedia installations, students will develop a critical appreciation for the ways in which art can raise awareness, provoke dialogue, and inspire action in relation to environmental concerns.

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  • Morton, Elizabeth
LFA 15 15 / 0 / 2 1.00
26/SP
ART-225-01
Experimental Animation
OPEN
Art
FIN A133
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W
1:10PM-3:00PM
This course will provide students with the knowledge and tools to create their own animations using Adobe After Effects and Photoshop. Techniques covered include (but are not limited to) isolating objects and animating layers, working with masks and shapes, photographic/collage approaches, including distorting/animating with the Puppet Tools, and working with 2D images in 3D space. Sound design, composition, editing techniques, color grading, and other image-making principles will be explored through a series of short animation experiments. In each project, students will be challenged to develop aesthetically interesting, visually abstract approaches to their ideas. No previous video editing experience is required.

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  • Mohl, Damon
LFA 10 5 / 5 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ART-225-02
Art: Materials and Message
OPEN
Art
FIN A124
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
1:10PM-3:00PM
In this studio course, students will work with Wabash Artist-in-Residence AKIRASH. Students will learn about his interdisciplinary art process, which emphasizes both concepts and materials This course asks students to examine process and material to shape meaning and impact. Students will explore how artworks can carry beauty, cultural traditions, and heritage, while also engaging with urgent social justice, and economic issues. Through studio projects, collaborative research, and discussion, students will practice using art to share ideas, start conversations, and engage with the community. Students will learn about the hidden aspects of the studio, and the ways in which artists connect their personal vision to the wider world.

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  • Strader, Annie
  • Akindiya, Akirash
LFA 10 9 / 1 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ART-226-01
Cinematic Envmt: Digital Space
WAITLISTED
Art
FIN A133
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W
10:00AM-11:50AM
  • Mohl, Damon
LFA 8 8 / 0 / 4 1.00
26/SP
ART-227-01
Sculpture
WAITLISTED
Art
FIN A124
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • 亚洲通edman, Matthew
LFA 12 12 / 0 / 7 1.00
26/SP
ART-331-01
Advanced Studio
OPEN
Art
FIN A124
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
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.
This course requires instructor permission to register.
  • 亚洲通edman, Matthew
1 / 0 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ART-433-01
Senior Studio
CLOSED
Art
FIN A119
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
ART-330 or ART-331
Students must be Senior Art majors to register for this course.
  • Strader, Annie
12 12 / 0 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ASI-112-01
Modern Chinese Literature
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-180-01
Asian Studies
DET 128
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
This course introduces major trends in twentieth and twenty-first century Chinese literature, including works from mainland China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong. All readings are in English translation, and knowledge of Chinese is NOT expected. 亚洲通 trace the development of realism and its alternatives, including speculative genres like martial arts fiction and science fiction. 亚洲通 consider political uses of literature as a tool of state power, popular resistance, both, or neither. 亚洲通 explore how modern and contemporary Chinese, Taiwanese, and Hong Kong literature has engaged in debates of nationalism, individualism, gender equality, the rural/urban divide, environmentalism, historical memory, and more. No prerequisites.

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  • Healey, Cara
GCJD, LFA 16 7 / 6 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ASI-112-02
Chinese Calligraphy
CLOSED
cross-listed with
CHI-311-01
Asian Studies
FIN A133
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU
9:45AM-11:50AM
TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
CHI-311-01 = ASI-112-02. The focus of this course is Chinese Calligraphy. Chinese characters, with a history of 3,000 years, have influenced other cultures such as Japan, Korea, and Vietnam. This course is designed for students who are interested in Chinese language and culture, especially Chinese characters or Chinese calligraphy. The main goal of this course is to create a safe and supportive environment for students to appreciate the art of Chinese calligraphy, practice what they love, and create quality work. In order to fulfill this goal, students will learn traditional Chinese culture and Chinese characters as well. Therefore, the course will consist of the following 3 parts: Traditional Chinese Culture (20%); Chinese Character Study (20%); Calligraphy Projects (60%). NOTE: If taken as ASI-112-02: Does NOT require Chinese language background and has no prerequisites.If taken as CHI-311: Prerequisite is CHI-301 or by instructor permission. Prerequiste is CHI-301 or by Instructor Consent.

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  • Liu, Ruihua
LFA 10 6 / -- / 0 1.00
26/SP
ASI-177-01
Global Chinese Cinema
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-260-01
Asian Studies
DET 109
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M F
2:10PM-3:00PM
W
2:10PM-4:00PM
This course traces major trends in Chinese cinema, including works from mainland China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong. 亚洲通 will analyze films from multiple angles, including aesthetics, historical context, production, and circulation. In particular, we will focus on tensions between nationalism and transnationalism in Chinese cinema. No prerequisites. All readings will be in English, and Chinese language background is NOT expected. Film screenings 亚洲通dnesday 2:10-4:00.

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  • Healey, Cara
GCJD, HPR, LFA 20 2 / 16 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ASI-260-01
World History Since 1500
CLOSED
cross-listed with
HIS-102-01
Asian Studies
BAX 114
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
8:00AM-8:50AM
  • Levy, Aiala
GCJD, HPR 30 1 / -- / 0 1.00
26/SP
ASI-260-02
World History Since 1500
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-102-02
Asian Studies
BAX 202
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
  • Rhoades, Michelle
GCJD, HPR 30 0 / 1 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ASI-277-01
International Organizations
OPEN
cross-listed with
PPE-338-03, PSC-348-01
Asian Studies
BAX 202
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
PSC-141
  • Ye, Huei-Jyun
BSC, QL 20 0 / 10 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ASI-377-01
Studies in Chinese Language
CLOSED
Asian Studies
TBA TBA
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TBA
TBA-TBA
  • Liu, Ruihua
1 1 / 0 / 0 0.50
26/SP
BIO-101-01
Human Biology
OPEN
Biology
HAY 104
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
  • Bost, Anne
  • 亚洲通tzel, Eric
SL 80 78 / 2 / 0 1.00
26/SP
BIO-101L-01
Human Biology Lab
CLOSED
Biology
HAY 110
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M
1:10PM-4:00PM
BIO-101
  • Bost, Anne
20 20 / 0 / 0 0.00
26/SP
BIO-101L-02
Human Biology Lab
CLOSED
Biology
HAY 110
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU
1:10PM-4:00PM
BIO-101
  • 亚洲通tzel, Eric
20 20 / 0 / 0 0.00
26/SP
BIO-101L-03
Human Biology Lab
OPEN
Biology
HAY 110
1/19/26- 5/9/26
W
1:10PM-4:00PM
BIO-101
  • Bost, Anne
20 18 / 2 / 0 0.00
26/SP
BIO-101L-04
Human Biology Lab
CLOSED
Biology
HAY 110
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TH
1:10PM-4:00PM
BIO-101
  • 亚洲通tzel, Eric
20 20 / 0 / 0 0.00
26/SP
BIO-112-01
General Biology II
OPEN
Biology
HAY 104
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
BIO-111
  • Burton, Patrick
  • Ingram, Amanda
SL 60 54 / 6 / 0 1.00
26/SP
BIO-112L-01
General Biol II Lab
CLOSED
Biology
HAY 111
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU
1:10PM-4:00PM
BIO-112
  • Burton, Patrick
20 20 / 0 / 0 0.00
26/SP
BIO-112L-02
General Biol II Lab
OPEN
Biology
HAY 111
1/19/26- 5/9/26
W
1:10PM-4:00PM
BIO-112
  • Burton, Patrick
20 14 / 6 / 0 0.00
26/SP
BIO-112L-03
General Biol II Lab
CLOSED
Biology
HAY 111
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TH
1:10PM-4:00PM
BIO-112
  • Burton, Patrick
20 20 / 0 / 0 0.00
26/SP
BIO-177-01
Global Health
CLOSED
cross-listed with
GHL-177-01
Biology
HAY 319
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
8:00AM-8:50AM
GHL-177-01=BIO-177-01 This is an Immersion course, so students will need to submit an application for consideration.
  • 亚洲通tzel, Eric
12 2 / -- / 0 1.00
26/SP
BIO-212-01
Cell Biology
CLOSED
Biology
HAY 319
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
BIO-211 or BIO-213
  • Walsh, Heidi
QL, SL 42 42 / 0 / 0 1.00
26/SP
BIO-212L-01
Cell Biology Lab
CLOSED
Biology
HAY 214
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU
1:10PM-4:00PM
BIO-212
  • Walsh, Heidi
14 14 / 0 / 0 0.00
26/SP
BIO-212L-02
Cell Biology Lab
CLOSED
Biology
HAY 214
1/19/26- 5/9/26
W
1:10PM-4:00PM
BIO-212
  • Sorensen-Kamakian, Erika
14 14 / 0 / 0 0.00
26/SP
BIO-212L-03
Cell Biology Lab
CLOSED
Biology
HAY 214
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TH
1:10PM-4:00PM
BIO-212
  • Walsh, Heidi
14 14 / 0 / 0 0.00
26/SP
BIO-311-01
Molecular Genetics
OPEN
Biology
HAY 321
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
8:00AM-8:50AM
BIO-211
  • Sorensen-Kamakian, Erika
12 5 / 7 / 0 1.00
26/SP
BIO-311L-01
Molecular Genetics Lab
OPEN
Biology
HAY 212
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU
1:10PM-4:00PM
BIO-311
  • Sorensen-Kamakian, Erika
12 5 / 7 / 0 0.00
26/SP
BIO-313-01
Advanced Ecology
OPEN
Biology
HAY 321
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
BIO-213
Enrollment by Instructor Consent.
  • Carlson, Bradley
SL 12 7 / 5 / 0 1.00
26/SP
BIO-313L-01
Adv Ecology Lab
OPEN
Biology
HAY 103
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU
1:10PM-4:00PM
CoReq BIO-313
  • Carlson, Bradley
12 7 / 5 / 0 0.00
26/SP
BIO-321-01
Compar Anatomy & Embryology
CLOSED
Biology
HAY 104
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
BIO-112
Enrollment by Instructor consent.
  • Carlson, Bradley
20 20 / 0 / 0 1.00
26/SP
BIO-321L-01
Comp Anatomy & Embryology Lab
CLOSED
Biology
HAY 103
1/19/26- 5/9/26
W
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • Carlson, Bradley
20 20 / 0 / 0 0.00
26/SP
BIO-324-01
Vascular Plants
OPEN
Biology
HAY 002
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
BIO-112
  • Ingram, Amanda
16 9 / 7 / 0 1.00
26/SP
BIO-324L-01
Vascular Plants Lab
OPEN
Biology
HAY 101
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TH
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • Ingram, Amanda
16 9 / 7 / 0 0.00
26/SP
BLS-201-01
Introduction to Black Studies
WAITLISTED
cross-listed with
ENG-260-01
Black Studies
CEN 300
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
  • Lake, Tim
GCJD 20 20 / 0 / 5 1.00
26/SP
BLS-270-01
Literary Voices of Indiana
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-370-01, GEN-273-01
Black Studies
CEN 304
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
Who are the literary voices of Indiana? How does Indiana literature examine issues of American and Midwest identity? For generations, Hoosier writers have contributed to and shaped an ongoing discourse about geography, belonging, national identity, and community. As a crossroads state, Indiana lives at the epicenter of multiple literary traditions that transcend borders and boundaries. In this course, we will learn about the many Hoosier writers, past and present, that use literature to manifest a literary consciousness for the state. Students will learn to appreciate the role Indiana has played in forging a complex web of stories linked to America's own sense of place. Authors featured will include Kurt Vonnegut, Indiana Poet Laureate Curtis Crisler, Susan Neville, Shari Wagner, and many others. Join us as we learn about the mystique of Indiana.

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  • Whitney, Julian
GCJD, LFA 20 8 / 2 / 0 1.00
26/SP
BLS-270-03
The Francophone Black Atlantic
OPEN
cross-listed with
FRE-277-01
Black Studies
DET 226
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
Did you know that the largest French-speaking city in the world isn't Paris but Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of the Congo? What about that the International Organization of the Francophonie includes over 90 countries? In this course, we will learn more about the variety of Black cultures within the French-speaking world, spanning from areas like Senegal to metropolitan France, the Caribbean, and Canada, through studying artistic expressions from French-speaking Black creators. This will include an introduction to geographically diverse films, literature, and music placed within their socio-historical context. Together, we will discuss topics such as political and social issues raised and depicted by Black thinkers and artists, such as Édouard Glissant and Ousmane Sembène, the complex relationships between African and Afro-descendant peoples in different countries, and the creation of solidarities within the French-speaking world. 亚洲通 will explore to what extent there exists a Black Atlantic in the Francophonie, in other words, a collective experience of French-speaking Blackness amid the diversity of these cultures. This course will be taught in English, and we will use English translations of French texts or other subtitled media. Those taking the course for credit towards the French major or minor will be expected to do the readings and written assignments in French.

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  • Fouchereaux, Claire
GCJD, LFA 20 4 / 16 / 0 1.00
26/SP
BLS-280-01
Civil War and Reconstruction
CLOSED
cross-listed with
HIS-240-01
Black Studies
MXI 109
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
By far the bloodiest war in the history of the United States as well as that of the entire 亚洲通stern Hemisphere even to this day, the Civil War still holds sway over Americans' minds. In this course we will begin with the antebellum period and explore how and why people took up arms for the Confederacy and the Union, including the 527 Wabash men whose names are emblazoned outside Center Hall as well as those Black veterans from Montgomery County who are absent on that Roll of Honor. The course will detail the military campaigns of the war itself, always illustrating how results on the battlefield shaped the politics and economics of the homefront, and the course will conclude with an extensive look at Reconstruction. The destruction of slavery brought about a period of unimaginable hope for freedpeople as well as equally unimaginable terror and violence. This course aims to string the together all these threads into a singular grand narrative of hope, hypocrisy, vitriol, and valor.

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  • Calhoun, Jake
HPR 30 11 / -- / 0 1.00
26/SP
BLS-280-02
Afroamerican Faith Traditions
OPEN
cross-listed with
REL-280-01
Black Studies
CEN 300
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
8:00AM-9:15AM
Students will learn about the history of African American faith traditions and practices. The several African derived religions, various Christian denominations, Islamic and Islamic derived faiths as well as new age spiritualist movements will be explored. The goal here is to come to see African American faith is rooted in an African Imagination that posits a reality to the invisible world(s). Students will come to understand how African Americans deal will notions of death, satan, illness, the afterlife, hell, and many other theological concepts. Additionally, the course we explore the connection between faith and justice, faith and love and faith and what it means to be human.

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  • Lake, Tim
20 1 / 18 / 0 1.00
26/SP
BLS-282-01
Africa Since 1885
CLOSED
cross-listed with
HIS-272-01
Black Studies
MXI 109
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
  • Warner, Rick
GCJD, HPR 25 5 / -- / 0 1.00
26/SP
BLS-288-01
Educational Policy & Eval
OPEN
cross-listed with
EDU-240-01
Black Studies
DET 209
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
FRT-101
EDU-240-01=BLS-288-01
  • Seltzer-Kelly, Deborah
QL 20 2 / 1 / 0 1.00
26/SP
BLS-300-01
Colonial & Postcolonial Ed
OPEN
cross-listed with
EDU-372-01
Black Studies
DET 112
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W
2:10PM-3:25PM
EDU-372-01=BLS-300-01
  • Seltzer-Kelly, Deborah
12 0 / 6 / 0 1.00
26/SP
CHE-106-01
Survey of Biochemistry
WAITLISTED
Chemistry
HAY 319
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Taylor, Ann
  • Wysocki, Laura
SL 42 47 / -5 / 2 1.00
26/SP
CHE-106L-01
Survey of Biochemistry Lab
CLOSED
Chemistry
HAY 315
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • Taylor, Ann
14 16 / -2 / 0 0.00
26/SP
CHE-106L-02
Survey of Biochemistry Lab
CLOSED
Chemistry
HAY 315
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • Scanlon, Joe
14 15 / -1 / 0 0.00
26/SP
CHE-106L-03
Survey of Biochemistry Lab
CLOSED
Chemistry
HAY 315
1/19/26- 5/9/26
W
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • Wysocki, Laura
14 16 / -2 / 0 0.00
26/SP
CHE-241-01
Inorganic Chemistry
CLOSED
Chemistry
HAY 104
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM
CHE-111
  • Porter, Lon
  • Scanlon, Joe
QL, SL 48 50 / -2 / 0 1.00
26/SP
CHE-241L-01
Inorganic Chemistry Lab
CLOSED
Chemistry
HAY 316
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • Porter, Lon
16 17 / -1 / 0 0.00
26/SP
CHE-241L-02
Inorganic Chemistry Lab
OPEN
Chemistry
HAY 316
1/19/26- 5/9/26
W
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • Porter, Lon
16 15 / 1 / 0 0.00
26/SP
CHE-241L-03
Inorganic Chemistry Lab
CLOSED
Chemistry
HAY 316
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TH
1:10PM-4:00PM
  • Scanlon, Joe
16 17 / -1 / 0 0.00
26/SP
CHE-321-01
Organic Chemistry II
OPEN
Chemistry
HAY 319
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM
CHE-221
  • Wysocki, Laura
  • Kalb, Annah
32 28 / 4 / 0 1.00
26/SP
CHE-321L-01
Organic Chem II Lab
OPEN
Chemistry
HAY 314
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU
1:10PM-4:00PM
CHE-321
  • Wysocki, Laura
16 15 / 1 / 0 0.00
26/SP
CHE-321L-02
Organic Chem II Lab
OPEN
Chemistry
HAY 314
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TH
1:10PM-4:00PM
CHE-321
  • Kalb, Annah
16 13 / 3 / 0 0.00
26/SP
CHE-331-01
Analytical Chemistry
OPEN
Chemistry
HAY 001
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
CHE-241
  • Kalb, Annah
12 5 / 7 / 0 1.00
26/SP
CHE-331L-01
Analytical Chemistry Lab
OPEN
Chemistry
HAY 202
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU
1:10PM-4:00PM
CHE-331
  • Kalb, Annah
12 5 / 7 / 0 0.00
26/SP
CHE-361-01
Biochemistry
OPEN
Chemistry
HAY 319
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
8:00AM-9:15AM
CHE-211,
CHE-241,
or CHE-321,
or permission of instructor
  • Novak, Wally
  • Taylor, Ann
QL, SL 36 27 / 9 / 0 1.00
26/SP
CHE-361L-01
Biochemistry Lab
OPEN
Chemistry
HAY 211
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU
1:10PM-4:00PM
CHE-361
  • Novak, Wally
12 9 / 3 / 0 0.00
26/SP
CHE-361L-02
Biochemistry Lab
OPEN
Chemistry
HAY 211
1/19/26- 5/9/26
W
1:10PM-4:00PM
CHE-361
  • Novak, Wally
12 6 / 6 / 0 0.00
26/SP
CHE-361L-03
Biochemistry Lab
CLOSED
Chemistry
HAY 211
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TH
1:10PM-4:00PM
CHE-361
  • Taylor, Ann
12 12 / 0 / 0 0.00
26/SP
CHE-371-01
Instrument Design/3D Print
OPEN
Chemistry
HAY 003
1/19/26- 3/6/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
Prerequisite: CHE-241
1st Half Semester Course. Digital modeling software paired with desktop fabrication devices offers powerful tools for scientists and engineers, enabling novel approaches to molecular visualization, the creation of custom analytical instrumentation, and the development of specialized laboratory equipment. Rapid prototyping with parametric digital modeling moves beyond the limits of conventional tooling and commercial components while fostering critical and creative problem-solving skills. This course builds proficiency with these technologies through introductory training in three core areas: parametric computer-aided design using Autodesk Tinkercad and Fusion 360, fabrication of an analytical instrument with 3D printers and high-power laser cutters, and basic electronics and circuit design. Students will demonstrate competency through collaborative projects and targeted skill-building assignments.

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  • Porter, Lon
16 9 / 7 / 0 0.50
26/SP
CHE-371-02
Instrument Design/Arduino
OPEN
Chemistry
HAY 003
3/16/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
Prerequisite: CHE-241
2nd Half Semester course. Must take CHE-371-01, 1st half semester in order to take CHE-371-02 during the 2nd half semester. Building on introductory experience with digital design and fabrication, this course emphasizes the development of custom analytical instrumentation and applied electronics. Students will integrate 3D-printed and laser-cut components with sensors, actuators, and Arduino-based microcontrollers to design, prototype, and refine functional laboratory devices. Coursework will introduce fundamental Arduino programming skills, circuit design, and data acquisition methods, with a focus on adapting instruments for chemical and environmental analysis. Through collaborative projects, students will progress from initial concept to fully functioning prototypes, developing practical skills in iterative design, troubleshooting, and instrument optimization. Enrollment is by instructor permission, as students must complete the first half-semester of CHE-371 in order to participate in this follow-on course.

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  • Porter, Lon
16 5 / 11 / 0 0.50
26/SP
CHI-102-01
Elementary Chinese II
OPEN
Chinese
DET 211
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
CHI-101,
or CHI-102 placement
  • Liu, Ruihua
WL 10 7 / 3 / 0 1.00
26/SP
CHI-102L-01
Elementary Chinese II Lab
OPEN
Chinese
DET 226
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M
10:00AM-10:50AM
  • Wang, I Rui
4 3 / 1 / 0 0.00
26/SP
CHI-102L-02
Elementary Chinese II Lab
OPEN
Chinese
DET 226
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M
2:10PM-3:00PM
  • Wang, I Rui
4 3 / 1 / 0 0.00
26/SP
CHI-102L-03
Elementary Chinese II Lab
OPEN
Chinese
DET 226
1/19/26- 5/9/26
W
10:00AM-10:50AM
  • Wang, I Rui
4 1 / 3 / 0 0.00
26/SP
CHI-202-01
Intermediate Chinese II
OPEN
Chinese
DET 211
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
CHI-201,
or CHI-202 placement
  • Liu, Ruihua
WL 10 1 / 9 / 0 1.00
26/SP
CHI-202L-01
Intermediate Chinese II Lab
OPEN
Chinese
DET 226
1/19/26- 5/9/26
W
9:00AM-9:50AM
  • Wang, I Rui
10 1 / 9 / 0 0.00
26/SP
CHI-311-01
Chinese Calligraphy
CLOSED
cross-listed with
ASI-112-02
Chinese
FIN A133
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU
9:45AM-11:50AM
TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
CHI-301,
or CHI-311 placement
CHI-311-01 = ASI-112-02. The focus of this course is Chinese Calligraphy. Chinese characters, with a history of 3,000 years, have influenced other cultures such as Japan, Korea, and Vietnam. This course is designed for students who are interested in Chinese language and culture, especially Chinese characters or Chinese calligraphy. The main goal of this course is to create a safe and supportive environment for students to appreciate the art of Chinese calligraphy, practice what they love, and create quality work. In order to fulfill this goal, students will learn traditional Chinese culture and Chinese characters as well. Therefore, the course will consist of the following 3 parts: Traditional Chinese Culture (20%); Chinese Character Study (20%); Calligraphy Projects (60%). NOTE: If taken as ASI-112-02: Does NOT require Chinese language background and has no prerequisites.If taken as CHI-311: Prerequisite is CHI-301 or by instructor permission. Prerequiste is CHI-301 or by Instructor Consent.

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  • Liu, Ruihua
WL, LFA 10 4 / -- / 0 1.00
26/SP
CLA-104-01
Roman Art & Archaeology
WAITLISTED
cross-listed with
ART-104-01, ART-104-01SR, CLA-104-01SR
Classics
DET 209
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
CLA-104-01 is for freshmen, sophomores and juniors only.
  • Gorey, Matthew
LFA 30 20 / 0 / 1 1.00
26/SP
CLA-104-01SR
Roman Art & Archaeology
CLOSED
cross-listed with
ART-104-01, ART-104-01SR, CLA-104-01
Classics
DET 209
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
CLA-104-01SR is for seniors only
  • Gorey, Matthew
LFA 10 3 / -- / 0 1.00
26/SP
CLA-111-01
Death and Afterlife
WAITLISTED
cross-listed with
REL-290-01
Classics
CEN 305
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
亚洲通 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. Yet, in our time, we keep death at a firm distance, isolating it into the clinical space. It is the domain of professionals. On the other hand, 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. Death was part of life. However, these places are far from static conceptions. The theologies of the afterlife develop in notable ways. In this course, we will go on our own 'Tour of Heaven and Hell', so to speak, and explore the wide array of underworld and afterlife conceptions in ancient Greek, Roman, Jewish, and Christian sources. Why? It is illuminating and historically rich to observe the development and function of the afterlife in relation to social and political and religious concerns. 亚洲通 will also embark on a cemetery restoration project and delve into the material aspects of death.

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  • Campbell, Warren
LFA 25 18 / -2 / 1 1.00
26/SP
CLA-113-01
Barbarians and Beyond
WAITLISTED
cross-listed with
CLA-113-01SR, HIS-210-02, HIS-210-02SR
Classics
HAY 319
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
The Ancient Greeks famously divided the entire world into two categories: "Greeks" and "Barbarians"-that is, everyone else. But how exactly did they define these two contrasting identities? And who got to decide? For that matter, what did the so-called "barbarians" think of all this? This course will examine fundamental questions of identity, culture, and power in the Ancient Mediterranean. 亚洲通 will survey what ancient peoples-ranging from Greeks and Romans to Egyptians, Gauls, Germans, Phoenicians, and more-thought about their own origins and identities. 亚洲通 will also consider how questions of ethnic, civic, religious, racial, and linguistic identity and diversity impacted the everyday lives of people in the Ancient Mediterranean.

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  • Gorey, Matthew
GCJD, HPR, LFA 19 12 / 0 / 6 1.00
26/SP
CLA-113-01SR
Barbarians and Beyond
CLOSED
cross-listed with
CLA-113-01, HIS-210-02, HIS-210-02SR
Classics
HAY 319
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
The Ancient Greeks famously divided the entire world into two categories: "Greeks" and "Barbarians"-that is, everyone else. But how exactly did they define these two contrasting identities? And who got to decide? For that matter, what did the so-called "barbarians" think of all this? This course will examine fundamental questions of identity, culture, and power in the Ancient Mediterranean. 亚洲通 will survey what ancient peoples-ranging from Greeks and Romans to Egyptians, Gauls, Germans, Phoenicians, and more-thought about their own origins and identities. 亚洲通 will also consider how questions of ethnic, civic, religious, racial, and linguistic identity and diversity impacted the everyday lives of people in the Ancient Mediterranean.

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  • Gorey, Matthew
GCJD, HPR, LFA 6 4 / -- / 0 1.00
26/SP
CLA-162-01
New Testament
WAITLISTED
cross-listed with
REL-162-01
Classics
CEN 216
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM
  • Campbell, Warren
HPR, LFA 50 17 / 0 / 4 1.00
26/SP
CLA-212-01
Ancient Christianity in Rome
CLOSED
cross-listed with
REL-260-01
Classics
CEN 304
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
8:00AM-9:15AM
This course will study the gradual "Christianization" of Rome that the city and empire underwent from 50-650 CE, as well as the gradual "Romanization" of Christianity that the faith underwent under those conditions. 亚洲通 will examine art, material remains, texts and buildings to reconstruct the experiences of Christians, Romans, and Roman Christians. An immersion trip to Rome during Spring Break will allow students to see key sites and come to their own conclusions about this fascinating history for themselves.

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  • Nelson, Derek
HPR, LFA 16 6 / -- / 0 1.00
26/SP
CLA-213-01
Sex & Power in Ancient Greece
CLOSED
Classics
DET 209
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
This course will examine ancient Greek notions of sex, gender, sexuality, identity and their links to power. In particular, our attention will be concentrated on the prevailing views from the Greek Archaic to the Hellenistic period (circa 600 to 31 B.C.E.) with a particular focus on Classical Athens. Using a mixture of ancient sources, material culture, and modern critical evaluations, we will consider how the sexuality and gender of individuals were affected and framed by culture, looking at their family relations, class, status, occupation, location, and access to power.

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  • Kopestonsky, Theodora
GCJD, HPR, LFA 19 18 / -- / 0 1.00
26/SP
CLA-213-01SR
Sex & Power in Ancient Greece
CLOSED
Classics
DET 209
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
This course will examine ancient Greek notions of sex, gender, sexuality, identity and their links to power. In particular, our attention will be concentrated on the prevailing views from the Greek Archaic to the Hellenistic period (circa 600 to 31 B.C.E.) with a particular focus on Classical Athens. Using a mixture of ancient sources, material culture, and modern critical evaluations, we will consider how the sexuality and gender of individuals were affected and framed by culture, looking at their family relations, class, status, occupation, location, and access to power.

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  • Kopestonsky, Theodora
HPR, LFA 6 1 / -- / 0 1.00
26/SP
CLA-400-01
Senior Seminar
OPEN
Classics
LIB LSEM
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TH
1:10PM-3:55PM
  • Hartnett, Jeremy
LFA 6 / 0 / 0 1.00
26/SP
COL-402-01
Important Books
OPEN
Colloquium
CEN 304
1/19/26- 5/9/26
W
7:30PM-9:30PM
  • Blix, David
  • Mikek, Peter
HPR, LFA 15 14 / 1 / 0 1.00
26/SP
CSC-101-01
Intro to Computer Science
OPEN
Computer Science
GOO 101
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
3:10PM-4:00PM
  • Turner, William
QL 24 16 / 8 / 0 1.00
26/SP
CSC-111-01
Intro to Programming
OPEN
Computer Science
HAY 003
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
CSC-101,
CSC-106,
or MAT-112; or permission of the instructor.
  • Turner, William
QL 30 15 / 15 / 0 1.00
26/SP
CSC-211-01
Intro to Data Structures
OPEN
Computer Science
GOO 101
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
CSC-111 with a minimum grade of C-
  • Deng, Qixin
30 25 / 5 / 0 1.00
26/SP
CSC-233-01
Intro to Data Science
OPEN
Computer Science
HAY 002
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
Take CSC-211 with a minimum grade C-.
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.

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  • Yoon, Ryeongkyung
24 9 / 15 / 0 1.00
26/SP
CSC-243-01
Algorithm Design and Analysis
OPEN
Computer Science
GOO 104
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
3:10PM-4:00PM
MAT-111 or equivalent,
CSC-211,
Either MAT-108 (previously) or MAT-219 (previously or concurrently)
  • Bowling, Andrew
24 13 / 11 / 0 1.00
26/SP
CSC-361-01
Database System Design
OPEN
Computer Science
GOO 101
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
CSC-211 with a minimum grade of C-
  • Deng, Qixin
18 12 / 6 / 0 1.00
26/SP
CSC-363-01
Compiler Design
OPEN
Computer Science
GOO 101
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
8:00AM-8:50AM
TH
8:00AM-9:15AM
CSC-211 with a minimum grade of C- & CSC-241 with a minimum grade of C-
  • McKinney, Colin
18 13 / 5 / 0 1.00
26/SP
DV1-178-01
Sensors/Electronics/Computing
WAITLISTED
Division I
GOO 101
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM
Computation and electronics are simultaneously ubiquitous and enigmatic in modern society. This course is an introduction to both. It will explore computing machines, both from a foundational standpoint and as expressed in digital electronics. Topics will include electronics components (resistors, capacitors, inductors, transistors, diodes), electronics theory, Turing machines, procedural programming, basic logic gates using transistors, analog and digital input/output, and simple device interfacing, and basic radio theory. Students will use Linux-based microcomputers and microcontrollers to accomplish tasks interfacing the computational and real worlds during the weekly laboratory.

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  • McKinney, Colin
QL, SL 20 20 / 0 / 2 1.00
26/SP
DV1-178L-01
Sensors/Electronics/Computing
WAITLISTED
Division I
GOO 205
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M
1:10PM-4:00PM
DV1-178
  • Tompkins, Nate
20 20 / 0 / 1 0.00
26/SP
DV3-252-01
Stats for Social Sciences
OPEN
Division III
BAX 214
1/19/26- 3/6/26
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
1st Half Semester Course.
  • Byun, Christie
QL 30 12 / 18 / 0 0.50
26/SP
ECO-101-01
Principles of Economics
WAITLISTED
Economics
BAX 202
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
8:00AM-8:50AM
  • Mikek, Peter
BSC 30 26 / 4 / 4 1.00
26/SP
ECO-101-02
Principles of Economics
WAITLISTED
Economics
BAX 311
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
  • Saha, Sujata
BSC 30 25 / 5 / 6 1.00
26/SP
ECO-101-03
Principles of Economics
OPEN
Economics
BAX 311
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
3:10PM-4:00PM
  • Bhattacharjee, Sharbani
BSC 30 24 / 6 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ECO-241-01
Game Theory
WAITLISTED
cross-listed with
PPE-351-01
Economics
BAX 214
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
ECO-241-01=PPE-351-01
  • Dunaway, Eric
BSC, QL 25 27 / -6 / 5 1.00
26/SP
ECO-251-01
Economic Approach With Excel
WAITLISTED
Economics
BAX 214
3/16/26- 5/9/26
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
ECO-101
2nd Half Semester Course.
  • Byun, Christie
BSC, QL 30 29 / 1 / 1 0.50
26/SP
ECO-253-01
Intro to Econometrics
OPEN
Economics
BAX 214
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM
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-227, or MAT-253 and MAT-353,
or PSY-201 and PSY-202
  • Byun, Christie
  • Bhattacharjee, Sharbani
BSC, QL 30 29 / 1 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ECO-258-01
Topics in Health Economics
OPEN
cross-listed with
GHL-219-01, PPE-358-01
Economics
BAX 214
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM
One 200 level ECO course.,
ECO-101 with a minimum grade of C-
ECO-258-01=GHL-219-01=PPE-358-01 This course addresses key issues related to health, healthcare, and health policy, using economic theoretical frameworks and empirical evidence. 亚洲通 will examine how health systems are organized and financed, the challenges of delivering care, and the trade-offs that arise in promoting population health. Within this framework, we will explore the role of prevention, the economics of lifestyle and behavior, and the balance between public and private responsibility for health. 亚洲通 will also study key debates in contemporary health policy-including health insurance reform, cost containment and quality of care, disparities in health and access to care, pharmaceutical pricing, technological changes in the health care sector and their regulation. Finally, we will analyze how political, ethical, and distributional considerations shape health policy choices in both the U.S. and international settings.

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  • Bhattacharjee, Sharbani
BSC 25 10 / 11 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ECO-258-02
Political Economy: Migration
OPEN
cross-listed with
PPE-358-02
Economics
BAX 201
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
3:10PM-4:00PM
One 200 level ECO course.
ECO-258-02=PPE-358-02 Immigration is an important current issue across the globe as well as in the US, and past migrations have shaped history. This class will study the economic causes and consequences of migration. While the economics of migration will be the primary focus, we will also consider the politics and ethics of migration policy. 亚洲通 will study how politics have shaped migration policy, and how policy shapes outcomes.

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  • Burnette, Joyce
BSC, GCJD 25 5 / 14 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ECO-262-01
Financial Markets & Inst
WAITLISTED
Economics
BAX 311
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
ECO-101
  • Saha, Sujata
BSC 30 30 / 0 / 7 1.00
26/SP
ECO-277-01
Economics of Spain
CLOSED
cross-listed with
HSP-228-01
Economics
BAX 212
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
One previous course in Spanish
ECO-277-01=HSP-228-01 In this course, we will study historical and broader social context of Spanish economy as it develops from relatively less developed and isolated European economy during franquismo to the modern prosperous Spain. The fast social and economic development over the last 5 decades has had profound effect on all facets of Spanish life. Among the topics we will include the changes in labor markets through both internal and external migrations, economic growth, economic policies within the EU context, distribution of income, regional development, etc. Students with some background in economics and Spanish will benefit most from this course.

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  • Mikek, Peter
BSC 18 18 / 0 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ECO-277-02
Behavioral Economics
WAITLISTED
cross-listed with
PPE-258-01
Economics
BAX 202
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
ECO-101
ECO-277-02=PPE-258-01 Behavioral Economics, a relatively young field in economic theory, has challenged the conventional wisdom that agents always act rationally in any economic situation. By incorporating modern cognitive theories from psychology, we can enhance the traditional economic paradigm and bring it closer to what is observed in the real world. This course serves as an introduction to several of these topics.

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  • Dunaway, Eric
BSC 25 22 / -5 / 3 1.00
26/SP
ECO-291-01
Intermediate Micro Theory
OPEN
Economics
BAX 114
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM
ECO-101 with a minimum grade of C-,
and MAT-111,
MAT-112 or MAT-223 with a minimum grade of C-
  • Burnette, Joyce
BSC 30 29 / 1 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ECO-292-01
Intermediate Macroeconomics
OPEN
Economics
BAX 202
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM
ECO-101 with a minimum grade of C-,
and MAT-111,
MAT-112 or MAT-223 with a minimum grade of C-
  • Mikek, Peter
BSC 30 21 / 9 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ECO-333-01
Industrial Organization
WAITLISTED
Economics
BAX 114
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
ECO-251,
ECO-253,
and ECO-291
  • Dunaway, Eric
BSC 25 25 / 0 / 3 1.00
26/SP
EDU-101-01
Intro Child & Adolescent Devel
WAITLISTED
Education Studies
MXI 109
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM
  • Pittard, Michele
BSC 18 18 / 0 / 7 1.00
26/SP
EDU-230-01
Exploring Young Adult Novels
OPEN
Education Studies
MXI 214
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
Time Magazine's claim that "亚洲通're living in a golden age of young adult literature" is evidenced in the wide demographic range of readers YA books attract and in the number of popular film and limited series shows based on YA books produced in recent years. In this course students will delve into this vibrant and evolving genre that reflects the complexities of adolescence and young adulthood. Reading a variety of YA subgenres (e.g., dystopian, fantasy, historical, contemporary), students will examine themes such as identity, belonging, resilience, race, class, and social justice. Together students will explore the historical context of YA literature, its cultural significance, its impact on young readers, and YA's place in middle and high school curriculums.

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  • Pittard, Michele
LFA 20 13 / 7 / 0 1.00
26/SP
EDU-240-01
Educational Policy & Eval
WAITLISTED
cross-listed with
BLS-288-01
Education Studies
DET 209
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
FRT-101
EDU-240-01=BLS-288-01
  • Seltzer-Kelly, Deborah
QL 20 17 / 1 / 3 1.00
26/SP
EDU-370-01
Curriculum Design
OPEN
Education Studies
DET 111
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
Take 2 prior credits from EDU.
In 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, some 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 may be an option, subject to availability. This course satisfies the Curriculum and Pedagogy requirement for the Education Studies minor, or may be taken for elective credit.

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  • Seltzer-Kelly, Deborah
12 4 / 8 / 0 1.00
26/SP
EDU-372-01
Colonial & Postcolonial Ed
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-300-01
Education Studies
DET 112
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W
2:10PM-3:25PM
EDU-372-01=BLS-300-01
  • Seltzer-Kelly, Deborah
HPR 12 6 / 6 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ENG-101-01
Composition
OPEN
English
CEN 300
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
  • Lamberton, Jill
15 8 / 7 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ENG-101-02
Composition
OPEN
English
CEN 305
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
  • Szczeszak-Brewer, Agata
15 12 / 3 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ENG-110-01
Intro to Creative Writing
WAITLISTED
English
CEN 300
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
  • Mong, Derek
LS 16 16 / 0 / 2 1.00
26/SP
ENG-121-01
Language Variation & Change
OPEN
cross-listed with
HUM-121-01, MLL-121-01
English
DET 211
3/16/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
ENG-122 or HUM-122 or MLL-122
2nd Half Semester Course. MLL-121-01=ENG-121-01=HUM-121-01
  • Hardy, Jane
LS 25 2 / 19 / 0 0.50
26/SP
ENG-122-01
Modern Linguistics
OPEN
cross-listed with
HUM-122-01, MLL-122-01
English
DET 211
1/19/26- 3/6/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
1st Half Semester Course. MLL-122-01=ENG-122-01=HUM-122-01
  • Hardy, Jane
LS 25 7 / 14 / 0 0.50
26/SP
ENG-172-01
Science Fiction
OPEN
English
CEN 305
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
  • Szczeszak-Brewer, Agata
LFA 30 16 / 14 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ENG-180-01
Modern Chinese Literature
OPEN
cross-listed with
ASI-112-01
English
DET 128
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
This course introduces major trends in twentieth and twenty-first century Chinese literature, including works from mainland China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong. All readings are in English translation, and knowledge of Chinese is NOT expected. 亚洲通 trace the development of realism and its alternatives, including speculative genres like martial arts fiction and science fiction. 亚洲通 consider political uses of literature as a tool of state power, popular resistance, both, or neither. 亚洲通 explore how modern and contemporary Chinese, Taiwanese, and Hong Kong literature has engaged in debates of nationalism, individualism, gender equality, the rural/urban divide, environmentalism, historical memory, and more. No prerequisites.

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  • Healey, Cara
GCJD, LFA 16 3 / 6 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ENG-202-01
Writing With Power and Grace
OPEN
English
CEN 300
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
3:10PM-4:00PM
  • Whitney, Julian
LS 15 8 / 7 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ENG-210-01
Playwriting & Screenwriting
CLOSED
cross-listed with
THE-210-01
English
FIN TGRR
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
THE-210-01=ENG-210-01
  • Abbott, Mike
8 0 / -- / 0 1.00
26/SP
ENG-211-01
Creative Nonfiction Workshop
OPEN
English
CEN 305
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
  • Szczeszak-Brewer, Agata
LS 15 3 / 12 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ENG-237-01
English Literature 1800-1900
OPEN
English
CEN 216
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM
  • Whitney, Julian
LFA 25 12 / 13 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ENG-260-01
Introduction to Black Studies
CLOSED
cross-listed with
BLS-201-01
English
CEN 300
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
  • Lake, Tim
20 0 / -- / 0 1.00
26/SP
ENG-299-01
Professional Writing
WAITLISTED
English
CEN 305
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Benedicks, Crystal
LS 20 20 / 0 / 5 1.00
26/SP
ENG-310-01
The Modern Stage
OPEN
cross-listed with
THE-216-01
English
FIN TGRR
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
One previous course in English or American literature.
THE-216-01=ENG-310-01 The class will study the history of theater and the diverse forms of European drama since 1900. 亚洲通 will discuss theatrical responses to the events that have shaped the modern era: the World Wars, the Holocaust, the atomic bomb, terrorism, workers' movements, feminism, and the rise of a postmodern, media-saturated culture. 亚洲通 will examine the work of major European playwrights including Samuel Beckett (Waiting for Godot), Martin McDonagh (The Beauty Queen of Leenane), Bertholt Brecht (Galileo), and Tom Stoppard (Rosencranz and Guildenstern are Dead), among others. 亚洲通 will discuss one play a week, and the plays will be examined as reflections of moral, social, and political issues throughout modern European history. This course is suitable for all students. Students taking this course for credit toward the English major or minor must have taken at least one previous course in English or American literature. No more than one course taken outside the English Department will be counted toward the major or minor in English.

[show more]

  • Cherry, Jim
LFA 15 3 / 8 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ENG-312-01
Advanced Workshop in Poetry
OPEN
English
CEN 304
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
At least one other creative writing course,
or permission of the instructor.
Although the official pre-requisite for ENG 312 is one previous course in creative writing workshop, all students who are interested in the class are encouraged to contact Prof. Derek Mong (mongd@wabash.edu) for permission to enroll. ENG 312 fulfills the Language Studies Requirement, and students from a variety of backgrounds have succeeded in the course.

[show more]

  • Mong, Derek
LS 15 6 / 9 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ENG-370-01
Literary Voices of Indiana
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-270-01, GEN-273-01
English
CEN 304
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
Who are the literary voices of Indiana? How does Indiana literature examine issues of American and Midwest identity? For generations, Hoosier writers have contributed to and shaped an ongoing discourse about geography, belonging, national identity, and community. As a crossroads state, Indiana lives at the epicenter of multiple literary traditions that transcend borders and boundaries. In this course, we will learn about the many Hoosier writers, past and present, that use literature to manifest a literary consciousness for the state. Students will learn to appreciate the role Indiana has played in forging a complex web of stories linked to America's own sense of place. Authors featured will include Kurt Vonnegut, Indiana Poet Laureate Curtis Crisler, Susan Neville, Shari Wagner, and many others. Join us as we learn about the mystique of Indiana.

[show more]

  • Whitney, Julian
GCJD, LFA 20 8 / 2 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ENG-499-01
Capstone Portfolio
OPEN
English
CEN 216
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
ENG-311,
ENG-312,
or ENG-313
  • Mong, Derek
LS 10 6 / 4 / 0 0.50
26/SP
ENS-201-01
Applied Environmental Science
OPEN
cross-listed with
GHL-219-02
Environmental Studies
HAY 321
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
ENS-201-01=GHL-219-02 This course meets together with BIO-313 Advanced Ecology, but does not include a laboratory component. Students seeking credit towards a Biology major or minor should enroll in BIO-313 Advanced Ecology. This course will apply ecology to specific environmental issues and study the practice of ecological research. Lecture sessions of the course will focus on: advanced ecological topics, such as wetland ecology, fire ecology, and invasive species; the research process, such as critically evaluating literature and study design; and Indigenous perspectives on ecology and the environment. Special attention will be given to a case study of the globally significant Everglades ecosystem of Florida, including its function and relationship to humans. Over Spring Break, there will be an immersion trip to a biological research station and the Everglades National Park in Florida, where students will continue to learn and to apply their knowledge. Students should be open to camping during the trip, for which necessary supplies will be provided. Enrollment is by instructor permission only; interested students must contact the instructor to apply to this course. Prior preparation for the course is required and should be described to the instructor, which may include previous environmental or scientific coursework.

[show more]

  • Carlson, Bradley
12 1 / 11 / 0 1.00
26/SP
ENS-201-02
Mathematics of Sustainability
OPEN
cross-listed with
MAT-106-02
Environmental Studies
HAY 003
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
8:00AM-9:15AM
Counts for environmental studies minor. How can mathematics empower us to become more informed citizens in addressing challenges like pollution, climate change, and resource allocation? In this course, students will learn mathematical tools to understand and analyze sustainability issues. Topics covered include estimation, stocks and flows, networks, mathematical models, data, and probability.

[show more]

  • Ansaldi, Katie
24 4 / 9 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRC-101-01
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
BAX 301
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Horton, Bobby
16 15 / 1 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRC-101-02
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
BAX 311
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Saha, Sujata
16 15 / 1 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRC-101-03
Enduring Questions
CLOSED
Freshman Colloquium
FIN S206
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Cherry, Jim
16 16 / 0 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRC-101-04
Enduring Questions
CLOSED
Freshman Colloquium
DET 212
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Scanlon, Joe
16 16 / 0 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRC-101-05
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
BAX 212
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Himsel, Scott
16 14 / 2 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRC-101-06
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
MXI 214
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Hollander, Ethan
16 14 / 2 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRC-101-07
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
GOO 006
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Ansaldi, Katie
16 15 / 1 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRC-101-08
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
DET 109
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Greenhalgh, Matt
16 15 / 1 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRC-101-09
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
HAY 321
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Sorensen-Kamakian, Erika
16 14 / 2 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRC-101-10
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
BAX 114
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Pliego Campos, Noe
16 13 / 3 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRC-101-11
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
GOO 104
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Deng, Qixin
16 13 / 3 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRC-101-12
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
LIB LSEM
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Novak, Wally
16 15 / 1 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRC-101-13
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
CEN 300
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Blix, David
16 15 / 1 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRC-101-14
Enduring Questions
CLOSED
Freshman Colloquium
CEN 215
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Lake, Tim
16 16 / 0 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRC-101-15
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
HAY 001
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Bost, Anne
16 14 / 2 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRC-101-16
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
BAX 201
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Byun, Christie
16 14 / 2 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRC-101-17
Enduring Questions
CLOSED
Freshman Colloquium
MXI 109
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Pittard, Michele
16 16 / 0 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRC-101-18
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
DET 112
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM
  • Healey, Cara
16 12 / 4 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRE-102-01
Elementary French II
OPEN
French
DET 211
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM
FRE-101,
or FRE-102 placement
  • Quandt, Karen
WL 15 10 / 5 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRE-102L-01
Elementary French II Lab
OPEN
French
DET 226
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M
8:00AM-8:50AM
FRE-102
  • Barwicki, Thomas
5 4 / 1 / 0 0.00
26/SP
FRE-102L-02
Elementary French II Lab
OPEN
French
DET 226
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU
8:00AM-8:50AM
FRE-102
  • Barwicki, Thomas
5 4 / 1 / 0 0.00
26/SP
FRE-102L-03
Elementary French II Lab
OPEN
French
DET 226
1/19/26- 5/9/26
W
3:10PM-4:00PM
FRE-102
  • Barwicki, Thomas
5 2 / 3 / 0 0.00
26/SP
FRE-103-01
Accelerated Elementary French
OPEN
French
DET 211
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
  • Fouchereaux, Claire
WL 15 5 / 10 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRE-103L-01
Accelerated Elem French Lab
OPEN
French
DET 226
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M
3:10PM-4:00PM
  • Barwicki, Thomas
5 3 / 2 / 0 0.00
26/SP
FRE-103L-02
Accelerated Elem French Lab
OPEN
French
DET 226
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU
2:40PM-3:30PM
  • Barwicki, Thomas
5 2 / 3 / 0 0.00
26/SP
FRE-103L-03
Accelerated Elem French Lab
OPEN
French
DET 226
1/19/26- 5/9/26
W
8:00AM-8:50AM
  • Barwicki, Thomas
5 0 / 5 / 0 0.00
26/SP
FRE-202-01
French Lang & Francophone Cult
OPEN
French
DET 220
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
FRE-201,
or FRE-202 placement
  • Quandt, Karen
WL 10 1 / 9 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRE-202L-01
French Lng/Francophne Cult Lab
OPEN
French
DET 226
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TH
2:40PM-3:30PM
FRE-202
  • Barwicki, Thomas
5 1 / 4 / 0 0.00
26/SP
FRE-277-01
The Francophone Black Atlantic
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-270-03
French
DET 226
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
Did you know that the largest French-speaking city in the world isn't Paris but Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of the Congo? What about that the International Organization of the Francophonie includes over 90 countries? In this course, we will learn more about the variety of Black cultures within the French-speaking world, spanning from areas like Senegal to metropolitan France, the Caribbean, and Canada, through studying artistic expressions from French-speaking Black creators. This will include an introduction to geographically diverse films, literature, and music placed within their socio-historical context. Together, we will discuss topics such as political and social issues raised and depicted by Black thinkers and artists, such as Édouard Glissant and Ousmane Sembène, the complex relationships between African and Afro-descendant peoples in different countries, and the creation of solidarities within the French-speaking world. 亚洲通 will explore to what extent there exists a Black Atlantic in the Francophonie, in other words, a collective experience of French-speaking Blackness amid the diversity of these cultures. This course will be taught in English, and we will use English translations of French texts or other subtitled media. Those taking the course for credit towards the French major or minor will be expected to do the readings and written assignments in French.

[show more]

  • Fouchereaux, Claire
GCJD, LFA 20 0 / 16 / 0 1.00
26/SP
FRE-302-01
Intro to Literature
OPEN
French
DET 220
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
FRE-301
  • Quandt, Karen
LFA 10 2 / 8 / 0 1.00
26/SP
GEN-101-01
Intro to Gender Studies
WAITLISTED
Gender Studies
CEN 300
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM
  • Benedicks, Crystal
GCJD, HPR, LFA 20 20 / 0 / 9 1.00
26/SP
GEN-206-01
World Cinema
WAITLISTED
cross-listed with
THE-204-01
Gender Studies
FIN M120
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M F
2:10PM-3:00PM
W
2:10PM-4:00PM
THE-204-01=GEN-206-01
  • Abbott, Mike
GCJD, LFA 30 6 / -2 / 3 1.00
26/SP
GEN-272-01
Sex & Power in Ancient Greece
CLOSED
Gender Studies
DET 209
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
This course will examine ancient Greek notions of sex, gender, sexuality, identity and their links to power. In particular, our attention will be concentrated on the prevailing views from the Greek Archaic to the Hellenistic period (circa 600 to 31 B.C.E.) with a particular focus on Classical Athens. Using a mixture of ancient sources, material culture, and modern critical evaluations, we will consider how the sexuality and gender of individuals were affected and framed by culture, looking at their family relations, class, status, occupation, location, and access to power.

[show more]

  • Kopestonsky, Theodora
HPR, LFA 19 2 / -- / 0 1.00
26/SP
GEN-272-01SR
Sex & Power in Ancient Greece
CLOSED
Gender Studies
DET 209
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
This course will examine ancient Greek notions of sex, gender, sexuality, identity and their links to power. In particular, our attention will be concentrated on the prevailing views from the Greek Archaic to the Hellenistic period (circa 600 to 31 B.C.E.) with a particular focus on Classical Athens. Using a mixture of ancient sources, material culture, and modern critical evaluations, we will consider how the sexuality and gender of individuals were affected and framed by culture, looking at their family relations, class, status, occupation, location, and access to power.

[show more]

  • Kopestonsky, Theodora
HPR, LFA 6 0 / -- / 0 1.00
26/SP
GEN-273-01
Literary Voices of Indiana
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-270-01, ENG-370-01
Gender Studies
CEN 304
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
Who are the literary voices of Indiana? How does Indiana literature examine issues of American and Midwest identity? For generations, Hoosier writers have contributed to and shaped an ongoing discourse about geography, belonging, national identity, and community. As a crossroads state, Indiana lives at the epicenter of multiple literary traditions that transcend borders and boundaries. In this course, we will learn about the many Hoosier writers, past and present, that use literature to manifest a literary consciousness for the state. Students will learn to appreciate the role Indiana has played in forging a complex web of stories linked to America's own sense of place. Authors featured will include Kurt Vonnegut, Indiana Poet Laureate Curtis Crisler, Susan Neville, Shari Wagner, and many others. Join us as we learn about the mystique of Indiana.

[show more]

  • Whitney, Julian
GCJD, LFA 20 2 / 2 / 0 1.00
26/SP
GEN-274-01
Iberian Knights
OPEN
cross-listed with
SPA-313-01
Gender Studies
DET 220
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
Prerequisite: SPA-302
SPA-313-01=GEN-274-01 What does it mean to conduct oneself as a gentleman? This question looms large in the Spanish literary and cultural imaginary: from the Cid to Don Quijote, the figure of the "caballero" (knight / gentleman) is central. Yet across the history of the Iberian Peninsula, the practice of chivalry is varied and at times contradictory. How does a code of brotherhood work to enforce social hierarchy? How can one institution both foment and control violence? What does the relationship between men mean for relations between men and women? In this course, students will grapple with these questions while engaging with works across genres, media, and historical eras that focus on the figure of the "caballero," exploring how it has been deployed and what it means today.

[show more]

  • Kozey, Patrick
18 0 / 5 / 0 1.00
26/SP
GEN-275-01
Music and Masculinity
OPEN
cross-listed with
MUS-104-01
Gender Studies
FIN M140
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
3:10PM-4:00PM
MUS-104-01=GEN-275-01 This course explores the complex relationships between music and changing concepts of masculinity, with a particular focus on how masculinity is expressed performances. Through analysis of 亚洲通stern classical traditions, folk traditions, and modern popular genres, we will learn how the music both shapes and is shaped by contemporaneous notions of masculinity and gender. Additionally, students will apply gender studies methods and critical frameworks to better understand how musical style and gender identity intersect in performance. No prior musical background is required.

[show more]

  • Ables, Mollie
GCJD, LFA 15 2 / 2 / 0 1.00
26/SP
GEN-276-01
Philosophy of Gender
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHI-216-01, PPE-216-01
Gender Studies
CEN 300
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM
PHI-216-01=GEN-276-01=PPE-216-01
  • Trott, Adriel
GCJD, HPR 22 3 / 18 / 0 1.00
26/SP
GEN-279-01
Global Performance & Movement
OPEN
cross-listed with
THE-103-02
Gender Studies
FIN EXP
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
3:10PM-4:00PM
THE-103-02=GEN-279-01 This course will explore how the human body communicates character and meaning in various global contexts. With an emphasis on non-亚洲通stern physical practices such as yoga, we will investigate theater's pre-Greek and non-European origins, as well as how these traditions have evolved over time. 亚洲通 will encounter performance forms from the Middle East (Ta'ziyeh), Asia (Tai Chi), and South America (Teatro del Oprimido), as well as performance techniques with non-亚洲通stern lineages like Suzuki and Rasa. By experimenting with global theatrical traditions, students will also examine how ideas of gender are interpreted and performed in non-亚洲通stern contexts. Other areas of focus will include mask performance, puppets and other performing objects, clowning, folklore study, and choral movement.

[show more]

  • Vogel, Heidi
GCJD, LFA 16 1 / 4 / 0 1.00
26/SP
GEN-285-01
Theorizing the Father's Role
OPEN
cross-listed with
PSY-210-01
Gender Studies
BAX 301
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
Prerequisite: PSY-105 or PSY-220 or Instructor permission.
The father's role varies widely both between and within cultures. In some cultures, fathers commonly interpret their role as being primarily about financial provision. In other culturess, the cultural norms dictate that fathers ought to be highly involved in all aspects of daily caregiving for the duration of their children's lives. Even within a culture, two fathers who live on the same street may hold very different views regarding their roles as fathers. Research in family science has documented much of this variability, but no current theories in psychology explain the forces that lead men to interpret their roles as fathers so differently. Dr. Olofson is currently developing such a theory, but he is not done. This is where you come in. In this class, students will learn about cultural variability in fathers' roles and how fathers work together with their coparents to raise children. Then, they will help Dr. Olofson build the first-ever theory trying to explain how and why fathers' roles vary so widely across different families.

[show more]

  • Olofson, Eric
BSC 16 1 / 13 / 0 0.50
26/SP
GER-102-01
Elementary German II
OPEN
German
DET 212
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
GER-101,
or GER-102 placement
  • Ewing, Leah
WL 16 10 / 6 / 0 1.00
26/SP
GER-102-02
Elementary German II
OPEN
German
DET 128
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM
GER-101,
or GER-102 placement
  • Ewing, Leah
WL 16 12 / 4 / 0 1.00
26/SP
GER-102L-01
Elementary German II Lab
OPEN
German
DET 128
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M
9:00AM-9:50AM
GER-102
  • Schroeder, Jan
6 3 / 3 / 0 0.00
26/SP
GER-102L-02
Elementary German II Lab
OPEN
German
DET 220
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU
1:10PM-2:00PM
GER-102
  • Schroeder, Jan
6 5 / 1 / 0 0.00
26/SP
GER-102L-03
Elementary German II Lab
OPEN
German
DET 220
1/19/26- 5/9/26
W
8:00AM-8:50AM
GER-102
  • Schroeder, Jan
6 4 / 2 / 0 0.00
26/SP
GER-102L-04
Elementary German II Lab
OPEN
German
DET 128
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TH
9:45AM-10:35AM
GER-102
  • Schroeder, Jan
6 4 / 2 / 0 0.00
26/SP
GER-102L-05
Elementary German II Lab
OPEN
German
DET 128
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TH
2:40PM-3:30PM
GER-102
  • Schroeder, Jan
6 4 / 2 / 0 0.00
26/SP
GER-102L-06
Elementary German II Lab
OPEN
German
DET 128
1/19/26- 5/9/26
F
9:00AM-9:50AM
GER-102
  • Schroeder, Jan
6 2 / 4 / 0 0.00
26/SP
GER-202-01
German Language & Culture
OPEN
German
DET 111
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM
GER-201,
or GER-202 placement
Any student who meets the prerequisite may enroll in GER-202.
  • Tucker, Brian
WL 18 9 / 9 / 0 1.00
26/SP
GER-202L-01
German Lang & Culture Lab
OPEN
German
DET 128
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU
9:45AM-10:35AM
GER-202
  • Schroeder, Jan
5 2 / 3 / 0 0.00
26/SP
GER-202L-02
German Lang & Culture Lab
OPEN
German
DET 128
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU
2:40PM-3:30PM
GER-202
  • Schroeder, Jan
6 5 / 1 / 0 0.00
26/SP
GER-202L-03
German Lang & Culture Lab
OPEN
German
DET 128
1/19/26- 5/9/26
W
2:10PM-3:00PM
GER-202
  • Schroeder, Jan
6 2 / 4 / 0 0.00
26/SP
GER-202L-04
German Lang & Culture Lab
OPEN
German
DET 220
1/19/26- 5/9/26
W
3:10PM-4:00PM
GER-202
  • Schroeder, Jan
6 0 / 6 / 0 0.00
26/SP
GER-302-01
Intro to Literature
OPEN
German
DET 220
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
GER-301
  • Ewing, Leah
LFA 16 7 / 9 / 0 1.00
26/SP
GER-312-01
Studies in German Culture
OPEN
German
DET 112
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
GER-301 and GER-302
  • Tucker, Brian
LFA 10 3 / 7 / 0 1.00
26/SP
GER-401-01
Senior Seminar in German
OPEN
German
DET 112
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
  • Tucker, Brian
10 4 / 6 / 0 1.00
26/SP
GHL-177-01
Global Health
CLOSED
cross-listed with
BIO-177-01
Global Health
HAY 319
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
8:00AM-8:50AM
GHL-177-01=BIO-177-01 This is an Immersion course, so students will need to submit an application for consideration.
  • 亚洲通tzel, Eric
12 11 / -- / 0 1.00
26/SP
GHL-219-01
Topics in Health Economics
OPEN
cross-listed with
ECO-258-01, PPE-358-01
Global Health
BAX 214
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM
Must take one ECO 200 level course prior.,
ECO-101 with a minimum grade of C-
ECO-258-01=GHL-219-01=PPE-358-01 This course addresses key issues related to health, healthcare, and health policy, using economic theoretical frameworks and empirical evidence. 亚洲通 will examine how health systems are organized and financed, the challenges of delivering care, and the trade-offs that arise in promoting population health. Within this framework, we will explore the role of prevention, the economics of lifestyle and behavior, and the balance between public and private responsibility for health. 亚洲通 will also study key debates in contemporary health policy-including health insurance reform, cost containment and quality of care, disparities in health and access to care, pharmaceutical pricing, technological changes in the health care sector and their regulation. Finally, we will analyze how political, ethical, and distributional considerations shape health policy choices in both the U.S. and international settings.

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  • Bhattacharjee, Sharbani
25 0 / 11 / 0 1.00
26/SP
GHL-219-02
Applied Environmental Science
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENS-201-01
Global Health
HAY 321
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
ENS-201-01=GHL-219-02
  • Carlson, Bradley
12 0 / 11 / 0 1.00
26/SP
GHL-219-03
Human Rights
CLOSED
cross-listed with
PPE-238-01, PSC-240-01
Global Health
BAX 114
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM
This course critically examines the relationship between public opinion and the advancement of human rights, a central tension in modern democracies. 亚洲通 will investigate how popular beliefs, stereotypes, and misperceptions affect support for the rights of marginalized communities, including immigrants, women, LGBTQ+ individuals, and racial minorities. Using an analytical lens that incorporates concepts of power dynamics, justice, and incentive structures, students will explore normative frameworks and political attitudes to better understand how public sentiment shapes policy and social inclusion. 亚洲通 will also examine the political psychology that underpins these beliefs and test whether interventions can reduce prejudice and build empathy. The course places a special emphasis on applying empirical methods, especially the design and analysis of survey experiments. Students will gain hands-on experience conducting their own research, from developing a hypothesis to analyzing data and effectively presenting the results to public audiences. This project-based approach equips students with the analytical skills necessary for careers in advocacy, business, policy-making, and research.

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  • Liou, Ryan
BSC, GCJD, QL 20 7 / -- / 0 1.00
26/SP
GHL-310-01
History of Medicine
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-300-02
Global Health
BAX 212
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM
This research seminar is built on the premise that you are already familiar with the basic contours of European and World history. In this seminar, we will examine the development of European and Global medical practices. This includes how individuals and professionals understood the body, its functions, and disease states. Students will explore the development of formal and informal medical structures, such as the first laboratories, hospitals, and medical educations. The texts used will be a combination of primary and secondary sources, from readings in Greek perceptions of the body to press reports about Ebola outbreaks. The reading is designed to give you a basic understanding of the history of medicine and the types of evidence you may wish to explore in a paper. Throughout your readings and research, students will consider how cultural assumptions and social pressures encouraged or limited medicine and their impressions of what constituted a "healthy" body.

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  • Rhoades, Michelle
HPR 15 1 / 2 / 0 1.00
26/SP
GRK-102-01
Beginning Greek II
OPEN
Greek
DET 112
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM
GRK-101
  • Kopestonsky, Theodora
WL 20 5 / 15 / 0 1.00
26/SP
GRK-102L-01
Elem Greek Lab
OPEN
Greek
DET 111
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU
11:10AM-12:00PM
GRK-102
  • Kopestonsky, Theodora
20 5 / 15 / 0 0.00
26/SP
GRK-301-01
Advanced Greek Reading: Poetry
OPEN
Greek
DET 112
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM
GRK-201
  • Kopestonsky, Theodora
WL, LFA 10 4 / 6 / 0 1.00
26/SP
HIS-102-01
World Hist Since 1500
WAITLISTED
cross-listed with
ASI-260-01
History
BAX 114
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
8:00AM-8:50AM
HIS-102 is crosslisted with ASI-260
  • Levy, Aiala
GCJD, HPR 30 29 / 0 / 2 1.00
26/SP
HIS-102-02
World Hist Since 1500
OPEN
cross-listed with
ASI-260-02
History
BAX 202
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM
  • Rhoades, Michelle
GCJD, HPR 30 29 / 1 / 0 1.00
26/SP
HIS-200-01
Us Military History 1607-2024
CLOSED
History
BAX 212
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
8:00AM-8:50AM
This course tracks the development and evolution of the the US military in general--and the US Army in specific--from 1607 to 2024. This course fulfills the Military History Course required by ROTC cadets. 亚洲通 will be looking at the development of professional soldiers, how the society viewed the military, many of the political aspects as to why the mililtary looks as it does, the evolution of the military leadership, and discuss the quagmire of post-operational realities. In addition to the assignments required by US Army Training and Doctorine Command (TRADOC), there will be a number of reports, some analysis, visits to archives, and viewing of artifacts. This course is by instructor permission only.

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  • Koppelmann, Zachery
HPR 5 5 / 0 / 0 1.00
26/SP
HIS-200-02
True Crime & Serial Killers
OPEN
History
BAX 201
1/19/26- 5/9/26
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM
In this course, students will study the relationships between crime, society, and forensic policing from 1870 to the outbreak of the First World War. In a period marked by rapid industrialization, urbanization, and social change, crimes involving guns, bombs, pistols, and lots of blood increased. Beginning with a study of Jack the Ripper, this course explores how shifting economic conditions, class structures, and cultural anxieties influenced criminal behavior and its portrayal in the popular press. Students will consider how investigators pursued criminals and applied new psychological and forensic theories to create profiles of their suspects. By utilizing police reports and other historical documents, students will gain insight into criminal activity and advancements in news coverage, psychology and forensics, law enforcement, and justice in late 19th-century Europe.

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  • Rhoades, Michelle
HPR 20 19 / 1 / 0 1.00
26/SP
HIS-200-03
Food in World History
WAITLISTED
History
BAX 202
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
This is a survey of the impact of production and consumption of food on a global scale through human history.
  • Warner, Rick
HPR 40 45 / -5 / 5 1.00
26/SP
HIS-201-01
Big History
WAITLISTED
History
BAX 202
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
8:00AM-9:15AM
  • Warner, Rick
HPR 40 40 / 0 / 10 1.00
26/SP
HIS-210-01
Sex & Power in Ancient Greece
CLOSED
History
DET 209
1/19/26- 5/9/26
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM
This course will examine ancient Greek notions of sex, gender, sexuality, identity and their links to power. In particular, our attention will be concentrated on the prevailing views from the Greek Archaic to the Hellenistic period (circa 600 to 31 B.C.E.) with a particular focus on Classical Athens. Using a mixture of ancient sources, material culture, and modern critical evaluations, we will consider how the sexuality and gender of individuals were affected and framed by culture, looking at their family relations, class, status, occupation, location, and access to power.

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  • Kopestonsky, Theodora
HPR, LFA 19