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For capacities and available seats, go to Search for Sections.
25/FA Course | Faculty | Days | Comments/Requisites | Credits | Course Type | Location | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ACC - ACCOUNTING | ||||||||
ACC-201-01 Financial Accounting |
Hensley E |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
|
1.00 |
BAX 202
BAX 214
|
|||
ACC-301-01 Intermediate Accounting I |
Hensley E |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
ACC-202
|
1.00 |
BAX 202
|
|||
ART - ART | ||||||||
ART-103-01 Greek Art & Archaeology |
Kopestonsky T |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
HAY 104
|
||
ART-126-01 Studio Art Fundamentals |
Strader A |
M W
10:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN A133
|
||
ART-202-01 Art in Film |
Morton E |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN M120
|
||
ART-219-01 Blood, Screams, and Struggles |
亚洲通edman M |
M F
02:10PM - 03:00PM W
02:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
1.00 | GCJD, LFA |
TBA TBA
|
||
ART-223-01 Ceramics |
Strader A |
M W
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN A119
|
||
ART-224-01 Photography |
亚洲通edman M |
TU TH
01:10PM - 03:00PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN A113
|
||
ART-225-01 Drawing Animation |
Mohl D |
TU TH
01:10PM - 03:00PM |
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.
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN A133
|
||
ART-228-01 Painting: Mixed Media |
Mohl D |
M W
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN A131
|
||
ART-312-01 Post Modern Art & Culture |
Morton E |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
One course in Art History
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN B012
|
||
ART-331-01 Advanced Studio |
Mohl D |
TU TH
09:45AM - 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. |
1.00 |
FIN A133
|
|||
ASI - ASIAN STUDIES | ||||||||
ASI-112-01 Manga and Anime |
Whitney J |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
CEN 215
|
||
ASI-196-01 Religion & Japanese Literature |
Blix D |
TU TH
09:45AM - 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.
|
0.50 | HPR, LFA |
CEN 305
|
||
ASI-277-01 Trade Politics |
Ye, H |
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.
|
1.00 | BSC, QL |
BAX 201
|
||
BIO - BIOLOGY | ||||||||
BIO-102-01 Plants & Human Affairs |
Ingram A |
M W F
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
1.00 | SL |
HAY 319
|
||
BIO-102L-01 Plants & Human Affairs Lab |
Ingram A |
M
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
BIO-102
|
0.00 |
HAY 110
|
|||
BIO-102L-02 Plants & Human Affairs Lab |
Ingram A |
TU
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
BIO-102
|
0.00 |
HAY 110
|
|||
BIO-111-01 General Biology I |
Bost A, Burton P, Walsh H |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
|
1.00 | QL, SL |
HAY 104
|
||
BIO-111L-01 General Biol I Lab |
Burton P |
M
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
HAY 111
|
|||
BIO-111L-02 General Biol I Lab |
Bost A |
TU
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
HAY 111
|
|||
BIO-111L-03 General Biol I Lab |
Burton P |
W
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
HAY 111
|
|||
BIO-111L-04 General Biol I Lab |
Walsh H |
TH
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
HAY 111
|
|||
BIO-211-01 Genetics |
Sorensen-Kamakian E |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
Prerequisite: BIO-112
|
1.00 | QL, SL |
HAY 319
|
||
BIO-211L-01 Genetics Lab |
Sorensen-Kamakian E |
TU
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Prerequisite: BIO-112
|
0.00 |
HAY 214
|
|||
BIO-211L-02 Genetics Lab |
Sorensen-Kamakian E |
W
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Prerequisite: BIO-112
|
0.00 |
HAY 214
|
|||
BIO-213-01 Ecology |
Carlson B |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Prerequisite: BIO-112
|
1.00 | QL, SL |
HAY 003
|
||
BIO-213L-01 Ecology Lab |
Carlson B |
TU
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Prerequisite: BIO-112
|
0.00 |
HAY 103
|
|||
BIO-213L-02 Ecology Lab |
Carlson B |
W
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Prerequisite: BIO-112
|
0.00 |
HAY 103
|
|||
BIO-315-01 Physiology |
Walsh H |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
BIO-212
This course is by Instructor consent.
|
1.00 |
HAY 104
|
|||
BIO-315L-01 Physiology Lab |
Walsh H |
TU
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Co-Requisite: BIO-315.
This course is by Instructor consent.
|
0.00 |
HAY 212
|
|||
BIO-325-01 Microbiology |
Bost A |
M W F
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
Prerequisite: BIO-211
This is by Instructor consent only.
|
1.00 | SL |
HAY 321
|
||
BIO-325L-01 Microbiology Lab |
Bost A |
TH
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Co-Requisite BIO-325
Enrollment by Instructor Permission Only
|
0.00 |
HAY 212
|
|||
BIO-326-01 Parasitology |
亚洲通tzel E |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
Prerequisite: BIO-112
|
1.00 |
HAY 003
|
|||
BIO-326L-01 Parasitology Lab |
亚洲通tzel E |
M
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
HAY 101
|
|||
BIO-326L-02 Parasitology Lab |
亚洲通tzel E |
TH
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
HAY 101
|
|||
BIO-401-01 Senior Seminar |
Burton P, Carlson B, Sorensen-Kamakian E |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
|
1.00 |
HAY 001
HAY 002
|
|||
BLS - BLACK STUDIES | ||||||||
BLS-270-01 Law & Literature |
Whitney J |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
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.
|
1.00 | GCJD, LFA |
CEN 305
|
||
BLS-270-02 African American Stories |
Lake T |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
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.
|
1.00 | GCJD, LFA |
CEN 300
|
||
BLS-280-01 Harlem and Paris |
Rhoades M |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
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.
|
1.00 | HPR |
BAX 212
|
||
BLS-287-01 Philosophy of Education |
Seltzer-Kelly D |
M W
02:10PM - 03:25PM |
ENG-101 or established proficiency
|
1.00 | HPR |
MXI 109
|
||
BLS-289-01 Civic Literacy & Democracy |
Seltzer-Kelly D |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
Take ENG-101
|
1.00 | HPR |
MXI 214
|
||
BLS-401-01 Capstone Seminar |
Lake T |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
BLS-201
|
1.00 |
CEN 215
|
|||
CHE - CHEMISTRY | ||||||||
CHE-101-01 Survey of Chemistry |
Novak W, Kalb A |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 | QL, SL |
HAY 319
|
||
CHE-101L-01 Survey Chemistry Lab |
Novak W |
M
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
HAY 316
|
|||
CHE-101L-02 Survey Chemistry Lab |
Kalb A |
TU
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
HAY 316
|
|||
CHE-101L-03 Survey Chemistry Lab |
Novak W |
W
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
HAY 316
|
|||
CHE-102-01 Forensic Chemistry |
Porter L |
TU TH
09:45AM - 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.
|
1.00 | QL, SL |
HAY 319
|
||
CHE-102L-01 Forensic Chemistry Lab |
Porter L |
TH
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
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.
|
0.00 |
HAY 316
|
|||
CHE-111-01 General Chemistry I |
Taylor A, Scanlon J |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
1.00 | QL, SL |
HAY 104
|
||
CHE-111L-01 General Chemistry Lab |
Porter L |
M
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
HAY 315
|
|||
CHE-111L-02 General Chemistry Lab |
Taylor A |
TU
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
HAY 315
|
|||
CHE-111L-03 General Chemistry Lab |
Scanlon J |
W
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
HAY 315
|
|||
CHE-111L-04 General Chemistry Lab |
Taylor A |
TH
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
HAY 315
|
|||
CHE-111L-05 General Chemistry Lab |
Novak W |
TH
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
HAY 202
|
|||
CHE-221-01 Organic Chemistry I |
Wysocki L, Kalb A |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
Prerequisite: CHE-111
|
1.00 | SL |
HAY 319
|
||
CHE-221L-01 Organic Chem I Lab |
Wysocki L |
TU
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Prerequisite: CHE-111
|
0.00 |
HAY 314
|
|||
CHE-221L-02 Organic Chem I Lab |
Wysocki L |
W
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Prerequisite: CHE-111
|
0.00 |
HAY 314
|
|||
CHE-221L-03 Organic Chem I Lab |
Kalb A |
TH
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Prerequisite: CHE-111
|
0.00 |
HAY 314
|
|||
CHE-351-01 Physical Chemistry |
Scanlon J |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
CHE-241 and MAT-112 (must be completed prior to taking this
course.
|
1.00 |
HAY 002
|
|||
CHE-351L-01. Physical Chem I Lab |
Scanlon J |
TU
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Co-Requisite: CHE-351,
Prerequisites: CHE-241 and MAT-112 |
0.00 |
HAY 202
|
|||
CHE-388-01 Adv Methods in Organic Chem |
Wysocki L |
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.
|
0.50 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
CHE-461-01 Genetic Engineering |
Taylor A |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
CHE-361
2nd half semester course.
Genetic engineering has transformed our ability to conduct
biological research-and alter organisms for use in agriculture
and medicine. This course will look in depth at the processes
used to introduce new genetic material into organisms and
techniques for altering gene expression and genes themselves,
including RNAi and CRISPR/Cas9. The course will focus on
genetically engineered foods as well as RNAi and CRISPR/Cas9 in
research, in medicine and agriculture. The core readings for the
course will be primary literature papers and case studies.
|
0.50 |
HAY 321
|
|||
CHE-462-01 Biochemistry II |
Taylor A |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Prerequisite: CHE-361
1st half semester course.
|
0.50 |
HAY 321
|
|||
CHE-491-01 The Chemistry of Dyes |
Wysocki L |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
1st half semester course.
This senior capstone course will challenge students with an
application of fundamental concepts from earlier coursework to
the topic of dyes. From textiles to medicine to cutting-edge
experiments using fluorescence, dyes are chemical tools with a
long and interdisciplinary history. In-depth exploration will
connect overarching themes in the major and provide a powerful
launching point for written comprehensive exam preparation.
Critical engagement with the primary literature and diverse modes
of oral and written presentation will be emphasized. This
one-half credit course is required of all chemistry majors and
meets twice each week for the first half of the semester.
|
0.50 |
HAY 003
|
|||
CHI - CHINESE | ||||||||
CHI-101-01 Elementary Chinese I |
Liu R |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
Successful completion of both CHI-101 and CHI-102 in combination
will fulfill the World Languages distribution requirement.
|
1.00 |
DET 211
|
|||
CHI-101L-01 Elementary Chinese I Lab |
Staff |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
Once a week for 50 minutes.
|
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
CHI-201-01 Intermediate Chinese I |
Liu R |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
CHI-102,
or CHI-201 placement |
1.00 | WL |
DET 211
|
||
CHI-201L-01 Intermediate Chinese I Lab |
Staff |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
CHI-102,
or CHI-201 placement
Once a week for 50 minutes.
|
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
CHI-301-01 Conversation & Composition |
Liu R |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
CHI-202,
or CHI-301 placement. |
1.00 | WL |
DET 211
|
||
CHI-301L-01 Conversation & Composition Lab |
Staff |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
CHI-202
Once a week for 50 minutes.
|
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
CLA - CLASSICS | ||||||||
CLA-103-01 Greek Art & Archaeology |
Kopestonsky T |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
HAY 104
|
||
CLA-113-01 Rome in America |
Gorey M |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
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)
|
0.50 | HPR, LFA |
DET 109
|
||
CLA-113-02 Rome in America |
Gorey M |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
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)
|
0.50 | HPR, LFA |
DET 109
|
||
CLA-113-03 Trojan War: Fact Or Fiction? |
Day L |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
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)
|
0.50 | HPR, LFA |
DET 128
|
||
CLA-113-04 Trojan War: Fact Or Fiction? |
Day L |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
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 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-113-03 and
CLA-113-04)
|
0.50 | HPR, LFA |
DET 128
|
||
CLA-240-01 Ancient Philosophy |
Trott A |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 | HPR, LFA |
CEN 215
|
||
CLA-400-01 Senior Seminar |
Hartnett J |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
|
1.00 | LFA |
TBA TBA
|
||
COL - COLLOQUIUM | ||||||||
COL-401-01 Important Books |
Blix D, Mikek P |
W
07:30PM - 09:30PM |
Rising seniors only; admitted by application and permission of
the co-directors
|
1.00 | HPR, LFA |
CEN 304
|
||
CSC - COMPUTER SCIENCE | ||||||||
CSC-101-01 Intro to Computer Science |
McKinney C |
M W F
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
1.00 | QL |
GOO 101
|
||
CSC-111-01 Intro to Programming |
Staff |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
CSC-101,
CSC-106, or MAT-112; or permission of the instructor. |
1.00 | QL |
HAY 003
|
||
CSC-241-01 Intro to Machine Organization |
McKinney C |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
CSC-111 with a minimum grade of C-
|
1.00 | QL |
GOO 101
|
||
CSC-242-01 Theory of Programming Language |
Deng Q |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
CSC-111
|
1.00 |
GOO 101
|
|||
CSC-271-01 Intro to Computer Graphics |
Deng Q |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
Prerequisite: CSC-211
This course provides an introduction to the fundamental concepts
and techniques of computer graphics. Students will explore both
theoretical and practical aspects of graphics programming,
including rasterization, geometric transformations, rendering,
shading, and basic animation. The course covers essential topics
such as the graphics pipeline, 2D and 3D representations, color
models, and texture mapping. In addition to traditional graphics
programming, students will be introduced to parallel computing
concepts with simple CUDA programming to accelerate certain
graphics computations.
|
1.00 |
GOO 101
|
|||
CSC-338-1 Machine Learning |
McKinney C, Yoon R |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
Pre-requisite: CSC-211 and MAT-112
CSC-338-01=MAT-338-01
Machine learning as a term was first coined in 1959 by Arthur
Samuel, based on work he did developing a computer checkers game.
The area has grown vastly since then and is used for applications
from self-driving vehicles to ChatGPT. This course will explore
both the theory and practice of machine learning models and
algorithms.
|
1.00 |
GOO 101
|
|||
CSC-400-01 Senior Capstone |
Deng Q |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
CSC-211 with a minimum grade of C-
|
1.00 |
GOO 101
|
|||
DV3 - DIVISION III | ||||||||
DV3-252-01 Stats for Social Sciences |
Byun C |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
First-Half semester course.
|
0.50 | QL |
BAX 214
|
||
DV3-252-02 Stats for Social Sciences |
Bhattacharjee S |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
First-Half semester course.
|
0.50 | QL |
BAX 214
|
||
ECO - ECONOMICS | ||||||||
ECO-101-01 Principles of Economics |
Dunaway E |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 114
|
||
ECO-101-02 Principles of Economics |
Dunaway E |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 114
|
||
ECO-101-03 Principles of Economics |
Saha S |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 214
|
||
ECO-101-04 Principles of Economics |
Bhattacharjee S |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 311
|
||
ECO-235-01 Health Economics |
Bhattacharjee S |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
ECO-101
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 311
|
||
ECO-241-01 Game Theory |
Burnette J |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
|
1.00 | BSC, QL |
BAX 114
|
||
ECO-251-01 Economic Approach With Excel |
Byun C |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
ECO-101
Second-Half semester course.
|
0.50 | BSC, QL |
BAX 214
|
||
ECO-251-02 Economic Approach With Excel |
Bhattacharjee S |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
ECO-101
Second-Half semester course.
|
0.50 | BSC, QL |
BAX 214
|
||
ECO-253-01 Intro to Econometrics |
Byun C |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
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-253 and MAT-254, or MAT-253 and MAT-353, or PSY-201 and PSY-202 |
1.00 | BSC, QL |
BAX 214
|
||
ECO-258-01 Growth & Inequality Latin Amer |
Mikek P |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
ECO-101 with a minimum grade of C- and one 200 level ECO
course,
OR with the consent of the instructor |
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 212
|
||
ECO-291-01 Intermediate Micro Theory |
Burnette J |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
ECO-101 with a minimum grade of C-,
and MAT-111, MAT-112 or MAT-223 with a minimum grade of C- |
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 311
|
||
ECO-292-01 Intermediate Macroeconomics |
Mikek P |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
ECO-101 with a minimum grade of C-,
and MAT-111, MAT-112 or MAT-223 with a minimum grade of C- |
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 202
|
||
ECO-361-01 Corporate Finance |
Saha S |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
Prerequisites: ECO-251,
ECO-253, and ECO-291 |
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 311
|
||
ECO-362-01 Money and Banking |
Mikek P |
M W F
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
Prerequisites: ECO-253 with a minimum grade of C-,
and ECO-292 with a minimum grade of C-. |
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 214
|
||
ECO-401-01 Senior Seminar |
Saha S |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
Prerequisite: ECO-251,
and a minimum grade of C- in ECO-253, ECO-291, and ECO-292 |
1.00 |
BAX 114
|
|||
ECO-401-02 Senior Seminar |
Burnette J |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
Prerequisite: ECO-251,
and a minimum grade of C- in ECO-253, ECO-291, and ECO-292 |
1.00 |
BAX 311
|
|||
EDU - EDUCATION STUDIES | ||||||||
EDU-101-01 Intro Child & Adolescent Devel |
Pittard M |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
|
1.00 | BSC |
DET 209
|
||
EDU-201-01 Philosophy of Education |
Seltzer-Kelly D |
M W
02:10PM - 03:25PM |
ENG-101 or established proficiency
|
1.00 | HPR |
MXI 109
|
||
EDU-203-01 Adolescent Literacy Developmnt |
Pittard M |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
|
1.00 | LS |
DET 209
|
||
EDU-245-01 Arts Integration |
Seltzer-Kelly D |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
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.
|
1.00 | BSC |
MXI 214
|
||
EDU-250-01 Civic Literacy & Democracy |
Seltzer-Kelly D |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
ENG-101
|
1.00 | HPR |
MXI 214
|
||
EDU-314-01 Theory & Prac of Peer Tutoring |
Koppelmann Z |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
FRT-101 and FRC-101
|
1.00 | LS |
BAX 201
|
||
EDU-370-01 Public Schools & Communities |
Pittard M |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
One previous EDU credit.
With an eye toward issues of equity and justice within and across
public schools and their communities in rural, suburban, and
urban settings, students in this course will explore the various
elements of historical, cultural, economic, social, and political
influences that shape public education in the U.S. Through a
variety of course texts, including academic publications,
documentaries, and podcasts, students will be introduced to the
ways in which socioeconomic (poverty/wealth) diversity and
sociocultural (racial/ethnic) diversity within schools and
communities characterize public schools in various settings. As
part of an investigation into how schools function in rural,
suburban, and urban communities, the class will use civic mapping
to examine the ways in which community dynamics and lack of
resources can exacerbate inequities at the same time identify
community assets and partnerships that provide support and
resources for a more just and equitable public school experience
for all students. Finally, the class will study how a variety of
school districts within urban, rural, and suburban communities
characterized by distinctive demographics have diverse needs and
resources that often determine schools' unique curricular and
programmatic offerings.
|
1.00 | GCJD |
DET 209
|
||
ENG - ENGLISH | ||||||||
ENG-110-01 Intro to Creative Writing |
Freeze E |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
|
1.00 | LS |
CEN 300
|
||
ENG-171-01 Manga and Anime |
Whitney J |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
CEN 215
|
||
ENG-213-01 Fiction Workshop |
Freeze E |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
|
1.00 | LS |
CEN 300
|
||
ENG-235-01 Intro to Shakespeare |
Benedicks C |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
CEN 215
|
||
ENG-270-01 Law and Literature |
Whitney J |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
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.
|
1.00 | GCJD, LFA |
CEN 305
|
||
ENG-299-01 Professional Writing |
Lamberton J |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
1.00 | LS |
CEN 300
|
||
ENG-310-01 African American Stories |
Lake T |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
ENG-310-01=BLS-270-02
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.
|
1.00 | GCJD, LFA |
CEN 300
|
||
ENG-310-02 The Revolutionary Stage |
Cherry J |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
THE-212-01=ENG-310-02
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN TGRR
|
||
ENG-314-01 Theory & Prac of Peer Tutoring |
Koppelmann Z |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
Prerequisites: FRT-101 and FRC-101
|
1.00 | LS |
BAX 201
|
||
ENG-497-01 Emily Dickinson & Lyric Theory |
Mong D |
M W
02:10PM - 03:25PM |
|
1.00 |
CEN 304
|
|||
ENG-497-02 Seminar in English Lit |
Benedicks C |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
|
1.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
ENG-498-01 Capstone Portfolio |
Mong D |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
0.50 | LS |
LIB LSEM
|
||
ENS - ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES | ||||||||
ENS-400-01 Environmental Studies Capstone |
Carlson B |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
One credit from BIO-102,
BIO-103, or BIO-213. One credit from ECO-234, EDU-310, PHI-215, ART-210 (Art & the Environment), or HUM-277 (Literature & the Environment). |
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
FRE - FRENCH | ||||||||
FRE-101-01 Elementary French I |
Staff |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
Successful completion of both FRE-101 and FRE-102 in combination
will fulfill the World Languages distribution requirement.
|
1.00 |
DET 211
|
|||
FRE-101L-01 Elementary French 1 Lab |
Staff |
M
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 226
|
|||
FRE-101L-02 Elementary French 1 Lab |
Staff |
M
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 226
|
|||
FRE-101L-03 Elementary French 1 Lab |
Staff |
TU
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 226
|
|||
FRE-101L-04 Elementary French 1 Lab |
Staff |
TU
02:40PM - 03:30PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 226
|
|||
FRE-201-01 Intermediate French |
Quandt K |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
Prerequisite: FRE-102,
FRE-103 or FRE-201 placement |
1.00 | WL |
DET 212
|
||
FRE-201L-01 Intermediate French Lab |
Staff |
W
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 226
|
|||
FRE-201L-02 Intermediate French Lab |
Staff |
TH
02:40PM - 03:30PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 226
|
|||
FRE-201L-03 Intermediate French Lab |
Staff |
F
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 226
|
|||
FRE-301-01 Conversation & Composition |
Staff |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
Prerequisite: FRE-202,
or FRE-301 placement |
1.00 | WL |
DET 226
|
||
FRE-401-01 Senior Seminar in French |
Quandt K |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
DET 228
|
||
FRT - FRESHMAN TUTORIALS | ||||||||
FRT-101-01 Science & Pseudoscience |
Gunther K |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
What is science? What is pseudoscience? How do we know? One of
Wabash's core missions is to learn how to think critically. Is
global warming real? Is AIDS real? Do vaccines cause autism?
Can astrology determine our personalities and futures? How can
we test these claims? What should we consider to be good
evidence? 亚洲通 will examine these issues, plus cover some College
101 topics.
|
1.00 |
BAX 311
|
|||
FRT-101-02 The Score |
Abbott M |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Hollywood soundtracks are America's classical music. For nearly
100 years, Hollywood composers have created the essential scores
for our most memorable experiences at the movies. 亚洲通 will study
these great composers and scrutinize their work to better
understand how music operates on a special channel of
communication and meaning in films. If you can read music or have
a little music theory under your belt, your experience may be
enhanced. However, a simple curiosity about film music is
perfectly sufficient to succeed in this course.
|
1.00 |
FIN M120
|
|||
FRT-101-03 Once Upon a Time |
Vogel H |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Stories are messengers, spreading the lessons and values of a
culture. Stories are gifts, revealing hidden gems. Stories are
friends, they reveal who we are.
A child asks questions and is answered with a story: Why do we do
this? What is that for? How did it happen? Why not? Why is that
important?
You hear a story and ask ourselves what it means: Where do I fit?
What should I do? What choice do I make? What do I want?
This course digs into the stories around us, the stories we see
and hear. Especially the ones we return to and want to pass on.
亚洲通 will examine how stories work and what they communicate,
explicitly or not. Stories drive us to connect, to investigate,
to make discoveries, to understand. They form the core of what we
love and value. Once upon a time, there was a group of students
who came together to tell, listen, and talk about stories.
|
1.00 |
FIN S206
|
|||
FRT-101-04 The Card Shark |
Dunaway E |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
The world is poker, not chess. 亚洲通 are often confronted with
situations where we must make decisions without all of the
information we would need to do it perfectly. This tutorial will
explore just how to make those decisions well by learning about
various card games. Our focus will primarily be on No-limit Texas
Hold 'Em, but we will also explore Blackjack, Uno, and Euchre, to
name a few. Be ready to learn more about how our minds form
beliefs, how they respond to decision-making under pressure, and
also math.
|
1.00 |
BAX 301
|
|||
FRT-101-05 Presidential Power |
Himsel S |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
How Strong Should Our President Be? Teddy Roosevelt & Trump
A brash and magnetic New York Republican bends our nation to his
will. I'm not talking about President Donald Trump. I'm talking
about President Theodore Roosevelt ("TR"). By capturing the
media's attention and using it to push his own agenda, TR
invented the modern presidency and made it powerful. TR used his
power to protect workers and consumers from big business. TR
vigorously protected our environment, shielding 230 million acres
from development including treasures like the Grand Canyon. And
TR protected career federal employees from being fired for
political reasons. President Trump has pushed in the opposite
direction on these and other issues, using his own leverage over
the media. Because TR and Trump have wielded their strong
presidential power in different ways, comparing them will permit
us to debate very important questions we face today. Should one
person have this much power? Should Congress, the media, the
Supreme Court, and the state governments have more power to push
back against the President? Or do we need a powerful President to
lead our complex nation and fractured world? And what could we
lose by giving one person this much power?
|
1.00 |
BAX 212
|
|||
FRT-101-06 Studio Ghibli & Life Lessons |
Morton E |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Studio Ghibli & Lessons in a Better Life
This course explores Japanese animated feature films of Hayao
Miyazaki and Studio Ghibli, examining their enduring appeal and
the life lessons they impart. 亚洲通'll analyze how films like
Spirited Away, My Neighbor Totoro, Princess Mononoke, Howl's
Moving Castle, and The Boy and the Heron use beautiful animation
and compelling characters to address complex universal themes
including:
Life's Journey: How people grow and evolve through valuable
lessons learned along the way.
Ethical Dilemmas: The exploration of moral questions and varied
perspectives on life's choices.
Environmentalism: The importance of environmental responsibility
and its impact on our interconnected world.
Human Nature: An examination of what it means to be human,
exploring childhood, parenthood, love, and friendship.
亚洲通 will survey a selection of Studio Ghibli films, focusing on
recurring themes and Miyazaki's unique storytelling style. 亚洲通'll
discuss the films' production history, cultural context, and
lasting impact. Through screenings, discussions, and research,
students will gain a deeper understanding of these influential
films and their messages of resilience and the pursuit of a
better life.
|
1.00 |
FIN B012
|
|||
FRT-101-07 Puzzles & Problem Solving |
Ansaldi K |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
In this class, we'll explore enigmatology, a term coined by Will
Shortz for the study of puzzles. Puzzles have entertained and
challenged people for millennia. Not only can they be a fun part
of our daily routine, puzzles foster critical thinking,
perseverance, and creativity. This class will explore the rich
history of puzzles, examining why people are drawn to solving
them and how they've been woven into literature and stories.
亚洲通'll study many types of puzzles, including crosswords, logic
games, Rubik's cubes, and Wordle. The class will investigate
strategies for solving puzzles and develop problem-solving
techniques that can be applied to other areas of our lives.
|
1.00 |
HAY 001
|
|||
FRT-101-08 The Power of Paris |
Quandt K |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
The city of Paris casts an alluring spell on our imagination. The
Eiffel Tower.the Louvre.Notre-Dame de
Paris.cafés.croissants.romance.we all crave to experience these
places, tastes, and seductions and succumb to their charm. But in
this class, as we think critically in true Wabash style, we will
try hard not to get too dazzled by Paris's famous lights. Looking
mostly at modern Paris, we will consider the violent revolutions,
the social movements, the massive urban planning initiatives, the
two World Wars, and the waves of population migrations from
former French colonies (and beyond) that have shaped the city
into what it is today. Considering Paris through French history,
art, literature, music, film, and popular culture, as well as
through American perspectives on France and its people, we will
gain a deeper and more nuanced understanding of this city's
legendary influence in the world.
|
1.00 |
DET 128
|
|||
FRT-101-09 The Super Bowl Halftime Show |
Ables M |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
The Super Bowl Halftime Show an unmistakably American media
spectacle that is also globally relevant. The show uniquely
merges different aspects of American culture, including music,
sports, commerce, fashion, media, technology, politics, and more.
Though the first Super Bowl audience in 1967 enjoyed a musical
performance at halftime, it took decades for the show to become
the big-budget, prime-time, live television event that we have
come to expect. As the game itself became more culturally
relevant, the standards for the performers and production value
increased while the culture of celebrity changed.
The Halftime Show is often a platform for social, political, and
artistic statements and, consequently, a source of controversy.
亚洲通'll study the origins of the show, its evolving partnerships
with the NFL and various corporate entities, and select scandals
and triumphs that dot its history. By studying Halftime Shows, we
can better understand pop culture in different points in American
history as well as the societal factors that shaped it.
|
1.00 |
FIN M140
|
|||
FRT-101-10 Food and the Liberal Arts |
Warner R |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
This tutorial brings students through a variety of liberal arts
disciplines through the lens of food. 亚洲通 will dive into a
different disciplines: biology, chemistry, history, political
science, religion, to name a few. 亚洲通 will read about the lives of
people in different places involved in the production and
consumption of food, hearing from a variety of food writers,
chefs and other workers. There will also be a "laboratory" aspect
of the course, as students will learn basic cooking skills.
|
1.00 |
BAX 201
|
|||
FRT-101-11 Caesar Builds Wabah |
Hartnett J |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Winston Churchill famously said, "亚洲通 shape our buildings; and
afterwards our buildings shape us." Taking a cue from the former
British Prime Minister, this tutorial is concerned with how
architecture affects the ways people interact, both in the
ancient world and in the modern US. Along the way, to test-drive
our ideas, we will design new spaces on Wabash's campus.
Our raw material will come from the Romans, a society obsessed
with using buildings to unify, divide, and separate groups of
people. Structures like the Colosseum, for example, herded
different social classes through specific entrances and then into
different levels of seating, which literally stratified society.
By contrast, Rome's huge and resplendent public baths removed
many of these barriers and made even the lowliest plebs might
feel on equal footing with fancy folk. Examining houses from
Pompeii will add more techniques to our toolkit, which we'll
employ as we turn our attention to Wabash' campus. How, for
example, might the layout of a dormitory, a library, or a campus
center help or hinder social interactions?
This work sets the stage for the last portion of the term, when
we will assume the role of designers and architects to
contemplate possibilities for new or renovated structures on our
campus. What practical needs should be served? How might a
structure shape our college community for the better? On the
basis of interviews, field trips, meetings with practicing
architects, and their own ingenuity and creativity, students will
create and present virtual designs as their final project in the
course.
|
1.00 |
DET 109
|
|||
FRT-101-12 History and Cinema |
Rhoades M |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Students in this tutorial will explore the relationship between
film and history. Naturally, we can view history in motion
pictures as a backdrop to the story or actions of the main
characters. This is useful for general educational purposes (WWII
happened), but what if that history is wrong? When the past is
altered and a film becomes very popular, we can still learn much
about the society that viewed that film. Choices made by
documentary filmmakers can offer interpretations of the past that
are incomplete but valuable for understanding viewers'
perspectives. Students in this tutorial will read about
20th-century European history, view films, and discuss how well
the movies represent the past. Motion pictures and documentaries
screened in the course will address the Holocaust, 亚洲通imar
Germany, WWI, and WWII.
Films screened for class may include "Inglorious Bastards," "The
Sorrow and the Pity," "Night and Fog," "Sophie Scholl,"
"Casablanca," "All Quiet on the 亚洲通stern Front," "Life and Nothing
But," "Joyeux Noël," "The Officer's Ward," "Paths of Glory,"
"Behind the Lines," or "Dawn Patrol." All films will be shown
during class time with discussion to follow.
|
1.00 |
GOO 305
|
|||
FRT-101-13 Freshman Tutorial |
Nelson D |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Some people think that "What is the meaning of life?" is a
laughably impossible question. But it might be that not asking
such questions is far worse than asking them and failing to
perfectly answer. What kind of life is the best one to live? What
does it mean to live well, and to live a life rich with meaning?
Apart from our own actions, what does it mean for a life to go
well? 亚洲通 will explore these questions by reading classical and
contemporary texts about significant elements of human life,
including wealth, love, vocation, justice and death. Spoiler
alert: 亚洲通 will not be able to satisfactorily answer these
questions, but our motto will be from Irish playwright Samuel
Becket, "Ever tried, ever failed. No matter. Try again, fail
again. Fail better."
|
1.00 |
CEN 300
|
|||
FRT-101-14 Multiethnic America |
Lake T |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
亚洲通 Are The World: Multiethnic America
America has been called a "Melting Pot" because of the many
different ethnic groups that have come to call it home. Students
will examine the history of the peopling of the United States.
The different immigration histories of Europeans, Asians,
Mexicans, Jewish and Africans who claim US citizenship will be
explored. How these histories have shaped the national formation
narrative will come into focus too. Students will come to
understand their own migrations story/ies as we assess the
usefulness of the Melting Pot description of America.
|
1.00 |
MXI 214
|
|||
FRT-101-15 What Kind of Man? |
Olofson E |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Isn't it strange that boys often hear the importance of "manning
up" but girls rarely, if ever, are told about the importance of
"womanning up"? Why is there so much discussion about what a
"real man" is but little-to-no analogous discussion about what a
"real woman" is? Why do we have cultural debates about whether
there is a "crisis of masculinity" while the entire concept of a
"crisis of femininity" sounds silly? If any of these questions
stumped you, then you're not alone. In this Tutorial, we will
explore these questions, and more, by considering the biological,
historical, sociological, and psychological factors that create
this elusive concept of masculinity. 亚洲通 will look at novels,
movies, podcasts, short stories, empirical research papers, and
everything in between as we think about what masculinity is and
why it matters. Why is it that masculinity is, as some authors
have noted, hard won and easily lost? Is this precariousness part
of the reason why boys in our society struggle more than girls to
succeed in education and relationships? What is good about
masculinity and how can we nurture those traits? What is bad
about masculinity and how can we avoid those traits? Most
importantly, what kind of man do you want to be?
|
1.00 |
BAX 214
|
|||
FRT-101-16 Music, Language of the Gods |
Campbell W |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
In the ancient world, music was thought to be like a divine
language, the breath of the gods. This language was accessible
through instruments played in obedience to the mathematical laws
that govern the cosmos as whole. Music was less our creation than
a part of nature itself, awaiting our discovery. Though our
Spotify playlists lack this rich enchantment, we generally
recognize the unique and perhaps transcendent affect music has
upon us. If music is more than vibrations, what is that 'more'?
In this course we will study music from a variety of disciplinary
perspectives: psychology, philosophy, history, economy, and
biography. What happens to our brains when we listen to music?
How does music shape and give substance to our memories? How is
music currently made and monetized? Did the invention of
headphones give music new capabilities to shape our
self-conceptions? How might we listen to music differently?
|
1.00 |
CEN 216
|
|||
FRT-101-17 Kurt Vonnegut |
Carlson M |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Kurt Vonnegut, a Hoosier born and bred, was one of the finest
fiction writers of the 20th century. His work is simultaneously
profound and profane, and by equal turns deadly serious and
downright silly. As the novelist Jay McInerney put it, "Vonnegut
is a satirist with a heart, a moralist with a whoopee cushion, a
cynic who wants to believe." In this class, we'll study a variety
of Vonnegut's works from the middle part of the 20th century.
Despite their age, we'll see that they remain remarkably timely
as they explore, among other topics, the responsibilities of
science in society, automation and its implications for work, the
absurdity of war, personal and artistic authenticity, and what it
means to be free and live a meaningful life. As you'll see,
Vonnegut approaches these serious topics with his trademark blend
of earnestness and an irreverent sense of humor, which makes his
work a special delight to read.
|
1.00 |
CEN 304
|
|||
FRT-101-18 Popular Music & Culture: China |
Yun X |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Sean Yun is a member of the Music Department, where he teaches
courses on music theory and film music. He loves Mandopop and
would like to share good music with the students.
This course explores the world of popular music across the
Greater China region-including Mainland China, Hong Kong, Taiwan,
Singapore, and Malaysia-with a focus on both Mandarin pop
(Mandopop) and Cantonese pop (Cantopop). 亚洲通'll trace how pop
music has evolved over time, from early hits in 1930s Shanghai
and campus folk songs in 1970s Taiwan to the Cantopop boom of
1980s-90s Hong Kong and today's music scenes, increasingly shaped
by music reality shows and short videos on social media in
Mainland China. 亚洲通'll also examine how original soundtracks
(OSTs) from TV shows and films have played a significant role in
popular music culture. Through listening sessions, media
analysis, and historical readings, you'll gain insight into how
music connects to language, cultural identity, tradition, and
everyday life across Chinese-speaking communities. No background
in music is required-just curiosity about how pop culture works
in the China-speaking community.
|
1.00 |
FIN A124
|
|||
GEN - GENDER STUDIES | ||||||||
GEN-101-01 Intro to Gender Studies |
Benedicks C |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
|
1.00 | GCJD, HPR, LFA |
MXI 109
|
||
GEN-104-01 Intro to Philosophy: Nature |
Trott A |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
PHI-104-01=GEN-104-01
|
1.00 | GCJD, HPR |
CEN 216
|
||
GEN-105-01 Fatherhood |
Olofson E |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
|
1.00 | BSC |
CEN 216
|
||
GEN-302-01 Hist Masculin in Film From Ame |
Pliego Campos N |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
0.5 credit from HIS
What is masculinity? What are masculinities? What is a Man? This
course will ask how these questions have been answered throughout
the histories of the Americas, in particular Latin America and
the United States, and their films. Moreover, students by reading
theories and histories of masculinity and gender as well as
learning how to read film and other audio-visual texts with
attention to representations of masculinity, will develop their
own answers to these questions.
|
1.00 | HPR |
BAX 301
|
||
GER - GERMAN | ||||||||
GER-101-01 Elementary German I |
Ewing L |
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.
|
1.00 |
DET 212
|
|||
GER-101-02 Elementary German I |
Ewing L |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
Successful completion of both GER-101 and GER-102 in combination
will fulfill the World Languages distribution requirement.
|
1.00 |
DET 212
|
|||
GER-101L-01 Elementary German I Lab |
Staff |
M
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 220
|
|||
GER-101L-02 Elementary German I Lab |
Staff |
TU
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 128
|
|||
GER-101L-03 Elementary German I Lab |
Staff |
W
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 220
|
|||
GER-101L-04 Elementary German I Lab |
Staff |
TH
09:45AM - 10:35AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 226
|
|||
GER-101L-05 Elementary German I Lab |
Staff |
TH
02:40PM - 03:30PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 112
|
|||
GER-101L-06 Elementary German I Lab |
Staff |
F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 220
|
|||
GER-201-01 Intermediate German |
Tucker B |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
Prerequisite: GER-102,
or GER-201 placement |
1.00 | WL |
DET 111
|
||
GER-201L-01 Intermediate German Lab |
Staff |
TU
09:45AM - 10:35AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 226
|
|||
GER-201L-02 Intermediate German Lab |
Staff |
TU
02:40PM - 03:30PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 112
|
|||
GER-201L-03 Intermediate German Lab |
Staff |
W
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 128
|
|||
GER-201L-04 Intermediate German Lab |
Staff |
W
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 128
|
|||
GER-301-01 Conversation & Composition |
Tucker B |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
Prerequisite: GER-202,
or GER-301 placement |
1.00 | WL |
DET 111
|
||
GER-313-01 Episches Theater |
Ewing L |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Prerequisites: GER-301 and GER-302
In this course, students will explore the history and theories of
German language theatre and engage in discussions about cultural
appropriation, stereotypes, and ethical representations on stage.
Students will also create and perform their own play in the style
of Epic Theatre, using approaches and techniques they have
learned to provoke thought and engagement about a relevant
societal problem of their choosing. The first half of this course
will be what you might expect from a typical humanities seminar:
there will be readings, discussions, and a few brief lectures.
The second half of the semester will be focused on theatre
practice, including collaborative and creative work in the
classroom and reflection at home. The course will culminate in a
performance, in which every student will participate in a
capacity in which they feel comfortable.
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN EXP
|
||
GHL - GLOBAL HEALTH | ||||||||
GHL-219-01 Drugs & Society in Modern Hist |
Rhoades M |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
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.
|
1.00 |
BAX 202
|
|||
GHL-232-01 Disability and Politics |
McCrary L |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
PSC-232-01=GHL-232-01=PPE-232-01
|
1.00 | BSC |
CEN 215
|
||
GHL-235-01 Health Economics |
Bhattacharjee S |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
ECO-101
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 311
|
||
GHL-277-01 Epidemiology |
亚洲通tzel E |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 | QL |
TBA TBA
|
||
GHL-400-01 Capstone in Global Health |
亚洲通tzel E |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
Prereq: BIO-177,PSC-201/SOC-201,
and DV1-277. |
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
GRK - GREEK | ||||||||
GRK-101-01 Beginning Greek I |
Kopestonsky T |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
|
1.00 |
DET 112
|
|||
GRK-101L-01 Beginning Greek I Lab |
Kopestonsky T |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
The lab time will be determined by the students'availability
|
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
GRK-201-01 Intermediate Greek I |
Gorey M |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
GRK-101 and GRK-102
|
1.00 | WL, LFA |
DET 112
|
||
GRK-301-01 Advanced Greek Reading: Poetry |
Day J |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
GRK-201
|
1.00 | WL, LFA |
TBA TBA
|
||
HIS - HISTORY | ||||||||
HIS-101-01 World History to 1500 |
Warner R |
M W F
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
BAX 202
|
||
HIS-101-02 World History to 1500 |
Levy A |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
DET 109
|
||
HIS-200-01 Drugs & Society in Modern Hist |
Rhoades M |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
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.
|
1.00 | HPR |
BAX 202
|
||
HIS-200-02 Apocalypse From Rome to Waco |
Royalty B |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
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.
|
1.00 | HPR |
BAX 114
|
||
HIS-201-01 Big History |
Warner R, Levy A |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
BAX 202
|
||
HIS-210-01 Rome in America |
Gorey M |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
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.
|
0.50 | HPR, LFA |
DET 109
|
||
HIS-210-02 Rome in America |
Gorey M |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
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.
|
0.50 | HPR, LFA |
DET 109
|
||
HIS-210-03 Trojan War: Fact Or Fiction? |
Day L |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
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)
|
0.50 | HPR, LFA |
DET 128
|
||
HIS-210-04 Trojan War: Fact Or Fiction? |
Day L |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
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)
|
0.50 | HPR, LFA |
DET 128
|
||
HIS-230-01 Beatles, a Cultural History |
Royalty B |
TU TH
09:45AM - 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.
|
1.00 | HPR, LFA |
BAX 114
|
||
HIS-240-01 American Firearms History |
Calhoun J |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
American Firearms: This course will explore the history of small
arms. In doing so it would begin as a transnational history but
focus in on the history of firearms (and gun culture) in the
United States.
|
1.00 | HPR |
BAX 202
|
||
HIS-241-01 United States to 1865 |
Calhoun J |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
BAX 202
|
||
HIS-300-01 Harlem and Paris |
Rhoades M |
TU TH
01:10PM - 03:25PM |
One previous course in History
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.
|
1.00 | HPR |
BAX 212
|
||
HIS-340-01 Reconstruction:Politics of Hi |
Himsel S |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
One previous credit in History
|
1.00 | HPR |
TBA TBA
|
||
HIS-350-01 Hist Masculin in Film From Ame |
Pliego Campos N |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
.5 credit from HIS
What is masculinity? What are masculinities? What is a Man? This
course will ask how these questions have been answered throughout
the histories of the Americas, in particular Latin America and
the United States, and their films. Moreover, students by reading
theories and histories of masculinity and gender as well as
learning how to read film and other audio-visual texts with
attention to representations of masculinity, will develop their
own answers to these questions.
|
1.00 | HPR |
BAX 301
|
||
HIS-497-01 Philosophy & Craft of History |
Pliego Campos N, Calhoun J |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
|
1.00 |
BAX 214
|
|||
HIS-498-01 Research Seminar |
Pliego Campos N |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
1.00 |
BAX 114
|
|||
HSP - HISPANIC STUDIES | ||||||||
HSP-277-01 Growth & Inequality Latin Amer |
Mikek P |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
ECO-101
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 212
|
||
HSP-300-01 Hist Masculin in Film From Ame |
Pliego Campos N |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
One previous course in History at Wabash
What is masculinity? What are masculinities? What is a Man? This
course will ask how these questions have been answered throughout
the histories of the Americas, in particular Latin America and
the United States, and their films. Moreover, students by reading
theories and histories of masculinity and gender as well as
learning how to read film and other audio-visual texts with
attention to representations of masculinity, will develop their
own answers to these questions.
|
1.00 |
BAX 301
|
|||
HSP-311-01 Spanish Conversation & Compo |
Enriquez Ornelas J |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
PreReq SPA-301
|
1.00 |
DET 128
|
|||
HSP-400-01 Senior Capstone |
Staff |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
|
1.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
LAT - LATIN | ||||||||
LAT-101-01 Beginning Latin I |
Hartnett J |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
1.00 |
DET 111
|
|||
LAT-101L-01 Beginning Latin Lab |
Hartnett J |
TU
08:25AM - 09:15AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 111
|
|||
LAT-101L-02 Beginning Latin Lab |
Hartnett J |
TU
02:40PM - 03:30PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 111
|
|||
LAT-201-01 Intermediate Latin I |
Gorey M |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
Prerequisite: LAT-102,
or placement in LAT-201 |
1.00 | WL, LFA |
DET 112
|
||
LAT-301-01 Advanced Latin Reading: Poetry |
Kopestonsky T |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Prerequisite: LAT-201,
or LAT-301 placement |
1.00 | WL, LFA |
DET 114
|
||
MAT - MATHEMATICS | ||||||||
MAT-100-01 Math Modeling and Precalculus |
Staff |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
|
1.00 | QL |
GOO 104
|
||
MAT-108-01 Intro to Discrete Structures |
Staff |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
|
1.00 | QL |
GOO 104
|
||
MAT-111-01 Calculus I |
Akhunov T |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
MAT-100 with a minimum grade of C-,
or MAT-111 placement, or permission of the instructor |
1.00 | QL |
HAY 003
|
||
MAT-111-02 Calculus I |
Ansaldi K |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
MAT-100 with a minimum grade of C-,
or MAT-111 placement, or permission of the instructor |
1.00 | QL |
HAY 003
|
||
MAT-111-03 Calculus I |
Yoon R |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
MAT-100 with a minimum grade of C-,
or MAT-111 placement, or permission of the instructor |
1.00 | QL |
HAY 003
|
||
MAT-111-04 Calculus I |
Yoon R |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
MAT-100 with a minimum grade of C-,
or MAT-111 placement, or permission of the instructor |
1.00 | QL |
HAY 003
|
||
MAT-112-01 Calculus II |
Staff |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
MAT-110 or MAT-111 with a minimum grade of C-,
or MAT-112 placement |
1.00 | QL |
HAY 003
|
||
MAT-223-01 Linear Algebra |
Staff |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
MAT-112 with a minimum grade of C-,
or MAT-223 placement |
1.00 | QL |
GOO 101
|
||
MAT-225-01 Multivariable Calculus |
Staff |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
MAT-112 with a minimum grade of C-,
and MAT-223 |
1.00 | QL |
GOO 101
|
||
MAT-227-01 Probability & Stats I |
Akhunov T |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
MAT-112
General theory and application of probability and statistics,
including probability for finite sample spaces, discrete and
continuous distributions, marginal and conditional distributions,
mathematical expectation, variance, moment-generating functions,
functions of random variables, the Central Limit Theorem,
sampling distributions, the methods of estimation and their
application, hypothesis testing, regression and correlation. This
course is offered in the fall semester. This course is equivalent
to MAT-253 and MAT-254, and will satisfy the program requirements
that these courses fulfill (i.e., for majors in FEC or MAT).
Students may not receive credit for this course and either
MAT-253 or MAT-254.
|
1.00 |
HAY 003
|
|||
MAT-277-01 Topics in Financial Math |
Akhunov T |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
MAT-112
This course gives an introduction to mathematical finance,
drawing on applications from both Main street (loans and
mortgages) and Wall Street (stocks, bonds, futures, derivatives)
to provide motivation and context. A simple, yet essential,
guiding question for the course is how much value will $1
invested in a savings account or stock be worth in the future.
Special emphasis is given to the efficient market hypothesis and
arbitrage. When replication arguments alone are not enough to
predict prices of risky contracts, we use the binomial pricing
model and geometric Brownian motion.
This course is equivalent to MAT-251 and MAT-252, and will
satisfy the program requirements that these courses fulfill
(i.e., for majors in FEC or MAT). Students may not receive credit
for this course and either MAT-251 or MAT-252.
|
1.00 |
GOO 101
|
|||
MAT-333-01 Funct Real Variable I |
Turner W |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
Prerequisite: MAT-223
|
1.00 |
GOO 006
|
|||
MAT-338-01 Machine Learning |
McKinney C, Yoon R |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
Prerequiste: CSC-211 and MAT-112
CSC-338-01=MAT-338-01
Machine learning as a term was first coined in 1959 by Arthur
Samuel, based on work he did developing a computer checkers game.
The area has grown vastly since then and is used for applications
from self-driving vehicles to ChatGPT. This course will explore
both the theory and practice of machine learning models and
algorithms.
|
1.00 |
GOO 101
|
|||
MSL - MILITARY SCIENCE & LEADERSHIP | ||||||||
MSL-001-01 Leadership Lab (ROTC) |
Jump J, Staff |
TH
03:00PM - 05:20PM |
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.
|
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MSL-101-01 Introduction to the Army |
Jump J, Staff |
TH
01:30PM - 02:20PM |
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.
|
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MSL-201-01 Leadership and Ethics |
Jump J, Staff |
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.
|
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MSL-201-02 Leadership and Ethics |
Jump J, Staff |
TU TH
01:30PM - 02:20PM |
|
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MSL-301-01 Training Management & Function |
Jump J |
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.
|
0.50 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MSL-301-02 Training Management & Function |
Jump J, Staff |
TU TH
01:30PM - 02:45PM |
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.
|
0.50 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MSL-401-01 The Army Officer |
Jump J, Staff |
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.
|
0.50 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MUS - MUSIC | ||||||||
MUS-031-01 Music Lessons |
Staff |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
MUS-107 or departmental exam,
or instructor permission |
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MUS-101-01 Music in Society: A History |
Hernandez J |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN M120
|
||
MUS-104-01 Beatles, a Cultural History |
Royalty B |
TU TH
09:45AM - 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.
|
1.00 | HPR, LFA |
BAX 114
|
||
MUS-130-01 Musicianship |
Yun X |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN M121
|
||
MUS-130L-01 Musicianship Lab |
Yun X |
W
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
0.00 | LFA |
FIN M120
|
||
MUS-142-01 Chamber Orchestra |
Abel A |
M
04:15PM - 05:45PM |
|
0.25 |
FIN CONC
|
|||
MUS-143-01 Glee Club |
Hernandez J |
TU TH
04:15PM - 06:00PM |
|
0.25 |
FIN CONC
|
|||
MUS-144-01 Jazz Ensemble |
Pazera C |
TU
07:00PM - 09:00PM |
|
0.25 |
FIN CONC
|
|||
MUS-145-01 Mariachi Ensemble |
Staff |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
|
0.25 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MUS-187-01 Independent Study |
Staff |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
|
0.00-1.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MUS-204-01 Music of Christianity |
Ables M |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
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.
|
1.00 |
FIN M140
|
|||
MUS-204-02 Sound & Music Design |
Abbott M |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN M138
|
||
MUS-220-01 Approaches to Music & Culture |
Ables M |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN M140
|
||
MUS-311-01 Advanced Music Theory/Lab |
Yun X |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
MUS-301,
MUS-302L |
1.00 | LFA |
FIN M121
|
||
MUS-311L-01 Advanced Music Theory/Lab |
Yun X |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
MUS-301,
MUS-302L |
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
MUS-498-01 Senior Seminar |
Yun X |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
1.00 |
FIN M140
|
|||
NSC - NEUROSCIENCE | ||||||||
NSC-210-01 The Mindful Brain |
Schmitzer-Torbert N |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
1st half semester course. PSY-210-01=NSC-210-01
In recent decades, our understanding of the benefits of
mindfulness for our health and flourishing has greatly improved.
And today, we find ourselves at a point where the neural basis of
mindfulness, and the impact of mindfulness interventions on the
brain, are becoming more clear. In this course, we will consider
the relationship between mindfulness and stress, attention,
emotion regulation, and body awareness through the lens of the
available neuroscience literature. 亚洲通'll also consider the
potential for mindfulness to be cultivated (through formal
mindfulness-interventions, such as mindfulness-based stress
reduction of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy), and the
strength of the evidence that mindfulness interventions can
produce positive changes in nervous system function, as well as
the potential for people to experience adverse outcomes in
mindfulness training.
|
0.50 |
BAX 212
|
|||
NSC-232-01 Sensation and Perception |
Gunther K |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
Prerequisite: NSC-204,
PSY-204, BIO-101 or BIO-111 |
1.00 | BSC, GCJD |
BAX 311
|
||
NSC-310-01 Physiology |
Walsh H |
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.
|
1.00 |
HAY 104
|
|||
NSC-310L-01 Physiology Lab |
Walsh H |
TU
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Students taking 25/FA NSC-310 must also sign up for NSC-310L.
This course is by Instructor consent.
|
0.00 |
HAY 212
|
|||
OCS - OFF CAMPUS STUDY | ||||||||
OCS-01-01 Off 亚洲通 Study |
Staff |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
|
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
PE - PHYSICAL EDUCATION | ||||||||
PE-011-01 Advanced Fitness |
Brumett K |
M W F
06:00AM - 07:15AM |
|
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
PE-011-02 Advanced Fitness |
Del Gallo D |
M TU W TH
04:20PM - 05:20PM F
06:30AM - 07:30AM |
|
0.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
PHI - PHILOSOPHY | ||||||||
PHI-104-01 Intro to Philosophy: Nature |
Trott A |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
PHI-104-01=GEN-104-01
|
1.00 | GCJD, HPR |
CEN 216
|
||
PHI-109-01 Introduction to Philosophy |
Carlson M |
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.
|
1.00 | HPR |
GOO 104
|
||
PHI-110-01 Philosophical Ethics |
Montiel J |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
DET 109
|
||
PHI-215-01 Environmental Philosophy |
Busk L |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
PHI-215-01=PPE-215-01
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 305
|
||
PHI-218-01 Philosophy of Commerce |
Montiel J |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
PHI-218-01=PPE-218-01
|
1.00 | HPR |
DET 111
|
||
PHI-240-01 Ancient Philosophy |
Trott A |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 | HPR, LFA |
CEN 215
|
||
PHI-269-01 Knowledge and Skepticism |
Carlson M |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
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.
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 300
|
||
PHI-319-01 Democracy and Its Critics |
Busk L |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
One previous credit from PHI department.
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?
|
1.00 |
DET 112
|
|||
PHI-345-01 Continental Philosophy |
Trott A |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
Prerequisite: PHI-240 (or taken concurrently),
and PHI-242 |
1.00 |
CEN 216
|
|||
PHI-449-01 Senior Seminar |
Montiel J |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
Despite the political upheavals through which actually existing
socialism underwent during the 20th century, Karl Marx's
(1818-1883) philosophy continues to be useful not only for
describing social relations in the 21st century, but also for
providing norms to criticize these social relations. However,
while orthodox Marxism explained social relations along the
single category of class oppression, contemporary thinkers from
the global south such as Charles Mills (1951-2021) and Enrique
Dussel (1934-2023) offer innovative interpretations of Marx's
central ideas to explain and criticize racial and colonial forms
of oppression. Common to Mills and Dussel is that their appeal to
Marx aims to challenge liberal ethical and political conceptions
of justice and injustice by accounting for the material aspects
of the social world. This senior seminar will introduce students
to Marx's philosophy through a detailed analysis of Mill's and
Dussel's interpretations, as well as to these thinkers' challenge
to ethical and political liberalism. Among others, these
discussions will lead us to consider topics in the philosophical
areas of social ontology, epistemology, and ethics.
|
1.00 |
CEN 304
|
|||
PHY - PHYSICS | ||||||||
PHY-109-01 Physics I - Algebra |
Ross G |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Must have placement in either MAT-100 or MAT-111. Students
with placement in or credit for MAT-112 or higher are not
eligible for PHY-109.
|
1.00 | QL, SL |
GOO 104
|
||
PHY-109L-01 Physics I - Algebra Lab |
Ross G |
M
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
GOO 201
|
|||
PHY-109L-02 Physics I - Algebra Lab |
Ross G |
TU
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
GOO 201
|
|||
PHY-111-01 Physics I - Calculus |
Brown J |
M W F
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
Prerequisites: MAT-110 or MAT-111,
or placement into MAT-111 with concurrent registration, or placement into MAT-112 or MAT-223 |
1.00 | QL, SL |
GOO 104
|
||
PHY-111L-01 Physics I - Calculus Lab |
Brown J |
W
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
GOO 201
|
|||
PHY-111L-02 Physics I - Calculus Lab |
Brown J |
TH
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
GOO 201
|
|||
PHY-209-01 Intro Thermal Phy & Relativity |
Tompkins N |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
PHY-112 with a minimum grade of C-,
and MAT-112 |
1.00 | QL, SL |
GOO 305
|
||
PHY-209L-01 Thermal Physics Lab |
Tompkins N |
TU
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
Prerequisites: PHY-112 and MAT-112
|
0.00 |
GOO 305
|
|||
PHY-310-01 Classical Mechanics |
Ross G |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
PHY-112 with a minimum grade of C- and
MAT-224,
or permission of instructor |
1.00 |
GOO 305
|
|||
PHY-315-01 Quantum Mechanics |
Brown J |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
PHY-210 with a minimum grade of C-,
MAT-223, and MAT-224 |
1.00 | QL |
GOO 305
|
||
PHY-377-01 Differential Equations |
Brown J |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
PHY-210
|
1.00 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
PHY-381-01 Advanced Laboratory I |
Tompkins N |
TH
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
PHY-210
|
0.50 |
GOO 305
|
|||
PHY-382-01 Advanced Laboratory II |
Tompkins N |
TH
01:10PM - 04:00PM |
PHY-381
|
0.50 |
GOO 305
|
|||
PHY-400-01 Senior Seminar |
Tompkins N |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
PHY-210
|
0.50 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
PPE - PHILOSOPHY POLITICS ECONOMICS | ||||||||
PPE-215-01 Environmental Philosophy |
Busk L |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 305
|
||
PPE-218-01 Philosophy of Commerce |
Montiel J |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
PHI-218-01=PPE-218-01
|
1.00 | HPR |
DET 111
|
||
PPE-228-01 Philosophy of Education |
Seltzer-Kelly D |
M W
02:10PM - 03:25PM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
MXI 109
|
||
PPE-232-01 Disability and Politics |
McCrary L |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
PSC-232-01=GHL-232-01=PPE-232-01
|
1.00 | BSC |
CEN 215
|
||
PPE-238-01 Trade Politics |
Ye, H |
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.
|
1.00 | BSC, QL |
BAX 201
|
||
PPE-255-01 Health Economics |
Bhattacharjee S |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
ECO-101
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 311
|
||
PPE-329-01 Seminar Ethics & Social Phil |
Busk L |
TU TH
09:45AM - 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?
|
1.00 |
DET 112
|
|||
PPE-331-01 Nationalism & Ethnic Conflict |
Hollander E |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
Prerequisite: PSC-121 with a minimum grade of C-
|
1.00 |
STEP CONFER
|
|||
PPE-333-01 Constitutional Law |
Himsel S |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
PSC-313-01=PPE-333-01. This course is only open to Sophomores,
Juniors and Seniors.
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 212
|
||
PPE-337-01 Research/Stats Political Sci |
Hollander E |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
PSC-300-01=PPE-337-01
|
1.00 | BSC, QL |
HAY 002
|
||
PPE-338-01 Conflict, War, and Peace |
Liou, Y |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
PSC-347-01=PPE-338-01
|
1.00 | BSC, GCJD |
BAX 202
|
||
PPE-351-01 Game Theory |
Burnette J |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
|
1.00 | BSC, QL |
BAX 114
|
||
PPE-353-01 Intro to Econometrics |
Byun C |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
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-253 and MAT-254, or MAT-253 and MAT-353, or PSY-201 and PSY-202 |
1.00 | BSC, QL |
BAX 214
|
||
PPE-358-01 Growth & Inequality Latin Amer |
Mikek P |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
ECO-101 with a minimum grade of C- and one 200 level ECO
course with a minimum grade of D,
OR with the consent of the instructor |
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 212
|
||
PPE-400-01 Senior Seminar for PPE |
Liou, Y, Staff |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
PPE-200 with a minimum grade of C-,
and at least one 300-level PPE course, or permission of the instructor |
1.00 |
BAX 301
|
|||
PPE-400-02 Senior Seminar for PPE |
McCrary L, D'Amico D |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
PPE-200 with a minimum grade of C-,
and at least one 300-level PPE course, or permission of the instructor |
1.00 |
STEP CONFER
|
|||
PSC - POLITICAL SCIENCE | ||||||||
PSC-121-01 Intro to Comparative Politics |
Hollander E |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 | BSC, GCJD |
DET 109
|
||
PSC-131-01 Intro to Political Theory |
McCrary L |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
|
1.00 | BSC |
CEN 215
|
||
PSC-141-01 Intro to Intn'l Relations |
Ye, H |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 214
|
||
PSC-232-01 Disability and Politics |
McCrary L |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
PSC-232-01=GHL-232-01=PPE-232-01
|
1.00 | BSC, GCJD |
CEN 215
|
||
PSC-240-01 Trade Politics |
Ye, H |
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.
|
1.00 | BSC, QL |
BAX 201
|
||
PSC-300-01 Research/Stats Political Sci |
Hollander E |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
PSC-300-01=PPE-337-01
|
1.00 | BSC, QL |
HAY 002
|
||
PSC-313-01 Constitutional Law |
Himsel S |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
PSC-313-01=PPE-333-01.
This course is only open to Sophomores, Juniors and Seniors.
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 212
|
||
PSC-327-01 Nationalism & Ethnic Conflict |
Hollander E |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
Prerequisite: PSC-121 with a minimum grade of C-
|
1.00 |
STEP CONFER
|
|||
PSC-347-01 Conflict, War, and Peace |
Liou, Y |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
PSC-141
PSC-347-01=PPE-338-01
|
1.00 | BSC, GCJD |
BAX 202
|
||
PSC-497-01 Senior Seminar |
Ye, H, Liou, Y |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
Prerequiste: PSC-200
|
1.00 |
BAX 201
|
|||
PSY - PSYCHOLOGY | ||||||||
PSY-101-01 Introduction to Psychology |
Schmitzer-Torbert N |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 101
|
||
PSY-105-01 Fatherhood |
Olofson E |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
|
1.00 | BSC |
CEN 216
|
||
PSY-110-01 Mindfulness and Health |
Schmitzer-Torbert N |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
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.
|
0.50 | BSC |
BAX 212
|
||
PSY-201-01 Research Methods & Stats I |
Schmitzer-Torbert N |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
PSY-101
|
1.00 | BSC, QL |
BAX 214
|
||
PSY-202-01 Research Methods & Stats II |
Olofson E |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
PSY-201
|
1.00 | BSC, QL |
BAX 311
|
||
PSY-210-01 The Mindful Brain |
Schmitzer-Torbert N |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
Pre-requisite: BIO-101,
BIO-111, NSC-204 or PSY-204
1st half semester course. PSY-210-01=NSC-210-01
In recent decades, our understanding of the benefits of
mindfulness for our health and flourishing has greatly improved.
And today, we find ourselves at a point where the neural basis of
mindfulness, and the impact of mindfulness interventions on the
brain, are becoming more clear. In this course, we will consider
the relationship between mindfulness and stress, attention,
emotion regulation, and body awareness through the lens of the
available neuroscience literature. 亚洲通'll also consider the
potential for mindfulness to be cultivated (through formal
mindfulness-interventions, such as mindfulness-based stress
reduction of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy), and the
strength of the evidence that mindfulness interventions can
produce positive changes in nervous system function, as well as
the potential for people to experience adverse outcomes in
mindfulness training.
|
0.50 | BSC |
BAX 212
|
||
PSY-211-01 Cross Cultural Psychology |
Horton R |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
PSY-101
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 114
|
||
PSY-214-01 Psychology and Law |
Bost P |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
|
1.00 | BSC |
CEN 215
|
||
PSY-231-01 Cognition |
Bost P |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
Prerequisite: PSY-201.
|
1.00 | BSC |
BAX 301
|
||
PSY-232-01 Sensation and Perception |
Gunther K |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
Prerequisite: NSC-204,
PSY-204, BIO-101 or BIO-111 |
1.00 | BSC, GCJD |
BAX 311
|
||
PSY-301-01 Literature Review |
Gunther K |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
PSY-201
|
1.00 |
BAX 312
|
|||
PSY-322-01 Research in Social Psychology |
Horton R |
TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Prerequisite: PSY-202 and PSY-222
|
0.50 |
MXI 213
|
|||
PSY-495-01 Senior Project |
Gunther K |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
Prerequisite: PSY-202,
and PSY-301 (may be taken concurrently) |
0.50 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
PSY-495-02 Senior Project |
Horton R |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
Prerequisite: PSY-202,
and PSY-301 (may be taken concurrently) |
0.50 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
PSY-495-03 Senior Project |
Olofson E |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
Prerequisite: PSY-202,
and PSY-301 (may be taken concurrently) |
0.50 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
PSY-495-04 Senior Project |
Schmitzer-Torbert N |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
Prerequisite: PSY-202,
and PSY-301 (may be taken concurrently) |
0.50 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
PSY-495-05 Senior Project |
Bost P |
TBA
TBA - TBA |
Prerequisite: PSY-202,
and PSY-301 (may be taken concurrently) |
0.50 |
TBA TBA
|
|||
REL - RELIGION | ||||||||
REL-103-01 Islam & the Religions of India |
Blix D |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 216
|
||
REL-103-01SR Islam & the Religions of India |
Blix D |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 216
|
||
REL-141-01 Hebrew Bible/Old Testament |
Campbell W |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 216
|
||
REL-171-01 History Christianity to Reform |
Nelson D |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 216
|
||
REL-181-01 Religion in America |
Baer J |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
GOO 104
|
||
REL-195-01 Music of Christianity |
Ables M |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
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.
|
1.00 |
FIN M140
|
|||
REL-260-01 Economy in Early Christianity |
Campbell W |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
"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.
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 216
|
||
REL-272-01 Christianity and Fatherhood |
Baer J |
TU TH
09:45AM - 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?
|
1.00 | HPR |
DET 212
|
||
REL-274-01 Changing the World & the Self |
Nelson D |
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.
|
1.00 | HPR |
BAX 212
|
||
REL-275-01 Religion and Science |
Blix D |
TU TH
09:45AM - 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.
|
0.50 | HPR |
CEN 305
|
||
REL-280-01 Sects and Cults in America |
Baer J |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
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.
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 305
|
||
REL-290-01 Apocalypse From Rome to Waco |
Royalty B |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
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.
|
1.00 | HPR |
BAX 114
|
||
REL-296-01 Religion & Japanese Literature |
Blix D |
TU TH
09:45AM - 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.
|
0.50 | HPR, LFA |
CEN 305
|
||
REL-490-01 Sr. Sem: Nature & Study of Rel |
Blix D |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
|
1.00 | HPR |
CEN 305
|
||
RHE - RHETORIC | ||||||||
RHE-101-01 Public Speaking |
A. Khan |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
1.00 | LS |
FIN S206
|
||
RHE-101-02 Public Speaking |
Tscholl G |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
|
1.00 | LS |
MXI 214
|
||
RHE-101-03 Public Speaking |
Anderson C |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
|
1.00 | LS |
FIN S206
|
||
RHE-101-04 Public Speaking |
A. Khan |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
|
1.00 | LS |
FIN S206
|
||
RHE-201-01 Reasoning & Advocacy |
Tscholl G |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 | LS |
MXI 109
|
||
RHE-220-01 Persuasion |
A. Khan |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
|
1.00 | LS |
FIN S206
|
||
RHE-320-01 Classical Rhetoric |
Drury S |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
This course is by Instructor permission.
|
1.00 | LFA |
HAY 001
|
||
RHE-320-02 Classical Rhetoric |
Drury S |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
This course is by Instructor permission.
|
1.00 | LFA |
HAY 001
|
||
RHE-350-01 Contemp Rhetorical Theo & Crit |
Abbott J |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
FRT-101
This course is by Instructor permission.
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN S206
|
||
RHE-365-01 Rhetoric of the News Media |
Abbott J |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
HAY 321
|
||
RHE-497-01 Senior Seminar |
Drury S, Abbott J, Tscholl G |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM M W F
11:00AM - 11:30AM |
RHE-320 and RHE-350
|
1.00 |
MXI 109
MXI 213
|
|||
SPA - SPANISH | ||||||||
SPA-101-01 Elementary Spanish I |
亚洲通lch M |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
Successful completion of both SPA-101 and SPA-102 in combination
will fulfill the World Languages distribution requirement.
|
1.00 |
DET 111
|
|||
SPA-101L-01 Elementary Spanish I Lab |
Staff |
M
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 128
|
|||
SPA-101L-02 Elementary Spanish I Lab |
Staff |
M
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 220
|
|||
SPA-101L-03 Elementary Spanish I Lab |
Staff |
TU
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 128
|
|||
SPA-103-01 Accelerated Elementary Spanish |
Staff |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
|
1.00 | WL |
DET 112
|
||
SPA-103-02 Accelerated Elementary Spanish |
Staff |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
|
1.00 | WL |
DET 211
|
||
SPA-103L-01 Accelerated Elem Spanish Lab |
Staff |
TU
02:40PM - 03:30PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 220
|
|||
SPA-103L-02 Accelerated Elem Spanish Lab |
Staff |
W
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 128
|
|||
SPA-103L-03 Accelerated Elem Spanish Lab |
Staff |
W
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 220
|
|||
SPA-103L-04 Accelerated Elem Spanish Lab |
Staff |
TH
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 226
|
|||
SPA-103L-05 Accelerated Elem Spanish Lab |
Staff |
TH
02:40PM - 03:30PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 111
|
|||
SPA-103L-06 Accelerated Elem Spanish Lab |
Staff |
F
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 220
|
|||
SPA-201-01 Intermediate Spanish |
Kozey J |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
SPA-102 or SPA-103,
or SPA-201 placement |
1.00 | WL |
DET 112
|
||
SPA-201-02 Intermediate Spanish |
Hardy J |
M W F
02:10PM - 03:00PM |
SPA-102 or SPA-103,
or SPA-201 placement |
1.00 | WL |
DET 211
|
||
SPA-201L-01 Intermediate Spanish Lab |
Staff |
M
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 220
|
|||
SPA-201L-02 Intermediate Spanish Lab |
Staff |
M
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 128
|
|||
SPA-201L-03 Intermediate Spanish Lab |
Staff |
TU
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 220
|
|||
SPA-201L-04 Intermediate Spanish Lab |
Staff |
TU
02:40PM - 03:30PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 209
|
|||
SPA-201L-05 Intermediate Spanish Lab |
Staff |
W
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 111
|
|||
SPA-201L-06 Intermediate Spanish Lab |
Staff |
W
03:00PM - 04:00PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 226
|
|||
SPA-202-01 Span Lang & Hispanic Cultures |
Greenhalgh M |
M W F
11:00AM - 11:50AM |
SPA-201,
or SPA-202 placement |
1.00 | WL |
DET 211
|
||
SPA-202L-01 Span Lang/Hisp Cultures Lab |
Staff |
TH
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 220
|
|||
SPA-202L-02 Span Lang/Hisp Cultures Lab |
Staff |
TH
02:40PM - 03:30PM |
|
0.00 |
DET 209
|
|||
SPA-202L-03 Span Lang/Hisp Cultures Lab |
Staff |
F
08:00AM - 08:50AM |
|
0.00 |
DET 128
|
|||
SPA-301-01 Conversation & Composition |
Greenhalgh M |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
SPA-202,
or SPA-301 placement |
1.00 | WL, GCJD |
DET 109
|
||
SPA-302-01 Intro to Literature |
Kozey J |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
SPA-301 or SPA-321,
or SPA-302 placement |
1.00 | LFA |
DET 111
|
||
SPA-313-01 Medieval Iberian Horror |
Kozey J |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
SPA-301 or SPA-321,
and SPA-302
Long before the birth of "horror" as a genre, artists and authors
sought to frighten, disgust, and shock their audiences. What
scared people in Medieval Iberia? Was the answer the same for
everyone? In this class, we will engage with premodern texts and
visual sources to answer these questions, drawing insights from
affect theory, the history of emotions, and literary, film, and
cultural studies. 亚洲通 will also explore how the popular
imagination of "Medieval" Iberia has influenced horror as a genre
over the last three centuries, first in short stories and novels,
and later in comics, film, and television.
|
1.00 | LFA |
DET 112
|
||
SPA-313-02 Studies in Hispanic Literature |
Staff |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
SPA-301 or SPA-321,
and SPA-302 |
1.00 | LFA |
DET 212
|
||
SPA-321-01 Spanish Conversation & Compo |
Enriquez Ornelas J |
M W F
09:00AM - 09:50AM |
By Placement only
|
1.00 | WL |
DET 128
|
||
SPA-401-01 Spanish Senior Seminar |
Greenhalgh M |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
Prerequisite: SPA-302
|
1.00 |
DET 220
|
|||
THE - THEATER | ||||||||
THE-101-01 Introduction to Theater |
Vogel H |
M W F
10:00AM - 10:50AM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN EXP
|
||
THE-103-01 Lighning Design |
Rosa B |
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.
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN TGRR
|
||
THE-104-01 Introduction to Film |
Cherry J |
M F
02:10PM - 03:00PM W
02:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
TBA TBA
|
||
THE-105-01 Introduction to Acting |
Vogel H |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN EXP
|
||
THE-202-01 Intro to Scenic Design |
Vogel D |
TU TH
09:45AM - 11:00AM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
TBA TBA
|
||
THE-203-01 Costume Design |
Thompson B |
TU TH
08:00AM - 09:15AM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN TGRR
|
||
THE-207-01 Directing |
Abbott M |
TU TH
02:40PM - 03:55PM |
THE-105
|
1.00 |
FIN TGRR
|
|||
THE-212-01 The Revolutionary Stage |
Cherry J |
M W F
01:10PM - 02:00PM |
THE-212-01=ENG-310-01
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN TGRR
|
||
THE-219-01 Sound & Music Design |
Abbott M |
TU TH
01:10PM - 02:25PM |
|
1.00 | LFA |
FIN M138
|
||
THE-498-01 Senior Seminar |
Staff |
M W F
03:10PM - 04:00PM |
|
1.00 |
FIN TGRR
|
[show more]