Enrollment and waitlist data for current and upcoming courses refresh every 10 minutes; all other information as of 6:00 AM.
| 09/09 - 12/22 | ||||||
| M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
9:35 am |
9:35 am |
9:35 am |
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Subject: Biology (BIOL)
CRN: 41109
Blended Online & In-Person | Lecture
St Paul: Murray-Herrick Campus Center 204
Online
Core Requirements Met:
[Core] Natural Science
Other Requirements Met:
Environmental Sci. Major Appr
Sustainability (SUST)
Virtues - Fortitude
Virtues - Prudence
Instructor: TBD
Influences of humans on the global environment have reached unprecedented levels, increasing the need for society to strive to live in a sustainable manner. Many issues facing the environment have a biological basis. Thus, an understanding of basic biology is necessary to understand and address many environmental issues. This course will cover the fundamental biology involved with five environmental issues at the global scale: climate change, excessive nutrient loading into ecosystems, agricultural production, chemical contaminants, and loss of biodiversity. Specific biological principles to be covered include energy and nutrient mass balance by organisms and ecosystems, homeostasis and organismal physiology, and population dynamics and conservation biology. Prerequisite: Completion of BIOL 207 or BIOL 208 or any 100 level GEOL or CHEM 112 or CHEM 115 or permission of the instructor.
4 Credits
| 09/09 - 12/22 | ||||||
| M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
8:00 am |
8:00 am |
|||||
Subject: Biology (BIOL)
CRN: 41110
In Person | Lecture
St Paul: Murray-Herrick Campus Center 204
Core Requirements Met:
[Core] Natural Science
Other Requirements Met:
Environmental Sci. Major Appr
Sustainability (SUST)
Virtues - Fortitude
Virtues - Prudence
Influences of humans on the global environment have reached unprecedented levels, increasing the need for society to strive to live in a sustainable manner. Many issues facing the environment have a biological basis. Thus, an understanding of basic biology is necessary to understand and address many environmental issues. This course will cover the fundamental biology involved with five environmental issues at the global scale: climate change, excessive nutrient loading into ecosystems, agricultural production, chemical contaminants, and loss of biodiversity. Specific biological principles to be covered include energy and nutrient mass balance by organisms and ecosystems, homeostasis and organismal physiology, and population dynamics and conservation biology. Prerequisite: Completion of BIOL 207 or BIOL 208 or any 100 level GEOL or CHEM 112 or CHEM 115 or permission of the instructor.
4 Credits
| 09/09 - 12/22 | ||||||
| M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
10:55 am |
10:55 am |
10:55 am |
||||
Subject: Biology (BIOL)
CRN: 41111
Blended Online & In-Person | Lecture
St Paul: John Roach Center 126
Online
Core Requirements Met:
[Core] Natural Science
Other Requirements Met:
Environmental Sci. Major Appr
Sustainability (SUST)
Virtues - Fortitude
Virtues - Prudence
Instructor: TBD
Influences of humans on the global environment have reached unprecedented levels, increasing the need for society to strive to live in a sustainable manner. Many issues facing the environment have a biological basis. Thus, an understanding of basic biology is necessary to understand and address many environmental issues. This course will cover the fundamental biology involved with five environmental issues at the global scale: climate change, excessive nutrient loading into ecosystems, agricultural production, chemical contaminants, and loss of biodiversity. Specific biological principles to be covered include energy and nutrient mass balance by organisms and ecosystems, homeostasis and organismal physiology, and population dynamics and conservation biology. Prerequisite: Completion of BIOL 207 or BIOL 208 or any 100 level GEOL or CHEM 112 or CHEM 115 or permission of the instructor.
4 Credits
| 09/09 - 12/22 | ||||||
| M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
8:00 am |
8:00 am |
|||||
Subject: Biology (BIOL)
CRN: 41112
Online: Sync Distributed | Lecture
Online
Core Requirements Met:
[Core] Natural Science
Other Requirements Met:
Environmental Sci. Major Appr
Sustainability (SUST)
Virtues - Fortitude
Virtues - Prudence
Instructor: TBD
Influences of humans on the global environment have reached unprecedented levels, increasing the need for society to strive to live in a sustainable manner. Many issues facing the environment have a biological basis. Thus, an understanding of basic biology is necessary to understand and address many environmental issues. This course will cover the fundamental biology involved with five environmental issues at the global scale: climate change, excessive nutrient loading into ecosystems, agricultural production, chemical contaminants, and loss of biodiversity. Specific biological principles to be covered include energy and nutrient mass balance by organisms and ecosystems, homeostasis and organismal physiology, and population dynamics and conservation biology. Prerequisite: Completion of BIOL 207 or BIOL 208 or any 100 level GEOL or CHEM 112 or CHEM 115 or permission of the instructor.
4 Credits
| 09/09 - 12/22 | ||||||
| M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
8:15 am |
8:15 am |
8:15 am |
||||
Subject: Biology (BIOL)
CRN: 41113
Blended Online & In-Person | Lecture
St Paul: Murray-Herrick Campus Center 305I
Online
Core Requirements Met:
[Core] Natural Science
Other Requirements Met:
Environmental Sci. Major Appr
Sustainability (SUST)
Virtues - Fortitude
Virtues - Prudence
Instructor: TBD
Influences of humans on the global environment have reached unprecedented levels, increasing the need for society to strive to live in a sustainable manner. Many issues facing the environment have a biological basis. Thus, an understanding of basic biology is necessary to understand and address many environmental issues. This course will cover the fundamental biology involved with five environmental issues at the global scale: climate change, excessive nutrient loading into ecosystems, agricultural production, chemical contaminants, and loss of biodiversity. Specific biological principles to be covered include energy and nutrient mass balance by organisms and ecosystems, homeostasis and organismal physiology, and population dynamics and conservation biology. Prerequisite: Completion of BIOL 207 or BIOL 208 or any 100 level GEOL or CHEM 112 or CHEM 115 or permission of the instructor.
4 Credits
| 09/09 - 12/22 | ||||||
| M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
| + asynchronous coursework | ||||||
Subject: Film Studies (FILM)
CRN: 41481
Online: Asynchronous | Lecture
Online
Core Requirements Met:
[Core] Global Perspective AND [Core] Integ/Humanities
Other Requirements Met:
Virtues - Fortitude
Virtues - Justice
Virtues - Prudence
Virtues - Temperance
Writing in the Discipline
In this course, students will view, discuss, and read and write about feature-length films from Africa, Asia, the Americas, Europe, and possibly India and/or the Middle East. Following critical viewing of films both in and outside of class, students will engage in critical reflection, discussion, and analytical writing as a way of practicing the art of film analysis. This course asks students to think critically about the ways in which cinema engages the world as a form of entertainment, as art, as historical document, and as an instrument of social change. The course addresses issues of race, ethnicity, gender, and geopolitical status.
4 Credits
| 09/09 - 12/22 | ||||||
| M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
| + asynchronous coursework | ||||||
Subject: Film Studies (FILM)
CRN: 41482
Online: Asynchronous | Lecture
Online
Core Requirements Met:
[Core] Global Perspective AND [Core] Integ/Humanities
Other Requirements Met:
Virtues - Fortitude
Virtues - Justice
Virtues - Prudence
Virtues - Temperance
Writing in the Discipline
In this course, students will view, discuss, and read and write about feature-length films from Africa, Asia, the Americas, Europe, and possibly India and/or the Middle East. Following critical viewing of films both in and outside of class, students will engage in critical reflection, discussion, and analytical writing as a way of practicing the art of film analysis. This course asks students to think critically about the ways in which cinema engages the world as a form of entertainment, as art, as historical document, and as an instrument of social change. The course addresses issues of race, ethnicity, gender, and geopolitical status.
4 Credits
| 09/09 - 10/28 | ||||||
| M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
1:30 pm |
1:30 pm |
|||||
Subject: Finance (FINC)
CRN: 42330
In Person | Lecture
St Paul: McNeely Hall 111
Requirements Met:
Virtues - Prudence
Virtues - Temperance
This course teaches essential money management skills. The five major topics covered include: 1) Managing student loans/debt, 2) Understanding job offers and career compensation (benefits), 3) Planning and Budgeting, 4) Building an investment portfolio (401(k)’s and IRA’s) and 5) Finance and the Common Good. Also, understanding how your core values play a role in how you manage your finances. The class will utilize planning and investing tools to help simulate real life financial challenges and issues. [This course is NOT eligible to apply as finance major elective credits but can apply as business elective credits for all Opus majors.]
2 Credits
| 09/09 - 12/22 | ||||||
| M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
1:30 pm |
1:30 pm |
|||||
Subject: Journalism/Mass Comm (JOUR)
CRN: 41754
In Person | Lecture
St Paul: Schoenecker Center 238
Requirements Met:
[Core] Signature Work
Virtues - Fortitude
Virtues - Justice
Virtues - Prudence
Virtues - Temperance
Writing in the Discipline
This capstone seminar for graduating seniors explores ethical issues that confront professionals in journalism and other fields of mass media, and their audiences. Students explore theoretical perspectives on ethics, work from case studies to understand professional ethical standards, discuss current ethical issues, work in teams to perfect oral and written ethical analysis skills and write an individual thesis paper. Prerequisites: graduating seniors only and permission of department chair.
4 Credits
| 09/09 - 12/20 | ||||||
| M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
| + asynchronous coursework | ||||||
Subject: Management (MGMT)
CRN: 42407
Online: Asynchronous | Lecture
Online
Requirements Met:
Part-time MBA
MBA Global Elective
LLM/MSL Elective
Virtues - Fortitude
Virtues - Prudence
Virtues - Temperance
The structure of MGMT753 is a seminar format. Under the guidance of the instructor, students will be exposed to a wide range of theoretical, conceptual, and practitioner-oriented reading materials related to the subject of the insurance industry. Topics of specific concern will vary, but likely will include the internationalization of the economy, the movement toward a financial services industry, the impact of technology, and the emergence of alternative risk financing markets. The seminar enlists industry leaders, who participate in selected sessions and provide expert input on the questions at hand. Prerequisites: NONE.
3 Credits
| 09/09 - 12/22 | ||||||
| M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
9:55 am |
9:55 am |
|||||
Subject: Strategic Communication (STCM)
CRN: 42075
In Person | Lecture
St Paul: Schoenecker Center 238
Requirements Met:
Virtues - Fortitude
Virtues - Justice
Virtues - Prudence
Virtues - Temperance
This course focuses on professional ethics in the integrated field of strategic communication which is made up of Public Relations, Advertising, and Digital Communication. The course will cover theories and philosophies underlying the professional ethical codes, discuss moral challenges facing strategic communication professionals in today’s digital world, examine ethics in the context of diversity and globalization, and explore strategies and best practices in resolving ethical dilemmas in public relations, advertising, and digital communication. The course relies on both case studies and real-life events to connect theory to practice. Prerequisite: STCM234 or Junior standing
4 Credits
| 09/09 - 12/22 | ||||||
| M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
9:35 am |
9:35 am |
9:35 am |
||||
Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)
CRN: 42114
In Person | Lecture
St Paul: Sitzmann Hall 207
Core Requirements Met:
[Core] Phil/Theo
Other Requirements Met:
FYE CommGood/Learning Comm
Virtues - Fortitude
Virtues - Justice
Virtues - Prudence
Virtues - Temperance
Writing to learn
| 09/09 - 12/22 | ||||||
| M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
9:35 am |
9:35 am |
9:35 am |
||||
Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)
CRN: 42116
In Person | Lecture
St Paul: Murray-Herrick Campus Center 208
Core Requirements Met:
[Core] Phil/Theo
Other Requirements Met:
FYE CommGood/Learning Comm
Virtues - Fortitude
Virtues - Justice
Virtues - Prudence
Virtues - Temperance
Writing to learn
This section will compare how Jews, Christians, and Muslims think about major themes, such as God, Jesus, creation, revelation, and the human being. It will treat how the Abrahamic traditions are sources for determining the common good especially as it relates to respect for our world, the human community, and the dignity of each human being.
4 Credits
| 09/09 - 12/22 | ||||||
| M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
10:55 am |
10:55 am |
10:55 am |
||||
Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)
CRN: 42117
In Person | Lecture
St Paul: Murray-Herrick Campus Center 208
Core Requirements Met:
[Core] Phil/Theo
Other Requirements Met:
FYE CommGood/Learning Comm
Virtues - Fortitude
Virtues - Justice
Virtues - Prudence
Virtues - Temperance
Writing to learn
This section will compare how Jews, Christians, and Muslims think about major themes, such as God, Jesus, creation, revelation, and the human being. It will treat how the Abrahamic traditions are sources for determining the common good especially as it relates to respect for our world, the human community, and the dignity of each human being.
4 Credits
| 09/09 - 12/22 | ||||||
| M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
8:00 am |
8:00 am |
|||||
Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)
CRN: 42118
In Person | Lecture
St Paul: Murray-Herrick Campus Center 305J
Core Requirements Met:
[Core] Phil/Theo
Other Requirements Met:
FYE CommGood/Learning Comm
Virtues - Fortitude
Virtues - Justice
Virtues - Prudence
Virtues - Temperance
Writing to learn
This section introduces you to foundational concepts and skills associated with Christian theology. The primary lens through which we will approach theological questions in this course is that of the common good. A standard definition of the common good in Catholic intellectual tradition comes from the Second Vatican Council: “the sum of those conditions of social life which allow social groups and their individual members relatively thorough and ready access to their own fulfillment.”
4 Credits