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ENGL: English (UG)

201-L01
The American Short Story
 
Online
K. Larson
FYECore 
05/27 - 07/09
20/20/2
Lecture
CRN 30082
4 Cr.
Size: 20
Enrolled: 20
Waitlisted: 2
05/27 - 07/09
M T W Th F Sa Su
             
+ asynchronous coursework

Subject: English (UG) (ENGL)

CRN: 30082

Online: Asynchronous | Lecture

Online

Core Requirements Met:
     [Core] Diversity/Soc Just AND [Core] Integ/Humanities
     

Other Requirements Met:
     FYE CommGood/Learning Comm
     Writing to learn

  Kelli Larson

Even in the land of Super Targets and Big Mac hamburgers, bigger is not always better--at least not in terms of literature. Short stories, because of their compression and intensity, offer lively plots and constant surprises. To the delight of readers everywhere, American authors provide a wellspring of tales that uncover our past, define our present, and speak to our future. In keeping with our diverse American heritage, stories have been chosen from a broad cross-section of literary and cultural traditions. Alongside canonical authors such as Nathaniel Hawthorne and Ernest Hemingway, we read the works of Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Louise Erdrich, Kate Chopin, and others, examining how these diverse voices diverge from, resist, and transform the traditional American short story canon. This course satisfies a WAC Writing to Learn requirement; an Integrations in the Humanities requirement; and the Diversity, Inclusion, and Social Justice requirement. Please note that ENGL 201 is non-repeatable; students wishing to take a second 200-level Texts in Conversation course will need to register for ENGL 202, 203, or 204. Prerequisite: ENGL 106, 121, or 190.

4 Credits

HIST: History

115-L01
The World Since 1900
 
Online
K. Donahue
Core 
05/27 - 07/09
25/25/1
Lecture
CRN 30187
4 Cr.
Size: 25
Enrolled: 25
Waitlisted: 1
05/27 - 07/09
M T W Th F Sa Su
             
+ asynchronous coursework

Subject: History (HIST)

CRN: 30187

Online: Asynchronous | Lecture

Online

Core Requirements Met:
     [Core] Historic Analysis

Other Requirements Met:
     Writing to learn

  Kelly Donahue

Introduces students to historical reasoning. Students learn to analyze evidence from the past in context in order to explain how the past produced the ever-changing present. This course examines the origin, development, reception, alteration, and rejection of various ideologies—including, but not limited to, nationalism, imperialism, communism, liberalism, fascism and Nazism—and the political, social, economic, and cultural changes that they produced. Through a close examination of the twentieth century, students gain appreciation for the intricate nature of power and dependency that characterizes the modern world.

4 Credits

115-L02
The World Since 1900
 
Online
Z. Nagy
Core 
07/13 - 08/20
25/15/0
Lecture
CRN 30188
4 Cr.
Size: 25
Enrolled: 15
Waitlisted: 0
07/13 - 08/20
M T W Th F Sa Su
             
+ asynchronous coursework

Subject: History (HIST)

CRN: 30188

Online: Asynchronous | Lecture

Online

Core Requirements Met:
     [Core] Historic Analysis

Other Requirements Met:
     Writing to learn

  Zsolt Nagy

Introduces students to historical reasoning. Students learn to analyze evidence from the past in context in order to explain how the past produced the ever-changing present. This course examines the origin, development, reception, alteration, and rejection of various ideologies—including, but not limited to, nationalism, imperialism, communism, liberalism, fascism and Nazism—and the political, social, economic, and cultural changes that they produced. Through a close examination of the twentieth century, students gain appreciation for the intricate nature of power and dependency that characterizes the modern world.

4 Credits

HONR: Honors

481-L02
Honors Tuberculosis
 
See Details
J. Klein
Core 
07/13 - 08/20
24/12/0
Topics Lecture 2
CRN 30359
2 Cr.
Size: 24
Enrolled: 12
Waitlisted: 0
07/13 - 08/20
M T W Th F Sa Su
 

9:30 am
11:30 am
OWS 257

 

9:30 am
11:30 am
OWS 257

     

Subject: Honors (HONR)

CRN: 30359

In Person | Topics Lecture 2

St Paul: Owens Science Hall 257

Core Requirements Met:
     [Core] Integ/Humanities

Other Requirements Met:
     Writing to learn

  Joanna Klein, Sarah Snyder

Tuberculosis: Science, Story, and the Common Good - Tuberculosis (TB) is one of the world’s deadliest infectious diseases and has shaped lives and societies across centuries. In this interdisciplinary honors seminar, you’ll explore tuberculosis through a blend of fiction and non-fiction readings, analyze breakthrough scientific articles, and develop science communication skills. Through hands-on labs and global case studies, you’ll examine TB’s past, present, and future and design a final project that applies your major to address tuberculosis, all for the common good. These interdisciplinary seminars are intended to develop integrating insights through an analysis of topics chosen from different disciplines. Often they are taught by two faculty members or by a visiting lecturer who holds one of the endowed chairs at the university.

2 Credits

PSYC: Psychology (UG)

206-L02
Brain & Human Behavior
 
Online
S. Hankerson
EdTrnCore 
05/27 - 07/09
25/3/0
Lecture
CRN 30451
4 Cr.
Size: 25
Enrolled: 3
Waitlisted: 0
05/27 - 07/09
M T W Th F Sa Su
             
+ asynchronous coursework

Subject: Psychology (UG) (PSYC)

CRN: 30451

Online: Asynchronous | Lecture

Online

Requirements Met:
     School of Ed Transfer Course
     Writing to learn

  Sarah Hankerson

An examination of brain systems that subserve human behavior. Topics include: human development, consciousness, social behavior, cognition, emotion and abnormal behavior. Prerequisite: PSYC 111

4 Credits

315-L02
Cognition
 
Online
S. Hankerson
Core 
05/27 - 07/09
25/18/0
Lecture
CRN 30452
4 Cr.
Size: 25
Enrolled: 18
Waitlisted: 0
05/27 - 07/09
M T W Th F Sa Su
             
+ asynchronous coursework

Subject: Psychology (UG) (PSYC)

CRN: 30452

Online: Asynchronous | Lecture

Online

Requirements Met:
     Writing to learn

  Sarah Hankerson

This course will provide an overview of cognitive processes, the processes that collectively comprise what is commonly termed "thinking." Topics discussed will include perception, attention, remembering, language, problem solving, reasoning, and social cognition. The course will focus on how these processes operate in everyday situations, as well as empirical (laboratory) investigations of these processes. Connections between cognitive psychology and other areas of psychology (e.g., clinical, biological) will also be discussed. Prerequisite: PSYC 111

4 Credits

SPAN: Spanish

211-L01
Intermediate Spanish I
 
See Details
F. Contreras Flamand
Core 
07/13 - 08/20
25/6/0
Lecture
CRN 30205
4 Cr.
Size: 25
Enrolled: 6
Waitlisted: 0
07/13 - 08/20
M T W Th F Sa Su
 

N/A
N/A
Online

1:00 pm
3:00 pm
Online

N/A
N/A
Online

1:00 pm
3:00 pm
Online

   
+ asynchronous coursework

Subject: Spanish (SPAN)

CRN: 30205

Online: Some Synchronous | Lecture

Online

Core Requirements Met:
     [Core] Language/Culture
          OR
     [Core] Global Perspective

Other Requirements Met:
     Writing to learn

  Fernando Contreras Flamand

Designed to increase listening, speaking, reading, and writing skills in Spanish. Intensive review of grammatical structures of Elementary Spanish I and II. Continued exposure to Hispanic culture. Prerequisite: SPAN 112 or SPAN 122 or their equivalent with a grade of C- or better.

4 Credits

THEO: Theology (UG)

226-L01
Spirituality: Christian Marria
 
Online
M. Spencer
FYECore 
05/27 - 07/09
25/25/8
Topics Lecture 3
CRN 30208
4 Cr.
Size: 25
Enrolled: 25
Waitlisted: 8
05/27 - 07/09
M T W Th F Sa Su
             
+ asynchronous coursework

Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)

CRN: 30208

Online: Asynchronous | Topics Lecture 3

Online

Core Requirements Met:
     [Core] Phil/Theo
          OR
     [Core] Diversity/Soc Just AND [Core] Integ/Humanities
     

Other Requirements Met:
     FYE CommGood/Learning Comm
     Writing to learn

  Marguerite Spencer

This course either introduces diverse expressions of Christian spirituality or focuses on topics within a distinctly Christian spirituality according to the discretion of the instructor such as Christian styles of worship, Christian understandings of sacramentality (especially Christian marriage), or stages of spiritual formation. Students will consider methodological issues in the academic study of spirituality. Emphasis is placed on a wide reading in the Christian tradition of both primary and secondary literature in order to assist the student in grasping the integral link between the lived faith of Christians and the theological articulation of that faith.

4 Credits


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