Enrollment and waitlist data for current and upcoming courses refresh every 10 minutes; all other information as of 6:00 AM.
02/01 - 05/21 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
10:55 am |
10:55 am |
|||||
+ asynchronous coursework |
Subject: English (UG) (ENGL)
CRN: 25383
Blended Online & In-Person | Lecture
St Paul: Murray-Herrick Campus Center 209
Online
Old Core Requirements Met:
UG Core Literature/Writing
2020 Core Requirements Met:
Integ/Humanities
Other Requirements Met:
FYE Cultural, Social Transf
FYE Enviro Sustainability
Honors Course
Writing Intensive
This course explores urban experience through the perspective of writers working in fiction, drama, creative nonfiction, and poetry. It will focus on the way writers in those genres use language and literary devices to address the life and landscape of the city. Students will engage first-hand with the urban environment in the Twin Cities and bring that experience into their analytic and reflective writing for the semester. The writing load for this course is a minimum of 15 pages of formal revised writing. This Aquinas Scholars honors course satisfies a WAC Writing Intensive requirement and an Integration in the Humanities requirement. Please note that ENGL 202 is non-repeatable; students wishing to take a second 200-level Texts in Conversation course will need to register for ENGL 201, 203, or 204.
4 Credits
02/01 - 05/21 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
10:55 am |
10:55 am |
|||||
+ asynchronous coursework |
Subject: English (UG) (ENGL)
CRN: 25752
Blended Online & In-Person | Lecture
St Paul: Murray-Herrick Campus Center 209
Online
Old Core Requirements Met:
UG Core Literature/Writing
2020 Core Requirements Met:
Integ/Humanities
Other Requirements Met:
FYE Cultural, Social Transf
FYE Enviro Sustainability
Honors Course
Writing Intensive
This course explores urban experience through the perspective of writers working in fiction, drama, creative nonfiction, and poetry. It will focus on the way writers in those genres use language and literary devices to address the life and landscape of the city. Students will engage first-hand with the urban environment in the Twin Cities and bring that experience into their analytic and reflective writing for the semester. The writing load for this course is a minimum of 15 pages of formal revised writing. This Aquinas Scholars honors course satisfies a WAC Writing Intensive requirement and an Integration in the Humanities requirement. Please note that ENGL 202 is non-repeatable; students wishing to take a second 200-level Texts in Conversation course will need to register for ENGL 201, 203, or 204.
4 Credits
02/01 - 05/21 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
9:35 am |
9:35 am |
9:35 am |
Subject: History (HIST)
CRN: 25883
In Person | Lecture
St Paul: Murray-Herrick Campus Center 203
Old Core Requirements Met:
UG Core Historical Studies
2020 Core Requirements Met:
Historic Analysis
Other Requirements Met:
Amer Culture & Diff Minor Appr
Honors Course
School of Ed Transfer Course
Writing Intensive
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. The course introduces students to social, political, cultural, and economic developments from the American Civil War to the present day. It not only traces how ideas and lived experiences within each of those categories of historical analysis changed over time, but also shows how developments in each realm of American life shaped the others. It pays special attention to how American politics, institutions, and cultural norms emerged from—and produced—a changing role for the United States in its global context. It also interrogates how efforts to define American identity have both provided the terrain for inclusion and been used to justify the exclusion of various people, including racial, ethnic, and immigrant groups, people of different genders and sexual identities, and people of diverse religious and political beliefs.
4 Credits
02/01 - 05/21 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
9:35 am |
9:35 am |
9:35 am |
Subject: Philosophy (PHIL)
CRN: 25478
In Person | Lecture
St Paul: McNeely Hall 111
Old Core Requirements Met:
UG Core Moral/Phil Reasoning
Other Requirements Met:
Honors Course
An inquiry into the rational foundations and methods of ethics, with attention to the application of ethical principles to areas of personal conduct, institutional behavior and public policy, and diversity within and across cultures. Prerequisite: PHIL 110 or 115. NOTE: Students who receive credit for PHIL 214 may not receive credit for PHIL 215.
4 Credits
02/01 - 05/21 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
9:55 am |
9:55 am |
Subject: Psychology (UG) (PSYC)
CRN: 24814
Online: Some Synchronous | Lecture
Online
Old Core Requirements Met:
UG Core Social Analysis
2020 Core Requirements Met:
Soc Sci Analysis
Other Requirements Met:
Honors Course
School of Ed Transfer Course
An introduction to the research questions, concepts, theories, methods, and findings of psychological science. Although the selection varies with instructor, topics include brain function, psychological testing, sensation and perception, cognition (learning, memory, language), states of consciousness, motivation, human development, personality, origins and treatment of disorders, social behavior, stress and health, and applied psychology (workplace, community, environment).
4 Credits
02/01 - 05/21 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
3:25 pm |
3:25 pm |
Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)
CRN: 26059
Online: Sync Distributed | Lecture
Online
2020 Core Requirements Met:
Phil/Theo
Other Requirements Met:
Honors Course
This course introduces students to foundational concepts and skills associated with Christian theology. The course reflects critically upon the concepts of God and Christ, Scripture, Faith and Reason, the Human Being, and the Common Good, especially in the context of Catholic Intellectual Tradition and Catholic Social Teaching. Students will gain a basic level of theological literacy through introduction to central texts within Christian tradition, particularly the Bible. Students will also be introduced to connecting fundamental theological questions to the common good in the context of the pressing challenges of today’s world.
4 Credits
02/01 - 05/21 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
3:25 pm |
3:25 pm |
Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)
CRN: 26060
Online: Sync Distributed | Lecture
Online
Old Core Requirements Met:
UG Core Faith/Catholic Trad
Other Requirements Met:
Honors Course
This course is designed to acquaint students with the contents of the Bible and with Christian history, especially in the context of the Catholic tradition. Through careful reading of a core of common texts and a variety of written assignments, students are expected to attain a basic understanding of human experience in the light of major areas of theology, including revelation, God, creation, Jesus and the Church. Note: Students who take THEO 101 during academic year 2019-2020 and who choose to opt into the new curriculum will be allowed to count THEO 101 as the first course in theology in the new core curriculum.
4 Credits
02/01 - 05/21 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
9:55 am |
||||||
+ asynchronous coursework |
Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)
CRN: 26042
Online: Some Synchronous | Lecture
Online
2020 Core Requirements Met:
Phil/Theo
Other Requirements Met:
Honors Course
Writing to learn
This course introduces students to foundational concepts and skills associated with Christian theology. The course reflects critically upon the concepts of God and Christ, Scripture, Faith and Reason, the Human Being, and the Common Good, especially in the context of Catholic Intellectual Tradition and Catholic Social Teaching. Students will gain a basic level of theological literacy through introduction to central texts within Christian tradition, particularly the Bible. Students will also be introduced to connecting fundamental theological questions to the common good in the context of the pressing challenges of today’s world.
4 Credits
02/01 - 05/21 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
9:55 am |
||||||
+ asynchronous coursework |
Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)
CRN: 26043
Online: Some Synchronous | Lecture
Online
Old Core Requirements Met:
UG Core Faith/Catholic Trad
Other Requirements Met:
Honors Course
Writing to learn
This course is designed to acquaint students with the contents of the Bible and with Christian history, especially in the context of the Catholic tradition. Through careful reading of a core of common texts and a variety of written assignments, students are expected to attain a basic understanding of human experience in the light of major areas of theology, including revelation, God, creation, Jesus and the Church. Note: Students who take THEO 101 during academic year 2019-2020 and who choose to opt into the new curriculum will be allowed to count THEO 101 as the first course in theology in the new core curriculum.
4 Credits
02/01 - 05/21 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
9:55 am |
9:55 am |
Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)
CRN: 26057
In Person | Lecture
St Paul: Murray-Herrick Campus Center 203
2020 Core Requirements Met:
Phil/Theo
Other Requirements Met:
Honors Course
This course introduces students to foundational concepts and skills associated with Christian theology. The course reflects critically upon the concepts of God and Christ, Scripture, Faith and Reason, the Human Being, and the Common Good, especially in the context of Catholic Intellectual Tradition and Catholic Social Teaching. Students will gain a basic level of theological literacy through introduction to central texts within Christian tradition, particularly the Bible. Students will also be introduced to connecting fundamental theological questions to the common good in the context of the pressing challenges of today’s world.
4 Credits
02/01 - 05/21 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
1:35 pm |
1:35 pm |
1:35 pm |
Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)
CRN: 26206
Online: Sync Distributed | Topics Lecture 8
Online
2020 Core Requirements Met:
Phil/Theo
OR
Integ/Humanities
Other Requirements Met:
Honors Course
Theology courses numbered 221-229 are reserved for students on the new core curriculum. If this section of the class appears to have very few seats, it is because the rest of the seats in the classroom will be occupied by students on the “old core.” This section examines a variety of theological approaches to aesthetic questions, both ancient and modern. Is beauty "in the eye of the beholder"? Are "beauty" and "prettiness" synonymous? Are "beauty" and "ugliness" opposites? Might beauty still be considered a transcendental aspect of being along with the true and the good? Is it possible that Beauty is a name for God, or a means by which God reveals God's self in the created order? It also explores the implications of varying answers to these questions for the arts, and for lives of faith.
4 Credits
02/01 - 05/21 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
1:35 pm |
1:35 pm |
1:35 pm |
Subject: Theology (UG) (THEO)
CRN: 26207
Online: Sync Distributed | Lecture
Online
Old Core Requirements Met:
UG Core Faith/Catholic Trad
Other Requirements Met:
Honors Course
NOTE: This course is for students on the “old core.” Students on the new core should take any THEO 221-229 if they are choosing to take the third required course on philosophical and theological reasoning in Theology. Is beauty "in the eye of the beholder"? Are "beauty" and "prettiness" synonymous? Are "beauty" and "ugliness" opposites? Might beauty still be considered a transcendental aspect of being along with the true and the good? Is it possible that Beauty is a name for God, or a means by which God reveals God's self in the created order? This course examines a variety of theological approaches to these questions, both ancient and modern. It also explores the implications of varying answers to these questions for the arts, and for lives of faith. Prerequisite: THEO 101 and one 200-level or 300-level THEO course
4 Credits