ASL 101 Beginning American Sign Lang. I (3) LAS
An introduction to American Sign Language communication skills, basic ASL grammar, Deaf Culture and the Deaf Community.
ASL 102 Beginning American Sign Lang.II (3) LAS
New Course
Prerequisite(s): ASL 101
This course builds on skills and knowledge introduced in ASL 101 related to communication skills, basic ASL grammar, Deaf Culture and Deaf Community.
ENG 096 Foundations of Writing (3)
Foundations of Writing prepares new students to make the transition from high school to college writing with intensive writing practice and feedback. It helps them to write more confidently and purposefully and to develop ways to clarify and edit their writing for a college-level audience.
ENG 101 Written Word (3) C
Written Word introduces new college students to academic writing with intensive writing practice and feedback. It guides them in developing strategies for communicating clearly, effectively, ethically, and creatively in a college setting. It emphasizes critical reading, writing, and thinking. It teaches students to discover and create knowledge by generating questions, investigating issues, and forming their own opinions.
ENG 101H HON:Written Word (3) C
Course description as stated in ENG 101 (Honors Course)
ENG 110 Intro to Creative Writing (3)
New Course
This course introduces students to three major genres in creative writing: fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. The readings and assignments are designed for students of any major who enjoy writing creatively and who want to practice their creative writing skills in a fun, entry-level environment. Creative Writing minors taking this course will develop fundamental genre skills that will help them excel in advanced creative writing workshops.
ENG 132 In the Beginning: World Myths of Creation & Origins (3) CL
A survey of early old and new world creation narratives and myths contrasted with current viewpoints.
ENG 140 Survey of Women Writers (3) CL
A chronological study of women writers of the English-speaking world from the 15th century to the present day with emphasis upon their historical and literary significance.
ENG 142 King Arthur:The Medieval Quest (3) CL
This course focuses on the great adventures of medieval heroes with particular emphasis on whether they represent every individual's search for the holy grail, the meaning of life.
ENG 160 Apes, Angels & Victorians: A Survey of the Victorian Period (3) CL
The nineteenth century in Britain was one of rapid technological, intellectual, social, and cultural change. This course will examine Victorian literature -- fiction, poetry, and essays, along with the visual arts -- and will discuss the trends and movements over the period.
ENG 162 Murder Most Foul:Detectives in 19th Cent British Literature (3) CL
Prerequisite(s): COM/ENG 101
This course will examine the figure of the detective and the changing nature of crime and detection in nineteenth century literature, with ample historical, sociological, and psychological background.
ENG 162H HON:Murder Most Foul:Detectives 19th Cent. British Literature (0) CL
Concurrent requisite(s): ENG 162
Course description as stated in ENG 162 (Honors Course)
ENG 165 Literature, Nature & Environ (3)
New Course
In this course students will examine works of fiction, poetry, and non-fiction that demonstrate ways literary artists envision and critique the relationship of humankind with the natural world. The emphasis will be on contemporary work influenced by the rise of the environmentalist movement begun in the 1960s, but the context of this recent work will be established through an introductory study of selected essays and poems by the British Romantics and the American Transcendentalists. Topics to be discussed will include ecology, political and social responses to ecological crisis, and ecofeminism.
ENG 171 Sports in Literature (3) CL
Prerequisite(s): COM/ENG 101
A course that explores the significance of sports and athletes as depicted in novels, poems, short stories, essays, and film, as well as their relationship to culture and society.
ENG 173 20 Voices, 20 Countries: World Poetry (3) CL
Prerequisite(s): COM/ENG 101
A course that examines the work of 20 poets internationally and its impact on the world.
ENG 174 Meet Me at the Theatre: Mod & Contemp American Drama (3) CL
This course introduces students to classics of the American stage, beginning with O'Neill, Williams and Miller, and ending with contemporary theater. Students will read plays, view movie adaptations, and attend local productions.
ENG 174H HON:Meet Me at the Theatre: Mod & Contemp American Drama (3) CL
This course introduces students to classics of the American stage, beginning with O'Neill, Williams and Miller, and ending with contemporary theater. Students will read plays, view movie adaptations, and attend local productions.
ENG 175 Modern Short Fiction (3) CL
A study of short stories in world literature.
ENG 176 Modern Novel (3) CL
Readings in modern fiction emphasizing leading writers of world literature who express the concerns of modern society.
ENG 206 State of the Unions:20th Century British and American Drama (3) CL
Prerequisite(s): ENG 101
The course will explore a variety of plays, dramatic monologues, and performance art that encompasses an international perspective. The course will examine ways in which these dramas and artistic visions have shaped or influenced their respective cultures and society.
ENG 206H HON:State of the Unions:20th Century British and American Drama (0) CL
Concurrent requisite(s): ENG 206
Course description as stated in ENG 206 (Honors Course)
ENG 207 Teenage Wasteland:The Literature of Adolescence (3) CL
Prerequisite(s): ENG 101
This course examines the adolescent character in contemporary fiction as a reflection of the critically important period of personal development it has come to be in American culture, but also as a rich metaphor in literature, that helps readers examine a state of contradictions and a search for balance.
ENG 208 The Stars Our Destination: Masterworks of Science Fiction (3) CL
Prerequisite(s): ENG 101
This course will examine some of the masterworks of the science-fiction genre, from roughly the end of the Victorian era to the present, discussing the ways in which science fiction can both have a predictive quality and show us where we are in our present historical moment.
ENG 226 Multicultural Women Writers (3)
Prerequisite(s): COM/ENG 101 or equivalent
This course examines the variety of ways multicultural women writers express their evolving identities and their culture.
ENG 245 African-American Writers (3) CL
Prerequisite(s): COM/ENG 101/or Equiv.
This course surveys significant works by African-American writers, beginning with slave narratives and ending with contemporary novels.
ENG 245H Honors: African-American Writers (3) CL
Prerequisite(s): COM/ENG 101 or equivalent, IDS 100H Honors Seminar I and approval of the Honors Program Director
This course surveys significant works by African-American writers, beginning with slave narratives and ending with contemporary novels.
ENG 251 Of Dragons, Wizards, Goblins, and Elves: Fantasy Literature from Tolkien to the Present (3) CL
Prerequisite(s): ENG 101
Fantasy is one of the oldest literary genres and it remains one of the most popular, boasting high sales, academic attention, and a wide fanbase. The goal of this course is to introduce you to fantasy literature from the second half of the twentieth century, beginning with the work of one of the foundational figures in the genre, J. R. R. Tolkien. We will focus on multiple elements of fantasy literature: worldbuilding, the development of languages and cultures and customs, the use of non-human characters and the roots of these characters in mythology and past literary works, the intersections between the secondary, created world and our primary world, and speculation as to the reasons for the genre?s popularity.
ENG 260 19th Century American Thought in Prose (3) CL/CH
Prerequisite(s): COM/ENG 101
This course examines significant historical documents and literature of the late 18th century and the first half of the 19th century in America, with special emphasis on how issues and ideas they present are interpreted through genres such as speeches, letters, political documents, essays, poetry, and fiction.
ENG 260H HON:19th-Century American Thought in Prose (0) CL/CH
Course description as stated in ENG 260 (Honors Course)
ENG 262 I Was Crazy Once:Impaired Mind in Lit (3) CL
Prerequisite(s): COM/ENG 101
In this course we will examine 19th century literary depictions of madness and impairment and discuss how they illuminate 19th-century advances in science and medicine as well as 19th century assumptions about class. We will look at fiction, poetry and nonfiction.
ENG 262H HON:I Was Crazy Once:Impaired Mind in Lit (0) CL
Concurrent requisite(s): ENG 262
Course description as stated in ENG 262 (Honors Course)
ENG 273 The Classical World (3) LAS
Prerequisite(s): COM/ENG 101
Crosslisted HIS 273. This course introduces the student to the Greco-Roman views of the world through a study of the history, philosophy, art, and literature of classical antiquity.
ENG 275 A History of Violence: Survey of 20th-Cent British Literature (3) CL
Prerequisite(s): ENG 101
This course will examine broad movements in twentieth century British literature--fiction, poetry, essays, and drama--that reflect the violent political and social upheavals of that era. We will discuss the historical, social, and cultural backdrop to these works.
ENG 276 The 20th-Century Graphic Novel (3) CL
Since the term "Graphic Novel" was first introduced as a label to describe a "new" genre of fiction, what that term really means and whether or not "books" that are written in such a format are really works of literature has been hotly contested. In this course we will look at graphic novels and a few film adaptations to reach the truth about the form and to understand the freedoms and advantages of the artistic medium as well as its significance to the canon of contemporary fiction.
ENG 276H HON:The 20th-Century Graphic Novel (0) CL
Concurrent requisite(s): ENG 276
Course description as stated in ENG 276 (Honors Course)
ENG 276S Serv Lrng:The 20th-Century Graphic Novel (1) EXP
Concurrent requisite(s): ENG 276
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
ENG 277 Dollars & Sense: Materialism in 20th-Century American Fiction (3) CL
This course will examine how the literature of the twentieth century examines materialism from the notion of the American dream to the realities of corporate greed.
ENG 277H HON:Dollars & Sense: Materialism in 20th Century American Fiction (0)
Concurrent requisite(s): ENG 277
Course description as stated in ENG 277 (Honors Course)
ENG 278 The End of the World as We Know It: Fiction After 9/11 (3) CL
This course will look at literature that examines the relationship that the United States has with the rest of the world, look at literature that recognizes life's dangers, and examine what such literature reflects about the times in which we currently live.
ENG 279 Killing the Angel in the House: 20th-Cent Brit Women Novelists (3) CL
Prerequisite(s): ENG 101
This course will examine British women writers from the twentieth century, and discuss the ways in which they broke literary molds and led often daring, even scandalous, personal lives--"killing the angel in the house" or getting beyond the need to please a male audience.
ENG 280 In Their Own Voices: American Autobiography,Letters, & Memoirs (3) CL
Prerequisite(s): COM/ENG 101
This course examines first-person writing of Americans from the 18th-century to the present. Students will explore issues in American life and thought through autobiographies, letters and memoirs.
ENG 280H HON:In Their Own Voices:American Autobiography,Letters, & Memoirs (3) CL
Prerequisite(s): COM/ENG 101
This course examines first-person writing of Americans from the 18th-century to the present. Students will explore issues in American life and thought through autobiographies, letters and memoirs.
ENG 285 Speak Its Name: LGBTQ+ Literature (3) CL
Prerequisite(s): ENG 101
The course will explore a variety of novels, plays, and memoirs that illuminate the experiences of the LGBTQ+ community, situating the works in their historical context, with the goal of illustrating the development of queer voices over the twentieth and twenty-first centuries and the broadening of terminologies and identities.
ENG 290 The Story of Your Life: Writing Diaries, Memoirs & Autobiographies (3) LAS
Prerequisite(s): COM/ENG 101, 100-level literature course
This course will examine multiple techniques for writing about your own life. Students will produce substantial diary writing, and will shape a final manuscript of either a diary, memoir, or autobiography.
ENG 300 Advanced Composition (3) LAS
Prerequisite(s): COM/ENG 101 or equivalent
Crosslisted COM 300. A course in writing nonfiction. While most of the work is practical, some theoretical considerations are made regarding style and methods of adapting discourse to meet the needs of a variety of audiences. Writing assignments involve descriptive, expository and persuasive writing.
ENG 301 The Past in Stages:A History of Theatre in Society (3) CL
Prerequisite(s): ENG 101 or equivalent plus any one Drama Elective except ENG 350W, ENG 374, or ENG 374
From its origins in ancient tribal cultures, theatre has thrilled, chilled, angered, tickled, taught, moved, mocked, entertained, and otherwise performed the shared experience of being human. This upper-level course is a study of the history of the theatre as a social institution, tracing the ways that audiences, actors, and other producers have shaped the theatrical event to meet changing times and needs. Theatre history from the Greeks to the present is considered, with an emphasis on the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries.
ENG 316 The School for Scandal: Restoration Comedy (3) CL
Prerequisite(s): ENG 101
This course will examine the comedies written and performed largely during the period in England known as the Restoration, when Charles II, who had fled England after the execution of his father Charles I during the English Civil War (after which England was headed by Oliver Cromwell), was restored to the throne. Drama thrived during this period, and the new king preferred his plays bawdy, raunchy, and explicit. We will examine many key Restoration plays (including two plays by Richard Brinsley Sheridan nearly 100 years later which borrow heavily from Restoration tropes) and discuss what these plays have to teach us about the values and mores of the time, and what they might have to say to us today, particularly on the topics of relations between men and women and the individual's relationship to power and authority.
ENG 350 Topics in Literature (1-3)
Special seminars, guided readings, minicourses of five or 10-week duration.
This course can be repeated 3 times for credit.
ENG 353 Topics:Literary Monsters Past & Present (3) CL
Prerequisite(s): ENG/COM 101
This course will examine literary texts and films dealing with monsters both literal and figurative, and discuss the ways in which monsters in literature tell us both what we ourselves are, and what we are not.
ENG 354 Literary London (3) EXP
Prerequisite(s): ENG 101
This course will survey British literature and will culminate in a trip to London. The focus of the course will be around the national character of British thought and the unique contributions that England has made to Western thought in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
ENG 354S Serv Lrng: Literary London (1) EXP
Concurrent requisite(s): ENG 354
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
ENG 359 American Film Authors (3) LAS
Prerequisite(s): COM 100, COM/ENG 101/or Equiv
Crosslisted COM 359. An in-depth study of major American film directors. The styles and major traits of these directors will be stressed through close examination of representative films. The course also addresses filmmaking as a collaborative art, examining the role of stars, writers, producers, and studios. Films and filmmakers will be placed within historical, sociological, and cultural contexts.
ENG 360 The Play's the Thing: Shakespeare's Major Works (3) CL
Prerequisite(s): COM/ENG 101
This course will examine selected comedies, tragedies and histories from Shakespeare's body of work, and will include significant discussion of Shakespeare's life and times, situating him and his work in historical context.
ENG 370 Creative Writing: Poetry (3) LAS
Prerequisite(s): COM/ENG 101 or equivalent
This course examines methods, models and practice in poetry writing.
ENG 371 Seminar in Creative Writing: Poetry
(3) LAS
Prerequisite(s): ENG 370 or equivalent
This course provides advanced study of methods, models and practice in poetry writing.
ENG 372 Creative Writing: Fiction (3) LAS
Prerequisite(s): ENG 101 or equivalent
This course examines methods, models and practice in fiction writing.
ENG 373 Sem Creative Writing:Fiction (3) LAS
Prerequisite(s): ENG 372 or equivalent
This course provides an advanced study of methods, models and practice in fiction writing.
ENG 374 Screenwriting Workshop (3) LAS
Prerequisite(s): COM/ENG 101
A course focusing on the craft of writing a full-length feature script (screenplay) and on the basic fundamentals of casting, filming, and editing scenes using digital editing equipment.
ENG 376 Novels Without Borders (3) CL
Prerequisite(s): COM/ENG 101
In this class we will read fiction from former colonies such as the Caribbean, India, Africa, or elsewhere and examine where cultures clash, refuse each other, contaminate each other, uplift each other and control one another.
ENG 388 Feature Writing (3) LAS
Prerequisite(s): ENG 101
This course stresses the craft of newspaper and magazine feature writing, with attention to leads, structure and polished prose, and ethics.
ENG 397 Theater Production (1-3)
Students may earn up to 3 credits toward their English major with a concentration in drama over the course of their studies at the College by participating in student drama productions housed in the Department of English and Modern Languages. Variable credit: 1-3 credits. Learning contract required.
ENG 461 Writing for Publication (3) LAS
Prerequisite(s): COM 101; COM 388 recommended
This course gives student advanced practice in feature writing, with emphasis on skills for placing their work in publications.
ENG 496 Co-Op:Alternating(FT) (1-3) EXP
Prerequisite(s): CED 220
A work-related experience supervised by a faculty coordinator in collaboration with the cooperative education staff. Credit is awarded on successful completion of the work experience, documentation of predetermined Learning Agreement and evaluation of work performance. Evaluation of work performed is on a pass/fail basis.
This course can be repeated for a maximum total of nine credits.
ETH:PHI 203 Environmental Ethics (3) CE
This course is an introduction to the ethical features of the human relationship with the natural environment. In addition to the deontological, utilitarian, and virtue ethical perspectives on this environmental relation, this course will consider various approaches to environmental value, e.g., anthropocentrism, biocentrism, and ecocentrism, in an effort to identify and clarify potential obligations that moral agents have toward the natural environment. These theoretical considerations will be raised through an exposure to contemporary environmental problems, e.g., climate change, animal treatment, pollution, food production, and waste management.
ETH:PHI 204 Contemporary Moral Debate (3) CE
This course takes an interdisciplinary, case-study approach to practical contemporary ethical issues in education, engineering, law, medicine, personal relationships, politics, etc. It focuses on the process or articulating one's own moral judgments on a variety of case studies and cultivating the necessary skills to defend those judgments.
This course can be repeated 4 times for credit.
ETH:PHI 240 Ethics (3) CE
This course is a study of the major ethical theories of the Western tradition. The action-based approach and the virtue-based approach will be covered.
ETH:PHI 250 Health Care Ethics (3) CE
This course is a study of major ethical principles and their application to health care issues. Emphasis is on the method of decision-making and health care policy. Fulfills Ethics requirement.
ETH:PHI 250H Hon:Health Care Ethics (0)
Concurrent requisite(s): ETH:PHI 250
Course description as stated in ETH:PHI 250 (Honors Course)
ETH:PHI 250S Serv Lrng:Health Care Ethics (1) EXP
Concurrent requisite(s): ETH:PHI 250
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
ETH:PHI 397 Ethical Conduct of Business (3) CE
This course examines the moral dilemmas raised by the conduct of business. Topics to be discussed include product safety, truth in advertising, fair pricing, pollution, sexual harassment, and affirmative action.
ETH:PHI 397H Honors: Ethical Conduct of Business (0) CE
Course description as stated in ETH:PHI 397 (Honors Course)
ETH:REL 250 Christian Ethics (3) CE
This course introduces students to the study of Christian ethics from the Catholic theological perspective. We begin by exploring the foundations of Christian ethics: the nature of the good, the relationship between faith and reason, and the importance of both free will and rightly formed conscience. We then focus on specific topics, chosen by students, in the areas of social, medical, and sexual ethics. For each of the chosen topics, we discuss the underlying moral principles and seek to articulate an appropriate Christian response to them.
ETH:REL 251 Business Ethics (3) CE
This course is designed to offer students an introduction to the study of business ethics from both a philosophical and theological perspective. We begin by examining 1) foundational philosophical theories and 2) the principles of Catholic Social Teaching and demonstrate how each is related to ethical business activity. We then focus on specific challenges concerning-- but not limited to--corporate governance, socially responsible investing, product safety, truth in advertising, and doing business in an international context. For each of these challenges, we discuss the underlying moral principles and seek to articulate appropriate philosophical and theological responses to them.
ETH:REL 252 Theological Health Care Ethics (3) CE
This course offers students an introduction to the study of health care ethics from the Catholic theological perspective. We begin by exploring foundational topics such as the relationship between faith and reason and the moral principles that govern the patient-professional relationship. We then focus on ethical challenges concerning particular health care topics. These topics include--but are not limited to--determining when human life begins (and its associated implications for medicine), treatment for critically ill newborns, genetic screening/testing, and the duties of health care professionals with regard to end of life care. The course seeks to help students, and in turn the patients for whom they will care, formulate appropriate responses to the many ethical challenges they will face in the health care field.
ETH:REL 252H Honors;Theological Health Care Ethics (0) CE
Corequisite(s): ETH:REL 252
Course description as stated in ETH:REL 252 (Honors Course)
ETH:REL 252S Serv Lrng:Theol Healthcare (1)
Concurrent requisite(s): ETH:REL 252
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
ETH:REL 256 Sexual and Reproductive Ethics (3) CE
Prerequisite(s): Sophomore Standing or Above
Human sexuality and reproduction are two controversial and often misunderstood topics. This course offers students an opportunity to reflect upon issues concerning sexuality and reproduction in light of the Catholic moral tradition, and it encourages students to critically evaluate the teachings of the Catholic tradition from their own philosophical and theological perspectives.
ETH:REL 269 Environmental Ethics:A Call to Conscience in a Time of Climate Change (3) CE
In a time when the adverse effects of anthropogenic climate change are beginning to be felt, this course will examine how to respond to a call to conscience from a Catholic theological perspective. We will explore the principles of faith and reason and the resources of the Catholic tradition regarding stewardship, the common good, and the option for the poor and vulnerable as they relate to climate change. In analyzing contemporary environmental problems, we will engage in dialogue in order to seek personal and social courses of action to care for creation.
ETH:REL 269S Serv Lrng:Environmental Ethics:A Call to Conscience in a Time of Climate Change (1) EXP
Concurrent requisite(s): ETH:REL 269
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
HIS 102 World Civilization 1200-1500 (3)
New Course
The course will cover the history of the world from roughly 1200 CE to roughly 1500 CE. This course is for dual enrolled high school students only in AP World History Modern.
HIS 105 World Civilization to 1500 (3) CH
A study of the development of the early cultures and civilizations of the world from their beginnings to approximately 1500 CE.
HIS 106 World Civilization Since 1500 (3) CH
A study of the development of the cultures and civilizations of the world from approximately 1500 CE to the present
HIS 107 European Civilization to 1500 (3) CH
In order to better understand current issues facing the industrialized world, one must understand the ideas, values, events and persons critical to the development of European civilization. As we examine European history from the late Roman Empire to the early Renaissance, we will begin to understand the major concepts of humanity and society as defined in Europe and how these both unified and divided its inhabitants.
HIS 108 European Civilization Since 1500 (3) CH
A survey of European culture from the Renaissance to the present.
HIS 109 U.S. History to 1877 (3) CH
This course surveys the political, economic, and cultural forces that transformed North American British colonies into the United States of America through the first century of the nation's existence. Topics include colonial development, the Revolutionary War, issues of race, class, and gender facing the early Republic, sectional tensions culminating in the Civil War, and attempts at Reconstruction following war's end. An emphasis is placed on interpreting historical sources.
HIS 109H HON:U.S. Hist to 1877 (0)
Concurrent requisite(s): HIS 109
Course description as stated in HIS 109 (Honors Course)
HIS 109S Serv Lrng:U.S. Hist to 1877 (1) EXP
Concurrent requisite(s): HIS 109
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
HIS 110 U.S. History Since 1877 (3) CH
This course examines the political, economic, and social forces that have directed American development from Reconstruction to the present. An emphasis is placed upon interpreting historical sources.
HIS 110S Serv Lrng:U.S. Hist Since 1877 (1) EXP
Concurrent requisite(s): HIS 110
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
HIS 200 Local History (3) CH
This course explores the development of the Greater Cincinnati area, primarily from the late eighteen century to the present, using the Cincinnati region as a model for discussing American urban growth in general. It considers the people, places, events, and issues that formed this small but hugely significant part of the country and discusses how they helped to shape and were shaped by the larger history of the United States of America.
HIS 200S Serv Lrng:Local History (1) EXP
Concurrent requisite(s): HIS 200
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
HIS 211 U.S. History Since 1945 (3) CH
This course is an examination of American society during the seven decades following World War II. Among the topics considered are the Cold War, the Civil Rights movement, the Vietnam War, the counterculture, feminism, and modern conservatism.
HIS 211S Serv Lrng:U.S.His Since 1945 (1) EXP
Concurrent requisite(s): HIS 211
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
HIS 212 "The Future Depends on What We Do in the Present": World History since 1945 (3) CH
This course examines global culture, technology, geopolitics, and economics since 1945.
HIS 215 The Second Rome:Byzantine Empire (3)
New Course
An examination of the Byzantine Empire and its relation to the Medieval Mediterranean, Islamic and Slavic worlds
HIS 230 Competing Identities:The Modern Middle East (3) CH
This course examines the conflicting ideas, people, and events that created the contemporary Middle East out of the former Ottoman Empire after World War I. Emphasis is placed on using primary documents as historical sources.
HIS 236 From Cortez to Costco: Impact of European Contact with the Americas on the Food We Eat (3) CH
This course examines the effects of European contact with the Americas on global biodiversity from the 15th century to the present.
HIS 260 19th Century American Thought in Prose (3) CL/CH
Corequisite(s): ENG 101 or equivalent
This course examines significant historical and documents and literature of the late 18th century and the first half of the 19th century in America, with special emphasis on how issues and ideas they present are interpreted through genres such as speeches, letters, political documents, essays, poetry, and fiction.
HIS 270 Nihilism, Nuremberg & Nukes Europe in the 20th Century (3) CH
Prerequisite(s): HIS 108 Recommended
This course examines the social and cultural history of Europe in the 20th century, paying particular attention to the ways in which the arts reflect responses to war, peace, and politics.
HIS 273 The Classical World (3) LAS
Crosslisted ENG 273. This course introduces the student to the Greco-Roman views of the world through a study of the history, philosophy, art, and literature of classical antiquity.
HIS 281 Women in American History (3) CH
This course examines US women's experience from the 17th century to the present.
HIS 326 The Scientific Revolution and the Enlightenment (3) CH
An examination of the period between 1500 and 1789, focusing on the development of "science" and how it shaped ideas about humans and their world.
HIS 385 Sea, Sail & Song: Early American Maritime History (3) CH/EXP
Prerequisite(s): 15 or more credit hours earned and min 2.0 cum GPA
This course features early summer travel to the coast of Maine to explore the development of national identity through Americans' extensive reliance on the ocean. Together we will study how life on various frontiers--between past and future, land and sea, and between Native American and trans-Atlantic cultures--created new ideas concerning individualism, independence, and eventually, a new American character. Particular attention will be paid to how this process has been expressed through the music of the folk, and how the history of American seafaring life is communicated through museums of different sizes today. Activities will include music presentations, study at several historical sites, kayaking, a sail on a two-masted schooner, and several days' residence on Maine's historic Pemaquid Harbor. Only three credit hours will be earned upon successful completion of this course; however, this course is coded to satisfy two core curriculum requirements: History (CH) and Experiential Learning (EXP as a travel course).
HIS 385S Serv Lrng:Sea,Sail & Song:Early American Maritime History (1) EXP
Concurrent requisite(s): HIS 385
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
HIS 398 History Internship (1-3) EXP
The History Internship allows students to work in a variety of historic and archival settings to earn Experiential Learning credit.
HIS 480 Directed Independent Study (1-4)
This individualized course allows for reading, research, or creative work on a selected era or aspect of history.
This course can be repeated 2 times for credit.
JCG 200 Inclusive Justice: Disability and the Common Good (3) JCG
Prerequisite(s): Religion Course (Code CR)
Corequisite(s): SOC 103
Using a practical theological method that dialogues between theology and experience, this course explores the social injustice of ableism, as well as the search for the common good, in relationship to persons who are differently abled in body, mind, and/or psyche.
JCG 200S Serv Lrng:Disabling Theology (1) EXP
Concurrent requisite(s): JCG 200
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
JCG 250 The Holocaust (3) JCG
Prerequisite(s): Religion Course (Code CR)
Corequisite(s): SOC 103
This course is an exploration of the historical event called the Holocaust and its far-reaching consequences. During the course, students will become familiar with what happened, move on to the question of "why", and conclude with a deeper understanding of the implications of these events for the present and future. While the Holocaust can be approached from many angles and perspectives, this course will focus much of its attention on examining questions that emerge in light of the Holocaust about ethics, the meaningful pursuit of justice, and the human capacity for both good and evil.
JCG 250H HON:The Holocaust (0) JCG/IDS
Concurrent requisite(s): JCG 250
Course description as stated in JCG 250 (Honors Course)
JCG 255 Christian Social Justice (3) JCG
Prerequisite(s): Religion Course (Code CR)
Corequisite(s): SOC 103
This course will acquaint students with both concrete efforts by Christians in support of social justice and with the Christian premises that underlie these efforts. Topics include economic justice, religious liberty and church-state relations, rights of women and minorities, war and peace, pro-life issues, and environmental ethics.
JCG 255H HON: Christian Social Justice (0) JCG
Concurrent requisite(s): JCG 255
Course description as stated in JCG 255 (Honors Course)
JCG 255S Serv Lrng:Christian Social Justice (1) EXP
Concurrent requisite(s): JCG 255
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
JCG 256 Race and Justice (3) JCG
Prerequisite(s): Religion Course (Code CR)
Corequisite(s): SOC 103
This course examines the social injustices of racism and ethnocentrism from theological perspectives. Methods of practical theology are used to develop reflexive theological habits for critical analysis and social action.
JCG 256S Serv Lrng:Hands Up, Don't Shoot:Practical Theology for Racial Justice (1) EXP
Concurrent requisite(s): JCG 256
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
JCG 266 A Land Where You Can Eat: Sustainable Foodways and Christian Spirituality (3) JCG
Prerequisite(s): Religion Course (Code CR)
Corequisite(s): SOC 103
This course examines food production, distribution, and consumption using a practical theological method. Students develop a spirituality of just food, paying special attention to social structures and individual choices that promote and/or inhibit sustainable foodways.
JCG 267 Healing and Loving Creation:An Ecological Spirituality for Our Time (3) JCG
Prerequisite(s): Religion Course (Code CR)
Corequisite(s): SOC 103
Discipleship in our modern world increasingly necessitates an ecological commitment to embrace a green lifestyle. God's fidelity to "renew the face of Earth" as a planet of peace and compassion inspires new ways of thinking about and responding to the dignity of all creation. We will consider the contemplative encounter with God in nature that compels us to embrace our potential as co-creators, loving and healing Earth.
JCG 267S Serv Lrng: Healing and Loving Creation: An Ecological Spirituality for Our Time (1) EXP
Concurrent requisite(s): JCG 267
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
JCG 268 Bringing about a Sustainable Reign of God (3) JCG
Prerequisite(s): Religion Course (Code CR)
Corequisite(s): SOC 103
This course explores why we are called to live more sustainably and gives practical ways to live that are more in keeping with Gospel teaching. We will look at the signs of times in which we are now living and apply Jesus' message of love and compassion towards all of God's creation. We will also look at ways in which we can spread this message to others.
JCG 390 Appalachian Culture & Spirit (3) JCG
Prerequisite(s): Religion Course (Code CR) and minimum 2.0 cum GPA
Corequisite(s): SOC 103
This justice and the common good course will focus on the Appalachian mountain region in an effort to understand land, culture, history, social issues and spirituality of this unique region. We will examine how culture, history, and social forces have created the richness and social issues that impact the lives, values, beliefs, and spirituality of the people of Appalachia, as well as their lifestyle, family, social, ecological, economic and political systems. Special attention will be focused on social analysis of the poverty in Appalachia, issues of social and environmental justice, and exploration of strategies for future sustainability in the region.
JCG 390E Appalachian Culture & Spirit Experience (3) JCG/EXP
Prerequisite(s): Religion Course (Code CR) and minimum 2.0 cum GPA
Corequisite(s): SOC 103
This justice and the common good course will focus on the Appalachian mountain region in an effort to understand land, culture, history, social issues and spirituality of this unique region. We will examine how culture, history, and social forces have created the richness and social issues that impact the lives, values, beliefs, and spirituality of the people of Appalachia, as well as their lifestyle, family, social, ecological, economic and political systems. Special attention will be focused on social analysis of the poverty in Appalachia, issues of social and environmental justice, and exploration of strategies for future sustainability in the region. This course culminates with a 5 day service trip to Appalachia during spring break.
JCG 390S Serv Lrng:Appalachian Culture (1) EXP
Concurrent requisite(s): JCG 390
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
JCG 391 Cherokee Culture and Spirituality:Immersion (3) JCG/EXP
Prerequisite(s): Religion Course (Code CR) and minimum 2.0 cum GPA
Corequisite(s): SOC 103
This course includes a one-week trip the Cherokee Qualla Boundary in North Carolina. As a comprehensive exploration into justice and the common good students will meet with Cherokee guides who teach us about Native American life from their vantage point. We will see multi-faceted examples of how working for justice is a cornerstone of today's Cherokee. Only three credit hours will be earned upon successful completion of this course; however, this course is coded to satisfy two core curriculum requirements: Justice and the Common Good (JCG) and Experiential Learning (EXP as a travel course).
JCG 391S Serv Lrng:Cherokee Culture (1) EXP
Concurrent requisite(s): JCG 391
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
LIB 100 Writer's Block (0-1)
New Course
A seminar for students who have received a Writer's Block grant for the semester, which will be awarded at the successful completion of the syllabus. Students will collaborate with the lead faculty in workshopping, project planning, and logistics.
This course can be repeated for a maximum total of 7 credits.
LIB 100S Serv Lrng: Writer's Block (1) EXP
New Course
Concurrent requisite(s): LIB 100
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
LIB 115 Foundations of the Liberal Arts (3)
A three-credit introduction to the history and concerns of the liberal arts, which arose in Greco-Roman antiquity when ideas about political engagement required persons educated in critical thinking and citizenship. Students will explore this history and will practice identifying and analyzing enduring complex questions that the liberal arts both shape and help to answer.
LIB 280 Conference Planning and Assistance (3)
New Course
Prerequisite(s): ENG 101
Students will assist faculty with planning an academic conference, hosted at the Mount including content development, logistics, promotion, etc.
This course can be repeated one time for credit.
LIB 290 Research and Bibliography (0-3)
New Course
Student will assist faculty member with an existing research project, including research, indexing, bibliographical work etc.
This course can be repeated 6 times for credit.
LIB 300 Seriously Funny:The Liberal Art of Humor (3)
Prerequisite(s): 21 Hours Completed in the Major
With humor so widespread in our social world, affecting our relationships, reflecting our attitudes, influencing our politics, and used to sell us everything from Acura's to Zumba classes, having only a "sense" of humor is not enough. This seminar closely examines the phenomenon of humor, explores various motives for creating, using, and abusing it, analyzes how it is transmitted and received by diverse groups, and considers its diverse effects on the common good. By studying humor from multiple perspectives, including history, the arts, literature, economics, philosophy, politics, the media, and more, we can become more critical consumers, compassionate neighbors, and empowered citizens.
LIB 301 The Loving Friends:The Bloomsbury Group (3)
Prerequisite(s): 21 hours complete in the major
This seminar will examine the lives and works of the members of the Bloomsbury Group, a collection of artists, writers, thinkers, politicians, critics, and journalists who came to prominence in the 1910s and 1920s in London, so named for the London neighborhood in which most of them lived and worked. The Group had a profound effect on British culture, and their influence is still felt today. We will examine works by Virginia Woolf, E. M. Forster, John Maynard Keynes, Vanessa Bell, Duncan Grant, Roger Fry, Clive Bell, Leonard Woolf, Desmond McCarthy, Katherine Mansfield, T. S. Eliot, Vita Sackville-West and Carrington, and will view the Group in light of its influences and predecessors, such as Matthew Arnold, Oscar Wilde, G. E. Moore, and Walter Pater. Students will be able to choose a specific Group member on whom to complete an in-depth final project.
LIB 302 Ree/al or Not Ree/al:The History of the Documentary as History (3)
Prerequisite(s): 21 Credit Hours toward Liberal Arts Major
Documentary films compel us to believe that they represent the real world as it really is. They arise from real-life events that occur in real time; yet, the films, as well as the film makers, are representing an historical phenomenon by choosing who or what is presented, how it is presented, and what sources are used to support their particular re-telling of the past-much like a traditional, written history. Yet the documentary film employs powerful visual and auditory components not present in traditional, written histories to convince viewers to accept its particular point of view. Students in this seminar course will, while examining documentary film from its beginnings in the early 20th century to the present, learn the techniques used by documentarians to tell their stories. They will then analyze a series of films from the 1910's through the 21st century in order to address the overall course question.
LIB 303 Oy Vey:Contemporary Jewish Literature (3)
Prerequisite(s): 21 Credit Hours toward the Liberal Arts Major
Many religious scholars have noted that a Jew can be many different things at once and those scholars often argue that to doubt one's faith is very Jewish thing. What does it mean to be Jewish at a time during which nearly 2/3 of Jews define themselves as more secular than religious as "Just Jewish"? In this course we will explore such a question as well as representations of cultural transformation and significant periods of Jewish experience through contemporary literature (mostly 20th and 21st century): fiction, poetry, drama, memoir, film and philosophy. This course is devoted to the cultural, the artistic, the secular and the spiritual, to the literature that reflects deeply held traditions and the literature that has been produced by those who identify as "just".
LIB 305 Aesthetics:The Philosophy of Beauty (3)
New Course
Prerequisite(s): 21 Hours toward the Liberal Arts Major
This course analyzes the concept of beauty through a philosophical lens. This analysis involves considering the definition of beauty from multiple perspectives including artistic, historical, and scientific views. Contrast concepts such as ugliness and the sublime will also be considered.
LIB 307 Anxious, Alienated, Confused: The Subject of Late Capitalism (3)
New Course
Prerequisite(s): 21 hours completed in the Liberal Arts major
The subject enmeshed in the networks of late capitalism is constantly inundated with information, tragedy, advertisements promising fulfillment, polarized political opinions, social media posts, etc. Are individuals even capable of adequately processing so much affect and information? What does such daily exposure do to our sense of self? This interdisciplinary course will explore the religious and political roots of our contemporary condition, while at the same time seeking religious and political solutions to this anxious, alienated, and confused condition.
LIB 307S Serv Lrng: Anxious, Alienated, Confused; The Subject of Late Capitalism (1) EXP
New Course
Concurrent requisite(s): LIB 307
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
LIB 308 Philosophical Life Hacks: Actually Achieving the Good Life (3)
New Course
Philosophy often offers advice on the good life: how to become happier, break irrational habits, and inspire oneself to do right by others. Our course discusses, and practices in real life, ideas which effectively improve our attitudes and lives. These practical techniques are called care of the self, meditations, or therapy of desires and they reduce anxieties, increase courage, and help us remain content in rough times. Authors include Ancient Stoics, 17th-century humanists, and recent French philosophers. While this hectic world is often out of our control, these philosophies promise a degree of control over oneself in the pursuit of our highest goals.
LIB 309 Dare We Hope? Approaching Our Uncertain Future (3)
New Course
Prerequisite(s): 21 hours toward the Liberal Arts major
From climate change to rising political discord, many find it difficult to feel hopeful or optimistic about the future. But are hope and optimism really the same? This course will explore what hope has meant (and might continue to mean) within diverse theological, philosophical, and literary perspectives. Beyond exploring our past traditions, we will also ask how we can approach the future with confidence, while also being honest about the challenges we face.
LIB 310 Read Dangerously: Banned Books (3)
New Course
Why are people, parents, teachers, administrators, members of school boards and legislatures afraid of books? What harm can emerge from allowing readers to think deeply and critically about important ideas? How do great works of literature survive in spite of attacks against them? We will explore all of these questions as well as other complex ideas in this course by examining the history of book banning, the religious and philosophical rationales for both censoring books and upholding them as sacred by reading a number of books that have recently been challenged in the U.S., books written for a wide range of audiences: children and young adults as well as sophisticated readers.
LIB 396 Co-Op:Parallel(PT) (1-3) EXP
Prerequisite(s): CED 220
A work-related experience supervised by a faculty coordinator in collaboration with the cooperative education staff. Credit is awarded as a general elective upon completion of the work experience and documentation of predetermined Learning Agreement. Evaluation of work performed is on a pass/fail basis.
This course can be repeated for a maximum total of nine credits.
LIB 400 Liberal Arts Culminating Experience (3)
Prerequisite(s): Six Hours of Liberal Arts Seminar Coursework
The culminating course is designed to demonstrate the student's strong command of the learning outcomes and performance indicators associated with the Liberal Arts major. Working closely with peers and a faculty scholar, the student will compose a research question of significance and depth, conduct research and apply critical analysis from across the Liberal Arts in addressing the question, craft a twelve-to-fifteen-page paper presenting his or her findings, and articulate those findings to the wider University community.
PHI 140 Philosophical Point of View (3) CP
This course provides the student with an understanding of the particular perspective from which philosophers consider the world and human experience.
PHI 140H HON:Philosophical Point of view (0) CP
Concurrent requisite(s): PHI 140
Course description as stated in PHI 140 (Honors Course)
PHI 200 Perspectives on Human Nature (3) CP
This course emphasizes the importance of our views concerning what it means to be human and the effect of these views on human experience and personal identity. Attention will be given to major views within the history of philosophy or to various ways humanity relates to the world.
PHI 205 Philosophy of Mind (3) CP
This course introduces students to contemporary and historical perspectives on the mind and its relation to the brain. Topics such as thought, language, emotion, mental causation, and consciousness will be explored.
PHI 205S Serv Lrng:Philosophy of Mind (1) EXP
Concurrent requisite(s): PHI 205
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
PHI 220 Political Philosophy (3) CP
An examination of major political theories and ideologies from antiquity to modern times. Among the writers considered: Plato, Aristotle, St. Augustine, Niccolo Machiavelli, Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Edmund Burke, John Stuart Mill, Karl Marx, Henry David Thoreau, and Mohandas Gandhi.
PHI 220H HON: Political Philosophy (0) CP
Concurrent requisite(s): PHI 220
Course description as stated in PHI 220 (Honors Course)
PHI 285 Philosophy of Art (3) CP
This course investigates the place of art in life as a whole. Emphasis will be placed on the function of art, the nature of art, and major theories of art as presented in the Eastern and Western philosophical traditions.
PHI 398 Independent Study (1-3) LAS
This course is designed for students who wish to study an area of their own interest independently. Permission of an instructor is required.
This course can be repeated 2 times for credit.
PHI 398H HON: Independent Study (1-3) LAS
Course description as stated in PHI 398 (Honors Course)
REL 100 Introduction to Christianity (3) CR
The Jesus of faith serves as a starting point to explore contemporary and global expressions of Christianity, a major world religion. Christian history and doctrine will be explored in light of Christian practice.
REL 100S Serv Lrng:Intro to Christianity (1) EXP
Concurrent requisite(s): REL 100
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
REL 101 Introduction to Religion (3) CR
This course is an examination of how fundamental religious questions arise out of human experience and the variety of ways that people respond to those questions. Attention will be given to both historic and contemporary expressions of religious concern. Concepts of God, faith, religious experience, and theological reflection will be among the topics examined.
REL 102 Christian Scriptures (3) CR
An exposition of the basic theology of the four Gospels coupled with an analysis of the historical and cultural milieu from which the Christian message arose and the manner in which that message was transmitted and interpreted.
REL 102H HON:Christian Scriptures (3) CR
Course description as stated in REL 102 (Honors Course)
REL 102S Serv Lrng:Christ Scriptures (1) EXP
Concurrent requisite(s): REL 102
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
REL 104 Personal Spirituality and Theology of Human Experience (3) CR
This course focuses on developing and articulating a personal spirituality culled from theological reflection on one's own experiences and decisions. Methods and principles from both Eastern and Western religious traditions, as well as psychology and the social sciences, serve as resources.
REL 107 Intro to Catholic Christianity (3) CR
This course offers students an introduction to the study of Christian theology from the Roman Catholic perspective. It begins by exploring the importance of theological reflection in contemporary culture, and then focuses on the development of present-day Church teachings drawing from both Scripture and Tradition. Topics explored include the Old Testament foundations for Christianity, the life and teachings of Jesus Christ, the profession of faith in the creeds, and the sacraments as sources of God's grace. The course also introduces students to principles of Catholic morality, and offers them an opportunity to compare Catholic teachings with those of other Christian traditions.
REL 107S Serv Lrng: Intro to Catholic Christianity (1) EXP
Concurrent requisite(s): REL 107
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
REL 108 World Religions (3) CR
The core question that people have asked from the beginning of reflective thought can be summed up in one sentence: What is the meaning or purpose of my life? In a world filled with conflict and war, in a country held bound by consumerism and fear, the answers provided by some of the major world religions can show us ways to live a vibrant life. Pre-supposing a basic Christian grounding of the majority of class participants, we will study the age-old wisdom found in Hinduism, Buddhism, Taoism, Judaism and Islam, with emphasis on how this knowledge can energize us to become peacemakers and healers of our global home.
REL 108S Service Learning:World Religions (1) EXP
Concurrent requisite(s): REL 108
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
REL 109 Introduction to Biblical Literature (3) CR
This course explores the texts and basic theology of the Bible coupled with an analysis of the historical and cultural milieu from which the Old and New Testaments arose and the manner in which these texts were transmitted and interpreted.
REL 203 Theology of MLK and Malcolm X (3) CR
This course is a study of the life and thought of Martin Luther King, Jr., focusing on his contribution to Christian theology and ethics through his leadership role in the Civil Rights Movement. Students will be compelled to examine King's interpretation and appropriation of the Bible, of Gandhian ideas and methods, of Western philosophical categories, of the principles of American participatory democracy and Social Gospel concepts, considering how the black experience of oppression and the traditions of the black church influenced him.
REL 206 Spirituality & Wellness (3) CR
Judeo-Christian spirituality is incarnational at its core. In the book of Genesis, God "walks in the garden" to encounter the first humans. Moses first meets God in a bush and his people are freed through natural plagues and physical death. The prophets see God's hand in the political-social-economic events of the day and call people to live justly through it all. Jesus Christ is born as a human being to show us that the kingdom of God is among us in the here and now. In this spirituality God enters the "natural world" to show us how to live as whole, healthy, fully conscious humans, through the exercising of freedom of choice--our "Free Will"-- in accord with the Divine.
REL 215 Life Through Death (3) CR
The human encounter with death and dying poses a significant challenge to persons as physical, psychological, social, and spiritual beings. This course will acquaint students with recent research on death and dying from several disciplines, at the same time it helps the student raise his/her consciousness about personal reaction and responses to this encounter. Particular emphasis will be placed on the religious/spiritual dimension of death, grief, and loss, and theological responses to that issue from within the Christian tradition. Ethical issues related to death and dying will also be examined. The student taking this course should emerge from it with an increased awareness of the diversity of issues involved in death and dying that can be applied to managing one's own life journey, as well as to caring for others.
REL 221 Theology of Human Marriage and Sexuality
(3)
This course introduces students to the theology of marriage and sexuality from the Roman Catholic perspective. The first half of the course explores the biblical and historical foundations that underlie the sacrament of marriage, as well as marriage's nature, purposes, and essential properties. Topics discussed in this part of the course include the importance of matrimonial consent, "mixed" or inter-church marriage, and the distinction between annulment and divorce. The second half of the course focuses on human sexuality and explores the Catholic Church's teachings concerning the nature and purpose of sex, as well as its teachings on pre-marital sexual relations, cohabitation, birth control, and same-sex unions.
REL 236 History of Christianity (3) CR
History of Christianity examines the history and theology of Christianity in its various cultural and geographic contexts. It will focus on the key issues, events, and individuals that have impacted the development of Christian tradition from its earliest roots to today. Of particular interest will be the formation of doctrines concerning the divinity and humanity of Jesus.
REL 242 Exploring the Sacred (3) CR
This course seeks to explore the ways in which we may encounter the sacred in our lived experience, rather than in formal creeds or religious institutions. Students will examine the spiritual/sacred dimensions of their world by looking through a variety of different lenses, and using the tools of several different disciplines to bring those experiences into focus. Students can expect to develop a clearer understanding of the experience of the sacred, by exploring their own stories, and the stories of others as those are presented in both sacred and secular texts. The course will pay special attention to the significance that culture has in shaping and interpreting the experience of the sacred, and the variety of responses that may emerge out of this experience.
REL 245 Women in Christianity (3) CR
This course will consider all of the dimensions and dynamics of the spiritually-potent women who have imagined and enfleshed the mission of Jesus. Using short readings, input, and reflective dialogue we will consider ideas shaped by the religious experience of women throughout Christian history. Theological themes to be explored will include God, Trinity, Redemption, Reconciliation, Sacrament and Discipleship.
REL 314 Spirituality of Leadership (3) CR
Prerequisite(s): 12 hours in Theological core
This course aims at the relationship between one's personal spirituality and effective leadership. Further, it considers leadership in the workplace as a personal calling. The course will explore one's innate desire for integrity of life, and will examine the common good as both the purpose of business, and as necessary for human development. The good habits of acting, known as virtues, will be considered. The application of virtue to practical situations in the workplace, and in the world at large, will allow the principles of Christian social teaching to be integrated with management theory.
REL 339 Seminar in Spirituality: Critical Issues in Human Sexuality (3)
New Course
Prerequisite(s): REL 101,102 and 107 or any JCG Course
This upper-level seminar in spirituality explores complex and critical issues of human sexuality. Students will reflect theologically on topics of sexuality, and identify resources to develop a spirituality oriented towards human flourishing. Instructor's permission required for non-majors.
REL 350 Pauline Theo/Christ Begin (3) CR
Prerequisite(s): 100 level REL
This course is a study of the content and background of the letters of the Apostle Paul. Emphasis will be placed upon Paul's life, the literary and rhetorical structure of his letters, and the specific theological and pastoral themes addressed in the letters. Particular attention will be given to the social context of Paul's Christian communities, and how it impacts his message to them. We will also explore the impact of these issues in contemporary pastoral ministry contexts.
REL 351 Spirituality of the Johannine Literature (3) CR
Prerequisite(s): 100 level Religion
Together we will explore the basic theology and spirituality of the Gospel of John and the Johannine Epistles, with an analysis of the milieu and culture out of which the Christian message arose and was transmitted.
REL 351S Serv Lrng:Johannine Literature (1) EXP
Concurrent requisite(s): REL 351
Service Learning is an opportunity to engage in service to others while making academic connections to course material. This one credit hour course requires 30 hours of meaningful community service. Students will serve a community partner accomplishing projects relevant to the academic course to which the Service Learning credit is attached. Students will also be required to engage in different forms of reflection such as journaling, group guided reflection, and a one-on-one meeting with the course instructor. Students will develop a greater understanding of social problems, a sense of responsibility to our surrounding communities, and an increased awareness of their own faith and values.
REL 370 The Catholic Tradition: From Rome to Assisi and Back Again? (3) EXP/IDS
This accelerated 3 credit course offers students an on-site, immersion learning experience of Catholic culture, history, and theology in Rome and Assisi from an interdisciplinary methodological perspective. The majority of the course takes place in Italy and requires travel.
SPA 101 College Spanish I (3) LAS
Concurrent requisite(s): SPA 101A
A basic introduction to Spanish emphasizing confidence-building in the use of practical, spoken language. Attention is focused on pronunciation and speech patterns, the development of a working vocabulary, and the framing of simple sentences. Students are introduced to the concepts of cultural diversity and the appreciation of other cultures. Laboratory practice. No prerequisite.
SPA 101A College Spanish I (LAB) (1) LAS
Concurrent requisite(s): SPA 101
Course description as stated in SPA 101
SPA 102 College Spanish Lev I (3) LAS
Prerequisite(s): SPA 101
Concurrent requisite(s): SPA 102A
This course builds on material covered in Spanish 101 to further develop the student's ability to speak, write and read in Spanish. Attention is focused on expanding vocabulary, increasing mastery of Spanish grammar and parts of speech, and introducing additional verb tenses. Guided practice will strengthen student's communication skills in Spanish. Students will continue to explore the diverse cultures that make up the Spanish speaking world.
SPA 102A Col Spanish I (LAB) (1) LAS
Concurrent requisite(s): SPA 102
Course description as stated in SPA 102
SPA 201 College Spanish II (3) LAS
Prerequisite(s): SPA 101 and 102 or their equivalent
Concurrent requisite(s): SPA 201A
For students who can already control simple Spanish structures in conversation. This class will increase the student's facility in speaking, improve aural comprehension and expand vocabulary. Stress is placed on diversity in communicative styles within the Spanish-speaking world. Cultural and literary readings. Laboratory practice.
SPA 201A College Spanish II (LAB) (1) LAS
Concurrent requisite(s): SPA 201
Course description as stated in SPA 201
SPA 202 Col Spanish Lev II (3) LAS
Prerequisite(s): SPA 101, 102, 201 or their equivalent.
Concurrent requisite(s): SPA 202A
For students who can already control simple Spanish structures in conversation. This class will increase the student's facility in speaking, improve aural comprehension and expand vocabulary. Stress is placed on diversity in communicative styles within the Spanish-speaking world. Cultural and literary readings. Laboratory practice.
SPA 202A College Spanish II (LAB) (1) LAS
Concurrent requisite(s): SPA 202
Course description as stated in SPA 202
SPA 220 Spanish Written Communication (3) LAS
New Course
Students will practice intermediate-level Spanish writing skills for use in personal and professional communication requirements; prior ability in Spanish needed.
SPA 230 Spanish Conversation and Culture (3) LAS
Students will practice intermediate-level Spanish conversational skills and strategies within culturally appropriate context for personal and professional use; prior ability in Spanish needed.
SPA 358 Hispanic Literature in English (3) CL
Prerequisite(s): SPA 101/Equivalent, COM/ENG 101 and COM 100
Crosslisted ENG 358. Students will examine a selection of modern Latin-American authors translated into English for their literary, cultural, and linguistic content. Minimum competency in Spanish needed.