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Course Criteria
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2.00 Credits
An exploration of a variety of topics related to the study of Japanese music and culture.
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2.00 Credits
An introduction to selected cultures of the major world regions including the Americas, Western Europe, Africa, Asia, the Middle East, the Far East, and Indonesia. The cultural cluster areas covered will be: 1) language and communication, 2) social variables, 3) geographical variables, 4) cross cultural environment, and 5) current political systems. Students will also look at the regional culture of south Georgia and integrate knowledge of that culture within the international context, thereby increasing awareness of the diversity/similarity of communities within the global village.
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2.00 Credits
An examination of issues raised by living in a multicultural society. Through discussions of films and readings, students will consider how different cultures have shaped the United States in the past and where such shapings might lead in the future.
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2.00 Credits
An introduction to selected world music cultures, using a case-study approach that emphasizes the distinctive contexts, sounds, and meanings of music performance worldwide. The course looks at music as culture and focuses on the role and function of music in relation to such topics as identity; belief, ritual, and worship; politics; memory; migration; festival; and dance.
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2.00 Credits
Designed to provide a study in current topics through global, regional, and interdisciplinary approaches. Topics vary.
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2.00 Credits
The development and application of speech/artistic communication skills in both a southern and national cultural perspective that will affect the student's educational, religious, economic, social, and professional life in the 21st century.
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2.00 Credits
An exploration of success writings in biographies, research publications, and the self-help literature. Areas of application include business, sports, personal development, and interpersonal relations.
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2.00 Credits
An introduction to problem solving methodology and techniques that pertain to everyday problems, both regional and global, in vaired disciplines. Techniques include counting arguments, graphical methods, logical and analytical techniques such as contradicition, analogy, induction, generalization, specialization, exhaustion, and reformulation.
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2.00 Credits
An enhanced introduction to networking concepts, the Internet, and the World Wide Web, including regional and global applications. Students will work with FTP, telnet, email, Usenet, listservs, and Internet-based electronic bulletin boards, search strategies, streaming video, and web page construction.
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2.00 Credits
An exploration of the changing relationship between women's roles in the family and in the workforce, and the ways in which that relationship has been shaped by social and political forces over time. The course will trace historical trends in women's employment and will include an examination of the effects of economic globalization on women's employment, both in the southeast United States and around the world.
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