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Course Criteria
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2.00 Credits
Russian Conversation and Composition Development of oral and written skills. May be taken concurrently with RUSS 224. Prerequisite: RUSS 112 or instructor's consent.
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3.00 Credits
Intermediate Russian Readings General education further study course. Intensive reading and analysis of Russian literary works of all periods. Prerequisite: RUSS 224 or instructor's consent.
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2.00 Credits
Intermediate Russian Conversation and Composition Continued development of speaking and listening skills, focusing on the vocabulary of everyday Russian life and idiomatic usage. Prerequisite: RUSS 224 or 225 or instructor's consent.
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1.00 - 4.00 Credits
Travel Seminar in Russian An interdisciplinary travel seminar that allows a student to gain credit for the study of one of the following: culture, art, literature, architecture, politics, society, science, and economics while visiting historic places of interest. Prerequisite: departmental consent.
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2.00 Credits
Russian Phonology Cross-listed as LING 505B. Corrective pronunciation and auditory perception for non-native speakers of Russian. Includes articulatory phonetics, phonemics, and morphophonemics, as well as the study and production of intonation contours (intonatsionnye konstruktsii). Prerequisite: any 200-level course or instructor's consent.
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2.00 Credits
No course description available.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Special Studies in Russian Advanced reading and translation in Russian social sciences, literature, and civilization. Repeatable for credit. Prerequisite: departmental consent.
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3.00 Credits
RUSS 540. Russian Literature in English. Survey course in representative Russian literature (prose) of the 19th century, of the Soviet (socialist realism) or post-Soviet period, or of a particular author. The survey of 19th century Russian literature typically includes major prose works of Pushkin, Lermontov, Gogol¿, Goncharov, Turgenev, minor prose works of Tolstoy and Dostoevsky, and the more popular plays of Chekhov. Emphasis on Russian and European history, historiography, and intellectual movements, as well as fundamental concepts of general literary analysis and criticism. No knowledge of Russian is required, although some is desirable. Prerequisite: departmental consent.
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3.00 Credits
>SCWK 201. Introduction to Social Work and Social Welfare General education introductory course. Introduction to, and examination of, social problems, policies, and services in social welfare and social work. Includes history of social welfare, an introduction to the helping process, and current trends in social services and programs. Concepts of diversity are integrated throughout to provide awareness of social issues, poverty, government, and social welfare history.
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3.00 Credits
Perspectives on Social Welfare Surveys a broad spectrum of social welfare programs, policies, and controversies with an emphasis on public and private systems which address individual, family and group needs. Explores social welfare historical developments and policy trends which have an impact on service provisions and needs of diverse populations. Examines the relationship of area services to larger social welfare institutions and provides an introduction to social work professional roles, organizations, values, and goals.
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