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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
A descriptive analytic inquiry into the historical, social, and economic position of the Hispanics, Native Americans, and women of the Southwest. Credits: 4 Suffix: SS3 Clock Hours - (Lect-Lab): (4-0)
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4.00 Credits
An inquiry into both the production and the consumption of popular culture. Attention will be paid to cultural power as a force for domination as well as a condition for collective affirmation and struggle. Topics include popular music, radio and television programs, news media, comic strips, and pulp fiction. Credits: 4 Clock Hours - (Lect-Lab): (4-0)
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1.00 Credits
Individual research is conducted under the supervision of a faculty member. Topic and format must be approved by the Department Chairperson and Dean. Credits: 1 to 6 Hours: 50 contact hours are the equivalent of one credit hour.
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4.00 Credits
This course will critically examine the classical and contemporary theories of self and society. The major paradigms of functionalism, Marxism, symbolic interactionism, structuralism, ethnomethodology, and critical and feminist theory will be evaluated. Credits: 4 Clock Hours - (Lect-Lab): (4-0)
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4.00 Credits
A comparative study of the social structures of selected countries and regions within the first, second, and third worlds. Comparisons will be made of societies within selected regions as well as their relationships to U.S. society. Selected countries and regions will include: Cuba and the Caribbean, the Andean countries, China, Japan, etc. Credits: 4 Repeatable: Students may repeat the course for credit provided the topic is different on each occasion. Clock Hours - (Lect-Lab): (4-0)
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4.00 Credits
This course will examine environmental issues and the natural world from a cultural and socioeconomic perspective. It will attempt to study the ideas, conceptions, practices, and beliefs that relate people to the land and their collective environment. Finally, it will look at environmental concerns from the perspective of workers, minorities, and rural and urban communities both in America and worldwide. Credits: 4 Clock Hours - (Lect-Lab): (4-0)
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8.00 Credits
This course offers a field experience in the relationship between people and the land. Students will work on farms and in the U.S. National Forest. They will meet with Anglos, Hispanics, and Native Americans in rural communities. One week will be spent in the National Forest learning to identify wildlife and its habitat. Credits: 8
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4.00 Credits
This course is part of the Sociology internship program where students will learn how to conduct literature reviews, collect statistical data, conduct interviews and analyze that data for a major paper. Credits: 4
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8.00 Credits
This course provides the student with experience in applied sociology. Students will be involved in human services, applied social research or other activities approved by the advisor and practicum coordinator. The emphasis is on gaining experiential knowledge through active participation in sociological practice and sharing this in a classroom experience. Practicum may be taken for 1 to 8 credits per term and for a maximum of 16 credits. A maximum of 8 credits can be applied toward the major in Sociology. Consent of instructor. Credits: 1 to 16
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4.00 Credits
An examination into the ways in which society influences the self and the individual produces society. The relationship between consciousness and social structure will be discussed. Theoretical focus may include symbolic interactionism, ethnomethodology and/or a Marxist perspective. Credits: 4 Clock Hours - (Lect-Lab): (4-0)
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