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Course Criteria
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1.00 Credits
Applied weekly lessons. Content (repertoire and technical exercises) to be determined by the teacher based on the specific needs of the student.
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1.00 - 2.00 Credits
Non degree-required applied euphonium instruction. Weekly 1/2 hour lesson (1 credit) or 1 hour lesson (2 credits). Content consists of technical exercises, solo repertoire, and orchestral excerpt repertoire, to be determined for each student by the instructor.
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0.00 - 3.00 Credits
A specialized topic within the discipline, to be defined with each offering.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
An individually defined independent study project, approved and supervised by a professor. Requires divisional and collegiate permission
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1.00 Credits
Professional employment in a field directly related to the student's field of study. The practical experience of the employment contributes to the student's overall education and expertise in the field.
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1.00 - 12.00 Credits
The student will demonstrate an in-depth understanding of the assigned topic through a project that is approved by his or her advisor, faculty committee, department and/or division head, and the associate dean for academic affairs.
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3.00 Credits
This course is designed to acquaint students with the changing geographies of Europe. It presents an interdisciplinary, systematic and regional investigation of the physical and cultural processes and phenomena that have created the characteristic landscapes of Europe, including unifying characteristics, population problems, political and economic diversity, and sources of regional conflict. This course explores historical and contemporary issues affecting Europe, including climate, landform regions, trade, transportation, urban growth, population change, culture change, and evolution of economic integration in the region. Throughout the course there will be an emphasis on human-environment interaction in Europe, and by the end of the course students will become familiar with the diverse natural and human environments of each sub-region of Europe as well as their interconnectedness.
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3.00 Credits
This course examines the history of Jewish social, political, cultural, and religious life across Europe and the Middle East, throughout the twentieth century. It examines questions such as the causes of European anti-Semitism; similarities and differences between Jewish practice in places as diverse as France, Russia, Algeria, Egypt, and Palestine (and then Israel); the impact of both Western imperialism and communism on Jews throughout the Mediterranean; and the lasting impact of the Holocaust and the emergence of the State of Israel.
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3.00 Credits
This course surveys the settlement of Jews in Western Europe from Roman time through the Roman Catholic Middle Ages and the early modern period, with emphasis on migrations, movements, relations with the changing and developing ethnic states, the Papacy, the Crusades, persecutions, polemics, expulsions, and the rise of the Protestant Movement.
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3.00 Credits
An advanced seminar in European politics, economics, culture, geography, society, and history from an interdisciplinary perspective. Each year the course will focus on a different topic pertaining to European Studies. Topics will vary based on the expertise of the faculty member teaching the course and will employ a variety of disciplinary methodological approaches. Required for students completing the European Studies certificate.
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