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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Survey of major concepts and processes that explain interdisciplinary; the influences of culture, socialization and language on meanings of social interaction and critical thinking, and interdisciplinary research; the concequences of modernism, postmodernism and globalization for contemporary living. Social science paradigms such as feminist and Afro-centric ideas are explored in order to develop analytic and synthetic insights related to beliefs, values, laws and actions of human groups.
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3.00 Credits
No course description available.
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3.00 Credits
Examination of how characteristic logical constructs are employed in reading, writing, and speech acts; modeling and application of modes of analysis that develop critical thinking skills and flexible orientation toward reading and writing. Focus on current themes and issues in globalization.
Prerequisite:
INT-308
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3.00 Credits
No course description available.
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3.00 Credits
Exploration of relationships between social theory and the interdisciplinary process; investigates rationales and appropriate applications of qualitative and quantitative research methods; examines techniques for formulating thesis statements and hypotheses; reviews salient factors for developing valid and reliable questionnaires and constructs researchable proposals.
Prerequisite:
INT-308, INT-322
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3.00 Credits
Examination of the fundamental characteristics of language as a system of signs and symbols used to interpret and influence social and behaviorial environments. Exploration of common linguistic and hemgemonic practices and the underlying assumptions that sustain them; shows language as a medium for understanding the world and highlights contrasts between socail and written reality. Topics include the uses of English in globalization vis-a-vis voices of race, gender, and other minorites.
Prerequisite:
INT-308
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3.00 Credits
Investigation of the origins (historical, social and cultural) of ideas, theories, and paradigms in the Western intellecutal tradition; their influences in contemporary globalization; a holistic approach to an analysis, synthesis and interpretation of pre-Platonic, Renaissance, Enlightenment, modern, postmodern and globalization ideas.
Prerequisite:
INT-308
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3.00 Credits
No course description available.
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3.00 Credits
Critical survey of issues and forces shaping interdependencies among the world's nations; their meanings for global resource management and sharing; global investment, trade, producation, the free-market system, Western democratic intrusions, technologies and the global telecommunications revolution; their significance for new social grouping, human welfare, cultural and religious diversity, and education. Focus on diminishing national boundaries, migration of labor, world hegemonic powers and the role of the United Nations.
Prerequisite:
INT-308
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3.00 Credits
Wide ranging examination of the historical and theoretical developments that led to the evolution of Interdisciplinarity; assessment of societal parameters impacting the proliferation of new areas of inquiry and their outgrowth as complementary of couteragents of particular institutionalized modes of behavior and thought; development of adequate descriptions and explanations for current and evolving social and cultural practices, some that contrast sharply with normative perspectives grounded in configured traditional thought.
Prerequisite:
INT-308, INT-322, INT-360, INT-375, INT-411, INT-412
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