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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
Private study for graduate students in saxophone performance. All music performance, except class instruction, shall be taught as one hour of private instruction per week. Students may register for only one performance course in an area per semester, that is, only one piano course, or only one voice course, etc. When necessary, music performance courses may be repeated once for credit. The jury shall serve as the final examination for every music performance course. Advancement to the next performance course requires jury recommendation. When offered in a summer term, credit is reduced by half. Prerequisite requirements for this course may also be satisfied by equivalent course work as approved by the department.
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4.00 Credits
Private study for graduate students in saxophone performance. All music performance, except class instruction, shall be taught as one hour of private instruction per week. Students may register for only one performance course in an area per semester, that is, only one piano course, or only one voice course, etc. When necessary, music performance courses may be repeated once for credit. The jury shall serve as the final examination for every music performance course. Advancement to the next performance course requires jury recommendation. When offered in a summer term, credit is reduced by half. Prerequisite requirements for this course may also be satisfied by equivalent course work as approved by the department.
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3.00 Credits
Concepts and methods necessary for studying society.
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3.00 Credits
The American family as an institution and a group of interacting persons; the nature and problems of courtship, husband-wife, and parent-child relationships.
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3.00 Credits
Definitions and taxonomies of death. Changing attitudes and practices toward and locations for death. Death as an "official," structural, interpersonal, and private event. Passing through "passing on": stages in and the organization of death. Death and identity: physical, psychological, and social autopsies.
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3.00 Credits
The city as the nucleus of modern industrial society; its institutions, populations, ecology, and problems.
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3.00 Credits
The concept of social problems as a moral construct. Theoretical approaches to identifying social problems. Analysis of some currently defined major problems of U.S. society (e.g., environmental degradation, war and militarism, violence and crime) arguments for remediation, approaches to policy.
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3.00 Credits
Covers civil rights, global justice, feminist, conservative, environmentalist, and sexual identity movements. How movements emerge, why people participate, tactics, ideology, how groups frame issues, culture and lifestyle, authorities' response, and the role of religion.
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3.00 Credits
This course will survey contemporary theories of popular culture and provide critical analysis of various aspects of popular culture such as music, television, fast food, fashion, theme parks, advertising, malls, tourism, recreation, shopping, and the Internet.
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3.00 Credits
An analysis of the organization, production, distribution, labeling, and consumption of literature as art. Topics include: types of literature; audiences; the culture and commerce of publishing; socialization of artists; and criticism.
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