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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
History 101 is designed to provide students with a basic knowledge of World History from the Ancient Near East through the Protestant Reformation. Areas covered are: the Ancient Near East, Greece, Roman Republic and Empire, Middle Ages, Renaissance and Protestant Reformation. Pre-requisite: None. Fall.
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3.00 Credits
History 102 is designed to provide students with a basic knowledge of World History from Early Modern Europe through current times. Areas covered are: Religious Wars, Rise of Absolutism, Enlightenment and Exploration, France v. Britain for world power, French Revolution and Napoleon, German and Italian unification, World War I, years between World Wars, World War II and the Modern World. Pre-requisite: None. Spring.
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3.00 Credits
Coverage of selected topics from the Viking age until the present in the history of Northern Europe, including the modern nations of Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, and Iceland. Individual topics address the interaction of this region with the rest of the world. This course does not attempt to be comprehensive, but highlights particular topics and themes with emphasis on the twentieth century. Pre-requisites: Successful completion of ENGL 110 and ENGL 120, HIST 101 or consent of instructor. Spring 2010.
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3.00 Credits
Cross-listed with POLS 305. Study of the American government and issues related to American politics in their constitutional and cultural perspectives. Topics include how the multicultural character of Americans, past and present, has influenced the development of government under the Constitution; how events have shaped the interpretation of the Constitution; and how real world practice varies from the descriptions in the Constitution. Pre-requisite: None. Alternate years, Fall 2008.
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3.00 Credits
Cross-listed with POLS 314. This course is a place for detailed study of ideology and government. A special focus of the course is the alternative view of the world and politics in a multicultural setting. Topics include the major ideologies of modern and post-modern times, and a deep look at major world democratic governments. Pre-requisite: GEOG 103. Fall.
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3.00 Credits
This course begins by emphasizing the founding of the original thirteen colonies and their development. The second phase of the course traces the events that lead to the American Revolution, The War, and The Treaty of Paris in 1783 and concludes with the writing of the constitution and the establishment of the United States. Pre-requisites: Successful completion of ENGL 110 and ENGL 120, or consent of instructor. Fall 2009.
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1.00 Credits
Cross-listed with EDUC 324. This course is a general project-based study of North Dakota history and geography designed for Elementary Education majors to demonstrate familiarity with the North Dakota state standards and benchmarks. The course will include social, economic, cultural and political history, as well as presenting information on the geographical elements, climate, and state facts and symbols. Pre-requisite: Admission to Teacher Education. Co-requisites: EDUC 301, EDUC 318, EDUC 323, MATH 307 and SCNC 321. Fall, Spring.
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3.00 Credits
Cross-listed with POLS 330. This course focuses on the major events in American Diplomacy beginning with the American Revolution and going through the 20th Century. Pre-requisites: HIST 103, HIST 104, successful completion of ENGL 110 and ENGL 120, or consent of instructor. Fall, 2010.
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3.00 Credits
This course emphasizes the study of the Vietnam War with special emphasis on the views of the war from the North Vietnamese and American side. The course begins by studying Chinese imperialism in Vietnam and then moves to French control of the area. The second phase traces U.S. involvement in Vietnam and the quagmire that is known as the Vietnam War. The course concludes with the U.S. withdrawal, the fall of Saigon and the current situation in Vietnam. There will be discussion of the military side of the war and how it related to the political decisions made by all sides. Pre-requisites: Successful completion of ENGL 110 and ENGL 120, or consent of instructor. Spring 2009.
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3.00 Credits
This course begins with a study of the development of anti-Semitism and the role it played in the Nazi rise to power in Germany. The second phase of the course is the development of Nazi policies related to the Final Solution (Holocaust) and concludes with the Nuremburg War Crimes Trial (IMT). Pre-requisites: Successful completion of ENGL 110 and ENGL 120, or consent of instructor. Spring 2010.
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