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Course Criteria
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0.00 Credits
0 to 15 hours. Prerequisite: 3502 or equivalent. An intensive, full-time seminar concerned with the organization and interrelatedness of knowledge around a central theme, problem or topic in the social sciences. The seminar is taught by one or more faculty members from the social sciences area. (Irreg)
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: 1313, 1323, or equivalent. Issues affecting institutions from family through those affecting the national population, including health care, education, the economy, and the interaction of government with all such questions. Problems arising from inequality among groups in the society, including poverty, elderly and young, minority and majority, and gender concerns. (F, Sp, Su)
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: 1313, 1323, or equivalent. Conformity and deviance in societies. Topics addressed include sexual behavior, drug use and crime and violence. It also looks at social problems expressed on a broader scale, including those associated with increased problems and associated urbanization and the outbreaks of war, terrorism and international conflict arising from inequalities occurring on an international scale. (F, Sp, Su)
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: 1313, 1323, or equivalent. Analysis of the relationship of women to consumption and consumer culture. At the end of the course, students will be able to take a position and defend it with respect to various controversial arguments or ideas about women's relationship to consumption and consumer culture. (F, Sp, Su)
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: 1313, 1323, or equivalent. Concepts, principles and case studies involved in ethics in the social sciences, with a particular emphasis on business ethics. Students will examine core values in light of social conditioning, short-term profiteering and the need for affiliation. (F, Sp, Su)
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: junior standing. Examines the unique and diverse styles of four important Americans from four different eras in order to determine the impact these individuals had on society and posterity. (F, Sp, Su)
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0.00 Credits
0 to 15 hours. Prerequisite: 3502 or equivalent. An interdisciplinary approach to study in the natural sciences available through independent study, internet courses, or weekend classes. Classes include team project assignments that are planned and guided by a professor from the natural sciences area. (Irreg.)
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: 1413, 1423, or equivalent. An overview of chemistry, with fundamentals and organic processes explained. The course investigates chemicals found in everyday life and on the earth with the aim of understanding how chemical processes are at work, both in the environment around us and in energy, air, water, biochemistry, drugs, poisons and chemicals. It is ideal for the generalist and the interdisciplinary student, although it also provides excellent material for specialists. (F, Sp, Su)
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: 1413, 1423, or equivalent. Select topics including the Big Bang, formation of matter and its association into stars and planets, plate tectonics and the physics and chemistry of the atmosphere. (F, Sp, Su)
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: 1413, 1423, or equivalent. A study of the interactions of genetic change in organisms with environmental stress, and contributions of these interactions to evolution. (F, Sp, Su)
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