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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
This study of abnormal psychology in American society, including its occurrence, condition, and treatment, emphasizes the maintenance of good mental health. Topics include mood disorders, substance abuse, brain disorders and dream analysis. Prerequisite: Introduction to Psychology. 3 hours Lecture - 3 credits
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3.00 Credits
Non-Western Societies surveys the non-Western cultures and histories of Asia, Africa, and the Middle East, and their nineteenth and twentieth century interactions with the outside world. This course will explore pre-modern origins and enduring traditions of each region, address various independence movements of the twentieth century, and discuss examples of contact with the West, conflicts arising over USSoviet Cold War competition, terrorism, and the recent challenges to the emerging global economy. 3 hours Lecture and Discussion—3 credits
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1.00 Credits
Students are required to attend or participate in 14 cultural events, including concerts and recitals, lectures presented by distinguished authors, visits to museums, art galleries and shows, and theater presentations from among which the student must select a variety - 1 credit
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3.00 Credits
Examines global problems in historical perspective across time - war, terrorism, and the threat of war; cultural, racial, ideological, religious, gender, and economic struggles; and the search for peace and order. 3 hours Lecture - 3 credits
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3.00 Credits
This course analyzes the development, processes, and institutions of the global political economy, with an emphasis upon the politics and diplomacy of international trade and finance. 3 hours Lecture - 3 credits
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3.00 Credits
Under faculty direction, students explore topics in any of the following fields: American History, European History, World History, or the History of Science/Agriculture/Technology. This tutorial approach culminates in the preparation of a paper of considerable length with an oral defense/presentation. 3 hours Lecture - 3 credits.
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3.00 Credits
The history of American foreign relations concerns power, profit, security, politics, and ideology. This offering of US diplomatic history, covering selected topics from 1775 to the present, will explore competing interpretations of America's hot and cold wars, periods of peace, isolation, and intervention. 3 hours Lecture and Discussion - 3 credits
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3.00 Credits
The scientific studies of how people interact, communicate, influence, interpret and relates to one another. The courses focuses on the way an individual relates to groups as well as on how various groups affect the individual. Topics include prejudice, groupthink, attitude inoculation, polarization, eyewitness testimony, altruism, aggression, bargaining, mediation, arbitration, and conciliation. 3 hours Lecture and Discussion - 3 credits
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3.00 Credits
The social institutions of selected racial, ethnic and religious minorities, as well as the institutional, demographic and social/psychological aspects of intergroup relations, are reviewed. Prerequisite: Introduction to Sociology. 3 hours Lecture and Discussion - 3 credits
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3.00 Credits
This course traces a history and background of American family patterns that includes the structure, functions, and values of the contemporary family. It also deals with the factors that may result in the disorganization of the family. 3 hours Lecture and Discussion - 3 credits
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