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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Devoted to the extensive reading of standard and classic monographs, biographies, or articles on
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3.00 Credits
A special topics seminar which will investigate some aspect of the Civil War, e.g., Europe and the American Civil War, Abolitionism. The topic will vary from year to year. Each student, in consultation with the seminar director, will write a research paper related to the topic.
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3.00 Credits
This course offers practical learning experience at a historic site, museum, archive, government agency, or similar setting. Students will work at least 40 hours at tasks assigned by the cooperating site supervisor and the course instructor. A research paper related to the site will be written by the student in consultation with the instructor.
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3.00 Credits
This course provides practical learning experience in a Civil War or 19th-century related park, museum, library, or similar setting. Possible sites are the national parks in Antietam and Harpers Ferry, Shepherd's George Tyler Moore Center for the Study of the Civil War, or the Museum of Civil War Medicine. Students will work at least 40 hours in tasks assigned by the cooperating site supervisor and the instructor and, in consultation with the instructor and the site supervisor, will produce a research paper related to some aspect of the site.
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3.00 Credits
An intensive research and writing course that examines the life of the common soldier of the Civil War and the society of which he was a part. It includes a research trip to the National Archives and participation in the annual summer seminar hosted by the George Tyler Moore Center for the Study of the Civil War.
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3.00 Credits
The course will familiarize students with major thinkers and intellectual movements in the Western world from approximately 1750 to the later 20th century. It will treat the French Enlightenment as the impetus for a variety of conflicting efforts to understand human nature, society, and the cosmos.
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3.00 Credits
A study of modern health problems and their solutions. Mental health and stress, drug use and abuse, fitness and nutrition, human sexuality, cancer, cardiovascular disease, environmental health, and the aging process will be discussed.
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3.00 Credits
This introductory course examines the effects of Workplace Health Promotion (WHP) programs, including chemical dependency, exercise, heart disease, stress management, smoking cessation, nutrition and cancer screening on absenteeism, worker productivity and peak performance, worker satisfaction and morale, worker injury and illness, and employer costs.
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3.00 Credits
Examination of activities that help individuals recognize components of lifestyles detrimental to good health, and development of principles and programs to improve quality of life.
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3.00 Credits
Provides training to enable laypersons to respond appropriately to emergency situations and teaches skills needed to manage emergency situations until professional personnel arrive. Students will learn to recognize emergencies, make first aid decisions, and provide care with little or no first aid supplies or equipment.
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