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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Spring Semester This course will study the organizational patterns and administrative problems involved in operating various leisure service agencies: forms of organization, planning, budget, personnel, liability, public relations and evaluation. Required for all majors of senior standing. Prerequisite: Completion of DFE credits or by permission of instructor. 3 credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
Spring Semester A study of the implications of leisure and recreation as they relate to organization of recreation services. Visits to a variety of recreation agencies will be emphasized. Required of all majors of senior standing. Prerequisite: Completion of DFE credits or by permission of instructor. 3 credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
Fall-Spring Semesters Independent investigations of current problems facing the recreation field. These may include philosophical basis, delivery of services, professional problems, needed research, and certification or licensing. Recreation elective. Prerequisites: Permission of instructor and Coordinator of Recreation, junior or senior status and 12 hours of recreation. 1-3 credit hours each semester.
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3.00 Credits
This course introduces students to major concepts in the Jewish tradition as discussed in Judaism's primary sacred texts. Students will also learn about the development of the Jewish tradition through history. 3 credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
This course introduces students to Christianity's foundational concepts as developed in the New Testament, the writings of the Church Fathers and later writings. Additionally, the course introduces students to the historical development of the Christian tradition from a small Jewish sect into a world religion. 3 credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
This course explores how religion interacts with, challenges, and is challenged by other aspects of human cultural life including art, politics, and ethics. The course examines these interactions as they are discussed by leading religious thinkers and their critics including Plato, Augustine, Kant, Marx, Nietzsche, Tillich, Niebuhr, Wittgenstein, Levinas, and others. Prerequisite: WRT102. 3 credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
A study of the background of Catholicism, Protestantism, Judaism, and Native American religious traditions in the United States, as well as contemporary American religious movements. Prerequisite: WRT102. 3 credit hours. Satisfies ADR I.
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3.00 Credits
This course examines issues in the field of religious studies with an emphasis on interdisciplinary and cross-cultural perspectives. The specific topic for the course changes from semester to semester, according to faculty and student interest. In addition to courses on specific religious traditions, figures, movements, and sacred texts, topics may include religion and culture, religion and sociology, religion and ethics, religion and gender, and religion and film. Prerequisite: WRT102. 3 credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
This course explores how women have factored into or been excluded from the roles, rituals, scriptures, theologies, and governing images of some of the world's major religions. Additionally, the course explores contemporary efforts to contend with challenges to women in these traditions. Prerequisite: WRT102. 3 credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
An opportunity for the student who wishes to undertake a well-defined research project in an area of philosophy. While the student conducts work under the guidance of a faculty member of his or her own choosing, the project is carried out in an independent manner without regular class meetings. Effective independent study is characterized by a reduction in formal instruction and an increase in the individual student's responsibility and initiative in the learning process. Prerequisite: WRT101. 1-3 credit hours.
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