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- Textbook Information
- Course Type Key
| Term | Section Name | Status | Dept. | Location | Dates | Days | Times | Comments/Requisites | Faculty | Course Type | Capacity |
Enrolled/ Available/ Waitlist |
Credits |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 26/FA |
ACC-201-01
Financial Accounting
OPEN
|
Accounting BAX 202 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM |
|
|
50 | 0 / 50 / 0 | 1.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
ART-126-01
Studio Art Fundamentals
OPEN
|
Art FIN A124 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W
10:00AM-11:50AM |
|
|
LFA | 10 | 0 / 10 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ART-202-01
Art in Film
OPEN
|
Art FIN M120 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM |
|
|
LFA | 24 | 0 / 24 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ART-210-01
Medical Arts Observation
OPEN
|
Art FIN M140 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM |
|
|
LFA | 12 | 0 / 12 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ART-210-02
Comics and Graphic Novels
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-170-01 |
Art HAY 003 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM |
|
|
LFA | 22 | 0 / 22 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ART-223-01
Ceramics
OPEN
|
Art FIN A119 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W
1:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
LFA | 13 | 0 / 13 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ART-224-01
Photography
OPEN
|
Art FIN A113 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
1:10PM-3:00PM |
|
|
LFA | 11 | 0 / 11 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ART-225-01
Experimental Animation
OPEN
|
Art FIN A133 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
1:10PM-3:00PM |
This course will provide students with the knowledge and tools to
create their own animations using Adobe After Effects and
Photoshop. Techniques covered include (but are not limited to)
isolating objects and animating layers, working with masks and
shapes, photographic/collage approaches, including
distorting/animating with the Puppet Tools, and working with 2D
images in 3D space. Sound design, composition, editing
techniques, color grading, and other image-making principles will
be explored through a series of short animation experiments. In
each project, students will be challenged to develop
aesthetically interesting, visually abstract approaches to their
ideas. No previous video editing experience is required.
|
|
LFA | 10 | 0 / 10 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ART-228-01
Painting: Mixed Media
OPEN
|
Art FIN A131 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W
1:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
LFA | 12 | 0 / 12 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ASI-112-01
Premodern China
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-260-01 |
Asian Studies DET 112 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM |
This survey course introduces Chinese history and cultural
traditions from ancient times to 1911, outlining historical
trends such as Confucianism, Daoism, Buddhism, dynastic cycles,
literati culture, traditional gender roles, and interactions with
the 亚洲通st. 亚洲通 will analyze a variety of primary sources (in
English translation), including poetry, fiction, philosophical
writings, first-person accounts, and visual art. No
pre-requisites.
|
|
GCJD, HPR, LFA | 12 | 0 / 12 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ASI-112-02
Martial Arts Film
OPEN
|
Asian Studies DET 109 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M F
2:10PM-3:00PM W
2:10PM-4:00PM |
This course traces major trends in Chinese martial arts cinema,
including works from mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and
beyond. 亚洲通 analyze films from multiple angles, including
aesthetics, historical context, production, circulation, and
adaptation. 亚洲通 consider how films articulate diverse identities,
operating in relation to national and transnational cultural
institutions. All films include English subtitles. Film
screenings in class 亚洲通dnesdays 2:10-4:00.
|
|
GCJD, LFA | 12 | 0 / 12 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ASI-277-01
Trade Politics
OPEN
|
Asian Studies BAX 202 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
Trade politics is a complex nexus of domestic and international
politics, economic conditions, global and regional institutions,
business interests, and civil society. This course provides
students with both theoretical foundations and practical tools to
analyze trade politics. 亚洲通 begin with the international trade
system, focusing on policies for trade in goods andservices, as
well as tariffs and non-tariff barriers. 亚洲通 will examine how
these policies shape international relations and connect them to
current debates such as the trade wars. 亚洲通 then turn to the
winners and losers of trade. Who benefits financially from trade,
and whobears the costs? How do factors such as gender, race,
political ideology, education, and occupation shape public
opinion toward trade? 亚洲通 will consider how people from diverse
backgrounds understand and react to global trade, and how public
attitudes influence political, economic, and social policies.
Finally, students will gain quantitative literacy by learning MS
Excel for data management and visualization. Students will
analyze trade data from international organizations and
comparetrade developments in the Global North and South. Students
will also design, analyze, and present survey data. The course
concludes by reflecting on trade's impact on development
andequality.
There are no prerequisites. Students should come prepared for
active participation in student-centered learning
|
|
BSC, GCJD, QL | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
BIO-101-01
Human Biology
OPEN
|
Biology HAY 104 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
8:00AM-9:15AM |
|
|
SL | 32 | 0 / 32 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
BIO-111-01
General Biology I
OPEN
|
Biology HAY 104 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM |
|
|
QL, SL | 80 | 0 / 80 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
BIO-111L-01
General Biol I Lab
OPEN
|
Biology HAY 111 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M
1:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
BIO-111L-02
General Biol I Lab
OPEN
|
Biology HAY 111 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU
1:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
BIO-111L-03
General Biol I Lab
OPEN
|
Biology HAY 111 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
W
1:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
BIO-111L-04
General Biol I Lab
OPEN
|
Biology HAY 111 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TH
1:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
BLS-201-01
Introduction to Black Studies
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-260-01 |
Black Studies CEN 215 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM |
|
|
GCJD | 15 | 0 / 15 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
BLS-280-02
W.E.B. DuBois
OPEN
|
Black Studies CEN 215 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM |
This course offers an extended study of the social and political
philosophy of W.E.B. Du Bois (1868-1963). As someone who
dedicated his life's work to studying "the Negro problem" and
"the program of Negro freedom," Du Bois's reflections on racial
discrimination, social, political, and economic inequality, the
possibility of racial integration, and the meaning of racial
self-determination continue to inform how we think about racial
justice and injustice in the U.S. The course focuses on three
main questions in Du Bois's thought. The first question has to do
with the psychology of race. That is, what motivates white racial
prejudice? And how does racial discrimination affect Black
people's relation towards the self and others? The second
question regards social, political, and economic inequality. Do
poor whites and poor Blacks suffer from the same kind of
inequality? Or are there specific social factors that explain the
unequal distribution of inequality in the U.S.? Lastly, the third
question regards integration and self-determination. Is racial
integration possible in the U.S.? Is Black self-determination
compatible with racial integration? While the course centers on
Du Bois as a historical thinker, we will focus on how his social
and political philosophy can help us think about our present
racial relations.
|
|
GCJD, HPR | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
BLS-280-03
Police, Investigators & Spies
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-200-03 |
Black Studies LIB LSEM |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
Police, Investigators, and Spies: Histories of Police, the FBI,
and the CIA
Police, investigators, and spies have a coveted space within U.S.
politics and cultural imagination. This is reflected in the
budgets for these institutions at the federal, state, and local
levels as well as their place in cultural texts such as films and
television shows. In this class, students will be invited to
explore the role of police, the FBI, and the CIA within the
United States and the globe through an engagement with academic
histories as well as primary source materials, including
documents produced by and about the institutions.
|
|
HPR | 13 | 0 / 13 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
BLS-281-01
African American History
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-244-01 |
Black Studies BAX 101 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM |
|
|
HPR | 30 | 0 / 30 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
CHE-101-01
Survey of Chemistry
OPEN
|
Chemistry HAY 003 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM |
|
|
QL, SL | 48 | 0 / 48 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
CHE-101L-01
Survey Chemistry Lab
OPEN
|
Chemistry HAY 315 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M
1:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
16 | 0 / 16 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
CHE-101L-02
Survey Chemistry Lab
OPEN
|
Chemistry HAY 315 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU
1:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
16 | 0 / 16 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
CHE-101L-03
Survey Chemistry Lab
OPEN
|
Chemistry HAY 315 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
W
1:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
16 | 0 / 16 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
CHE-106-01
Survey of Biochemistry
OPEN
|
Chemistry HAY 321 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
|
|
SL | 16 | 0 / 16 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
CHE-106L-01
Survey of Biochemistry Lab
OPEN
|
Chemistry HAY 315 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TH
1:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
16 | 0 / 16 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
CHE-111-01
General Chemistry I
OPEN
|
Chemistry HAY 104 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM |
|
|
QL, SL | 52 | 0 / 52 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
CHE-111L-01
General Chemistry Lab
OPEN
|
Chemistry HAY 316 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M
1:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
12 | 0 / 12 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
CHE-111L-02
General Chemistry Lab
OPEN
|
Chemistry HAY 316 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU
1:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
12 | 0 / 12 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
CHE-111L-03
General Chemistry Lab
OPEN
|
Chemistry HAY 316 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
W
1:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
12 | 0 / 12 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
CHE-111L-04
General Chemistry Lab
OPEN
|
Chemistry HAY 316 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TH
1:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
12 | 0 / 12 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
CHI-101-01
Elementary Chinese I
OPEN
|
Chinese DET 211 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM |
|
|
16 | 0 / 16 / 0 | 1.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
CHI-101L-01
Elementary Chinese I Lab
OPEN
|
Chinese DET 226 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M
10:00AM-10:50AM |
|
|
4 | 0 / 4 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
CHI-101L-02
Elementary Chinese I Lab
OPEN
|
Chinese DET 226 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M
2:10PM-3:00PM |
|
|
4 | 0 / 4 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
CHI-101L-03
Elementary Chinese I Lab
OPEN
|
Chinese DET 226 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
W
10:00AM-10:50AM |
|
|
4 | 0 / 4 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
CHI-101L-04
Elementary Chinese I Lab
OPEN
|
Chinese DET 226 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
W
2:10PM-3:00PM |
|
|
4 | 0 / 4 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
CLA-101-01
Classical Mythology
OPEN
|
Classics HAY 319 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM |
|
|
LFA | 25 | 0 / 25 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
CLA-213-01
Art of Power in Ancient Rome
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-210-01 |
Classics DET 109 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM |
Immense power rested in the hands of Rome's emperors. And while
their peccadillos tend to dominate our imaginations today, in
antiquity emperors' public images were carefully curated in a way
that would make Madison Avenue ad agencies proud. Key in this
endeavor was the deployment of artwork and building projects,
which ranged from musclebound portraits and gilded building
complexes to infrastructure that we might initially consider
mundane, such as aqueducts and sewers.
This course travels back in time to investigate the strategies
that the imperial court used to claim, justify, and maintain its
power within the city of Rome itself. To that end, part of our
consideration will revolve around the monuments' multiple
audiences - rivals to power, traditionalists, and a cosmopolitan
population drawn from every corner of the empire. Short papers,
quizzes, and exams form the backbone of evaluation for the
course.
|
|
HPR, LFA | 15 | 0 / 15 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
CLA-240-01
Ancient Philosophy
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHI-240-01 |
Classics CEN 215 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
|
|
HPR, LFA | 30 | 0 / 30 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
CSC-101-01
Intro to Computer Science
OPEN
|
Computer Science GOO 101 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
8:00AM-8:50AM |
|
|
QL | 12 | 0 / 12 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
DV3-252-01
Stats for Social Sciences
OPEN
|
Division III BAX 214 |
8/26/26- 10/14/26 |
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM |
|
|
QL | 30 | 0 / 30 / 0 | 0.50 | |||
| 26/FA |
ECO-101-01
Principles of Economics
OPEN
|
Economics BAX 114 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM |
|
|
BSC | 18 | 0 / 18 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ECO-101-02
Principles of Economics
OPEN
|
Economics BAX 214 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
|
|
BSC | 28 | 0 / 28 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ECO-101-03
Principles of Economics
OPEN
|
Economics CEN 215 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM |
|
|
BSC | 28 | 0 / 28 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ECO-101-04
Principles of Economics
OPEN
|
Economics BAX 214 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
3:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
BSC | 18 | 0 / 18 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ECO-241-01
Game Theory
OPEN
cross-listed with
PPE-351-01 |
Economics BAX 202 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM |
|
|
BSC, QL | 25 | 0 / 25 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
EDU-101-01
Intro Child & Adolescent Devel
OPEN
|
Education Studies DET 209 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM |
|
|
BSC | 13 | 0 / 13 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
EDU-310-01
Hist & Phil Environmental Educ
OPEN
|
Education Studies MXI 214 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM |
This course meets a humanities/social science core requirement
for the Environmental Studies Minor.
|
|
HPR | 12 | 0 / 12 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ENG-101-03
Composition
OPEN
|
English CEN 300 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
3:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
15 | 0 / 15 / 0 | 1.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
ENG-101-04
Composition
OPEN
|
English CEN 300 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
8:00AM-8:50AM |
|
|
15 | 0 / 15 / 0 | 1.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
ENG-110-01
Intro to Creative Writing
OPEN
|
English CEN 300 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
8:00AM-9:15AM |
|
|
LS | 16 | 0 / 16 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ENG-170-01
Comics and Graphic Novels
OPEN
cross-listed with
ART-210-02 |
English HAY 003 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM |
|
|
LFA | 22 | 0 / 22 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ENG-180-01
Medical Humanities
OPEN
|
English CEN 305 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
Studies show that reading poetry and fiction about illness helps
both doctors and patients. More and more medical schools in the
U.S. require a "Narrative Medicine" course, recognizing that
language has the capacity to comfort us in times of need. How do
writers, poets, filmmakers, visual artists, and historians
portray the sick? What social, cultural, psychological, and
medical issues do they raise in these portrayals? 亚洲通 will read,
watch, and discuss creative depictions of AIDS, Covid 19, Chagas
disease, and other conditions as well as texts about mental
health. How have societies around the world classified sickness
and how have they treated bodies and minds that are unwell? How
have communities of color, women, and LGBTQ patients described
their hospitalizations and diagnoses? This is an
interdisciplinary class that includes literary analysis,
philosophy, history, political science, global health,
epidemiology, and other disciplines. The class will host visiting
speakers. It will also have a significant community engagement
component.
|
|
GCJD, LFA | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ENG-202-01
Writing With Power and Grace
OPEN
|
English CEN 300 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM |
|
|
LS | 10 | 0 / 10 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ENG-230-01
Writing for Video Games
OPEN
|
English CEN 300 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM |
|
|
LS | 12 | 0 / 12 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ENG-239-01
American Lit Before 1900
OPEN
|
English CEN 300 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM |
|
|
LFA | 14 | 0 / 14 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ENG-260-01
Introduction to Black Studies
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-201-01 |
English CEN 215 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM |
|
|
GCJD | 15 | 0 / 15 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ENG-297-01
亚洲通 Get Lit: Reading Like a Pro
OPEN
|
English CEN 304 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM |
|
|
LFA | 15 | 0 / 15 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ENG-298-01
Business & Technical Writing
OPEN
|
English DET 212 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM |
|
|
LS | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
ENG-310-01
The American Stage
OPEN
cross-listed with
THE-217-01 |
English FIN TGRR |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM |
|
|
15 | 0 / 15 / 0 | 1.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
FRE-101-01
Elementary French I
OPEN
|
French DET 211 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM |
|
|
20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
FRE-101L-01
Elementary French 1 Lab
OPEN
|
French DET 226 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M
8:00AM-8:50AM |
|
|
5 | 0 / 5 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
FRE-101L-02
Elementary French 1 Lab
OPEN
|
French DET 226 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M
3:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
5 | 0 / 5 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
FRE-101L-03
Elementary French 1 Lab
OPEN
|
French DET 226 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU
8:00AM-8:50AM |
|
|
5 | 0 / 5 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
FRE-101L-04
Elementary French 1 Lab
OPEN
|
French DET 226 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU
2:40PM-3:30PM |
|
|
5 | 0 / 5 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
FRE-103-01
Accelerated Elementary French
OPEN
|
French DET 211 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM |
|
|
WL | 15 | 0 / 15 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
FRE-103L-01
Accelerated Elem French Lab
OPEN
|
French DET 226 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
W
8:00AM-8:50AM |
|
|
5 | 0 / 5 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
FRE-103L-02
Accelerated Elem French Lab
OPEN
|
French DET 226 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
W
3:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
5 | 0 / 5 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
FRE-103L-03
Accelerated Elem French Lab
OPEN
|
French DET 226 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TH
8:00AM-8:50AM |
|
|
5 | 0 / 5 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
FRE-201L-01
Intermediate French Lab
OPEN
|
French DET 226 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
F
8:00AM-8:50AM |
|
|
5 | 0 / 5 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
FRE-201L-02
Intermediate French Lab
OPEN
|
French DET 226 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
F
3:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
5 | 0 / 5 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
GEN-101-01
Intro to Gender Studies
OPEN
|
Gender Studies DET 112 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
|
|
GCJD, HPR, LFA | 17 | 0 / 17 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
GEN-205-01
Fatherhood
OPEN
cross-listed with
PSY-105-01 |
Gender Studies CEN 216 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM |
|
|
BSC | 40 | 0 / 40 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
GEN-279-01
Queer Theatre
OPEN
cross-listed with
THE-219-03 |
Gender Studies FIN TGRR |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
In this course we will study the history of the queer theatre
movement and how queer theatre makers were impacted by different
moments in American theatre history. Students will be asked to
examine how queerness and the societal acceptability of queerness
impacts the work of artists, American theatre, and queer
performance. Students will also be asked to examine their own
biases in relation to different forms of queer performance.
|
|
LFA | 15 | 0 / 15 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
GER-101-01
Elementary German I
OPEN
|
German DET 212 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM |
|
|
16 | 0 / 16 / 0 | 1.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
GER-101-02
Elementary German I
OPEN
|
German DET 220 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM |
|
|
16 | 0 / 16 / 0 | 1.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
GER-101L-01
Elementary German I Lab
OPEN
|
German DET 220 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M
9:00AM-9:50AM |
|
|
6 | 0 / 6 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
GER-101L-02
Elementary German I Lab
OPEN
|
German DET 220 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU
1:10PM-2:00PM |
|
|
6 | 0 / 6 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
GER-101L-03
Elementary German I Lab
OPEN
|
German DET 220 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
W
8:00AM-8:50AM |
|
|
6 | 0 / 6 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
GER-101L-04
Elementary German I Lab
OPEN
|
German DET 220 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TH
9:45AM-10:35AM |
|
|
6 | 0 / 6 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
GER-101L-05
Elementary German I Lab
OPEN
|
German DET 220 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TH
2:40PM-3:30PM |
|
|
6 | 0 / 6 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
GER-101L-06
Elementary German I Lab
OPEN
|
German DET 220 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
F
9:00AM-9:50AM |
|
|
6 | 0 / 6 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
GER-201L-01
Intermediate German Lab
OPEN
|
German DET 220 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU
9:45AM-10:35AM |
|
|
5 | 0 / 5 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
GER-201L-02
Intermediate German Lab
OPEN
|
German DET 220 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU
2:40PM-3:30PM |
|
|
5 | 0 / 5 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
GER-201L-03
Intermediate German Lab
OPEN
|
German DET 220 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
W
2:10PM-3:00PM |
|
|
5 | 0 / 5 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
GER-201L-04
Intermediate German Lab
OPEN
|
German DET 220 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
W
3:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
5 | 0 / 5 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
GHL-177-01
Medical Humanities
OPEN
|
Global Health CEN 305 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
Studies show that reading poetry and fiction about illness helps
both doctors and patients. More and more medical schools in the
U.S. require a "Narrative Medicine" course, recognizing that
language has the capacity to comfort us in times of need. How do
writers, poets, filmmakers, visual artists, and historians
portray the sick? What social, cultural, psychological, and
medical issues do they raise in these portrayals? 亚洲通 will read,
watch, and discuss creative depictions of AIDS, Covid 19, Chagas
disease, and other conditions as well as texts about mental
health. How have societies around the world classified sickness
and how have they treated bodies and minds that are unwell? How
have communities of color, women, and LGBTQ patients described
their hospitalizations and diagnoses? This is an
interdisciplinary class that includes literary analysis,
philosophy, history, political science, global health,
epidemiology, and other disciplines. The class will host visiting
speakers. It will also have a significant community engagement
component.
|
|
GCJD, LFA | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
GHL-219-01
Healing: Religion & Sociology
OPEN
|
Global Health HAY 319 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
|
|
35 | 0 / 35 / 0 | 1.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
GHL-219-02
Drugs & Society in Modern Hist
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-200-02 |
Global Health BAX 311 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM |
What is an illegal drug?
This course examines the history of drugs in society by first
asking what an illegal drug or intoxicant might be. The class
will then consider how different cultures have accepted or
rejected drugs based on their usefulness or danger to the social
order. 亚洲通 will examine changing cultural attitudes toward drugs,
the rise of modern drug regulation, and the development of
pharmaceutical drugs. Key topics will include: The growth and
regulation of the opium trade in the 19th century; Drugs and
Sports; Alcohol policies in the 19th and early 20th centuries;
The global war on drugs; Appreciation for Cannabis, Alcohol,
Meth, Viagra, Chocolate, and Coffee; The use and administration
of LSD and amphetamines by various governmental agencies.
This course is suitable for first-year and advanced students
interested in history, sociology, and public health. There is no
immersion trip associated with this course, but to be blunt, in
addition to short assignments, in-class experiments, and two
exams, students will have a daily dose of reading and discussion.
|
|
15 | 0 / 15 / 0 | 1.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
GRK-101-01
Beginning Greek I
OPEN
|
Greek DET 111 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM |
Successful completion of both GRK-101 and GRK-102 in combination
will fulfill the World Languages distribution requirement.
|
|
20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
GRK-101L-01
Beginning Greek I Lab
OPEN
|
Greek TBA TBA |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TBA
TBA-TBA |
|
|
20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
HIS-101-01
World History to 1500
OPEN
|
History MXI 109 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM |
|
|
HPR | 30 | 0 / 30 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
HIS-200-01
Digitizing Immigration History
OPEN
cross-listed with
HSP-250-01 |
History BAX 212 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM |
How has the Internet changed what we know about the past? In this
hands-on course, we'll answer that question by focusing on the
history of immigration. 亚洲通'll roll up our sleeves and
collaboratively play--and sometimes fail--with AI chatbots,
online archives, and digital narration tools. Throughout, we'll
think about the implications of doing immigration history on the
Internet, including the ethical challenges of sharing immigrants'
stories and reducing human lives to data. 亚洲通'll conclude the
semester with a 亚洲通b-based research project. No experience in
computer science, digital media, or migration history required,
although an interest in at least one of these is recommended!
|
|
HPR | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
HIS-200-02
Drugs & Society in Modern Hist
OPEN
cross-listed with
GHL-219-02 |
History BAX 311 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM |
What is an illegal drug?
This course examines the history of drugs in society by first
asking what an illegal drug or intoxicant might be. The class
will then consider how different cultures have accepted or
rejected drugs based on their usefulness or danger to the social
order. 亚洲通 will examine changing cultural attitudes toward drugs,
the rise of modern drug regulation, and the development of
pharmaceutical drugs. Key topics will include: The growth and
regulation of the opium trade in the 19th century; Drugs and
Sports; Alcohol policies in the 19th and early 20th centuries;
The global war on drugs; Appreciation for Cannabis, Alcohol,
Meth, Viagra, Chocolate, and Coffee; The use and administration
of LSD and amphetamines by various governmental agencies.
This course is suitable for first-year and advanced students
interested in history, sociology, and public health. There is no
immersion trip associated with this course, but to be blunt, in
addition to short assignments, in-class experiments, and two
exams, students will have a daily dose of reading and discussion.
|
|
HPR | 15 | 0 / 15 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
HIS-200-03
Police, Investigators & Spies
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-280-03 |
History LIB LSEM |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
Police, Investigators, and Spies: Histories of Police, the FBI,
and the CIA
Police, investigators, and spies have a coveted space within U.S.
politics and cultural imagination. This is reflected in the
budgets for these institutions at the federal, state, and local
levels as well as their place in cultural texts such as films and
television shows. In this class, students will be invited to
explore the role of police, the FBI, and the CIA within the
United States and the globe through an engagement with academic
histories as well as primary source materials, including
documents produced by and about the institutions.
|
|
HPR | 13 | 0 / 13 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
HIS-201-01
Big History
OPEN
|
History BAX 202 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM |
|
|
HPR | 30 | 0 / 30 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
HIS-210-01
Art of Power in Ancient Rome
OPEN
cross-listed with
CLA-213-01 |
History DET 109 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM |
Immense power rested in the hands of Rome's emperors. And while
their peccadillos tend to dominate our imaginations today, in
antiquity emperors' public images were carefully curated in a way
that would make Madison Avenue ad agencies proud. Key in this
endeavor was the deployment of artwork and building projects,
which ranged from musclebound portraits and gilded building
complexes to infrastructure that we might initially consider
mundane, such as aqueducts and sewers.
This course travels back in time to investigate the strategies
that the imperial court used to claim, justify, and maintain its
power within the city of Rome itself. To that end, part of our
consideration will revolve around the monuments' multiple
audiences - rivals to power, traditionalists, and a cosmopolitan
population drawn from every corner of the empire. Short papers,
quizzes, and exams form the backbone of evaluation for the
course.
|
|
HPR, LFA | 15 | 0 / 15 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
HIS-241-01
United States to 1865
OPEN
|
History BAX 101 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM |
|
|
HPR | 30 | 0 / 30 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
HIS-244-01
African American History
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-281-01 |
History BAX 101 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM |
|
|
GCJD, HPR | 30 | 0 / 30 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
HIS-260-01
Premodern China
OPEN
cross-listed with
ASI-112-01 |
History DET 112 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM |
This survey course introduces Chinese history and cultural
traditions from ancient times to 1911, outlining historical
trends such as Confucianism, Daoism, Buddhism, dynastic cycles,
literati culture, traditional gender roles, and interactions with
the 亚洲通st. 亚洲通 will analyze a variety of primary sources (in
English translation), including poetry, fiction, philosophical
writings, first-person accounts, and visual art. No
pre-requisites.
|
|
GCJD, HPR, LFA | 12 | 0 / 12 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
HSP-107-01
Medical Humanities
OPEN
|
Hispanic Studies CEN 305 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
Studies show that reading poetry and fiction about illness helps
both doctors and patients. More and more medical schools in the
U.S. require a "Narrative Medicine" course, recognizing that
language has the capacity to comfort us in times of need. How do
writers, poets, filmmakers, visual artists, and historians
portray the sick? What social, cultural, psychological, and
medical issues do they raise in these portrayals? 亚洲通 will read,
watch, and discuss creative depictions of AIDS, Covid 19, Chagas
disease, and other conditions as well as texts about mental
health. How have societies around the world classified sickness
and how have they treated bodies and minds that are unwell? How
have communities of color, women, and LGBTQ patients described
their hospitalizations and diagnoses? This is an
interdisciplinary class that includes literary analysis,
philosophy, history, political science, global health,
epidemiology, and other disciplines. The class will host visiting
speakers. It will also have a significant community engagement
component.
|
|
GCJD, LFA | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
HSP-250-01
Digitizing Immigration History
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-200-01 |
Hispanic Studies BAX 212 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM |
How has the Internet changed what we know about the past? In this
hands-on course, we'll answer that question by focusing on the
history of immigration. 亚洲通'll roll up our sleeves and
collaboratively play--and sometimes fail--with AI chatbots,
online archives, and digital narration tools. Throughout, we'll
think about the implications of doing immigration history on the
Internet, including the ethical challenges of sharing immigrants'
stories and reducing human lives to data. 亚洲通'll conclude the
semester with a 亚洲通b-based research project. No experience in
computer science, digital media, or migration history required,
although an interest in at least one of these is recommended!
|
|
20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
LAT-101-01
Beginning Latin I
OPEN
|
Latin DET 111 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM |
Successful completion of both LAT-101 and LAT-102 in combination
will fulfill the World Languages distribution requirement.
|
|
10 | 0 / 10 / 0 | 1.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
LAT-101L-01
Beginning Latin Lab
OPEN
|
Latin DET 111 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU
8:25AM-9:15AM |
|
|
25 | 0 / 25 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
LAT-101L-02
Beginning Latin Lab
OPEN
|
Latin DET 111 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU
2:40PM-3:30PM |
|
|
25 | 0 / 25 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
MAT-100-01
Math Modeling and Precalculus
OPEN
|
Math HAY 002 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
Enrollment by instructor permission only. Fill out form at
https://forms.office.com/r/CpVG37L0zd
|
|
QL | 12 | 0 / 12 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
MAT-100-02
Math Modeling and Precalculus
OPEN
|
Math HAY 002 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM |
Enrollment by instructor permission only. Fill out form at
https://forms.office.com/r/CpVG37L0zd
|
|
QL | 12 | 0 / 12 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
MAT-108-01
Intro to Discrete Structures
OPEN
|
Math HAY 002 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM |
|
|
QL | 23 | 0 / 23 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
MSL-001-01
Leadership Lab (ROTC)
OPEN
|
Military Science & Leadership TBA TBA |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TH
3:00PM-5:20PM |
This is an ROTC course held on the campus of Purdue University.
It meets on Purdue's academic calendar. Fall Semester 2026 at
Purdue is from August 24 - December 19, 2026. Purdue's Fall Break
2026 is October 12-13, 2026. Purdue's academic calendar is at
https://catalog.purdue.edu/preview_program.php?catoid=18&poid=336
82.
|
|
10 | 0 / 10 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
MSL-101-01
Introduction to the Army
OPEN
|
Military Science & Leadership TBA TBA |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TH
1:30PM-2:20PM |
This is an ROTC course held on the campus of Purdue University.
It meets on Purdue's academic calendar. Fall Semester 2026 at
Purdue is from August 24 - December 19, 2026. Purdue's Fall Break
2026 is October 12-13, 2026. Purdue's academic calendar is at
https://catalog.purdue.edu/preview_program.php?catoid=18&poid=336
82.
|
|
10 | 0 / 10 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
MSL-201-01
Leadership and Ethics
OPEN
|
Military Science & Leadership TBA TBA |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
10:30AM-11:20AM |
This is an ROTC course held on the campus of Purdue University.
It meets on Purdue's academic calendar. Fall Semester 2026 at
Purdue is from August 24 - December 19, 2026. Purdue's Fall Break
2026 is October 12-13, 2026. Purdue's academic calendar is at
https://catalog.purdue.edu/preview_program.php?catoid=18&poid=336
82.
|
|
10 | 0 / 10 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
MSL-201-02
Leadership and Ethics
OPEN
|
Military Science & Leadership TBA TBA |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
1:30PM-2:20PM |
This is an ROTC course held on the campus of Purdue University.
It meets on Purdue's academic calendar. Fall Semester 2026 at
Purdue is from August 24 - December 19, 2026. Purdue's Fall Break
2026 is October 12-13, 2026. Purdue's academic calendar is at
https://catalog.purdue.edu/preview_program.php?catoid=18&poid=336
82.
|
|
10 | 0 / 10 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
MSL-301-01
Training Management & Function
OPEN
|
Military Science & Leadership TBA TBA |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
10:30AM-11:45AM |
This is an ROTC course held on the campus of Purdue University.
It meets on Purdue's academic calendar. Fall Semester 2026 at
Purdue is from August 24 - December 19, 2026. Purdue's Fall Break
2026 is October 12-13, 2026. Purdue's academic calendar is at
https://catalog.purdue.edu/preview_program.php?catoid=18&poid=336
82.
|
|
10 | 0 / 10 / 0 | 0.50 | ||||
| 26/FA |
MSL-301-02
Training Management & Function
OPEN
|
Military Science & Leadership TBA TBA |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
12:00PM-1:15PM |
This is an ROTC course held on the campus of Purdue University.
It meets on Purdue's academic calendar. Fall Semester 2026 at
Purdue is from August 24 - December 19, 2026. Purdue's Fall Break
2026 is October 12-13, 2026. Purdue's academic calendar is at
https://catalog.purdue.edu/preview_program.php?catoid=18&poid=336
82.
|
|
10 | 0 / 10 / 0 | 0.50 | ||||
| 26/FA |
MUS-101-01
Music in Society: A History
OPEN
|
Music FIN M120 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
|
|
LFA | 30 | 0 / 30 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
MUS-104-01
Sound and Scary Movies
OPEN
|
Music FIN M140 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM |
This course explores how sound (music, noise, silence, and voice)
shapes the experience of fear in cinema. Drawing from music,
philosophy, media studies, and cultural theory, students will
examine how sound design and film scoring help construct
suspense, dread, shock, and atmosphere from early cinema to
experimental and contemporary film. Topics include the music of
cinematic tension, the psychology and uncanny aesthetics of
noise, the role of sound production and music in filmmaking, and
the cultural implications of sound and fear. Students will learn
through screenings, analysis, discussion, and hands-on projects
creating and recording scary soundtracks. No prior music or film
training is required.
|
|
LFA | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
MUS-130-01
Musicianship
OPEN
|
Music FIN M140 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM |
|
|
LFA | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
MUS-130L-01
Musicianship Lab
OPEN
|
Music FIN M140 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
W
1:10PM-2:00PM |
|
|
20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
MUS-142-01
Chamber Orchestra
OPEN
|
Music FIN SALT |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M
4:15PM-5:45PM |
|
|
30 | 0 / 30 / 0 | 0.25 | ||||
| 26/FA |
MUS-143-01
Glee Club
OPEN
|
Music FIN SALT |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
4:15PM-6:00PM |
|
|
LFA | 60 | 0 / 60 / 0 | 0.25 | |||
| 26/FA |
MUS-144-01
Jazz Ensemble
OPEN
|
Music FIN SALT |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU
7:00PM-9:00PM |
|
|
30 | 0 / 30 / 0 | 0.25 | ||||
| 26/FA |
MUS-145-01
Mariachi Ensemble
OPEN
|
Music TBA TBA |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TBA
TBA-TBA |
|
|
LFA | 0 / 0 / 0 | 0.25 | ||||
| 26/FA |
MUS-204-01
Politics of Music & Vice Versa
OPEN
cross-listed with
PSC-220-01 |
Music BAX 114 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM |
The defining element of a 'Wabash Man' is a song. If you met
every graduate of our college, you would find rich people and
poor people, black people and white people, athletes and klutzes,
people from dozens of countries around the world, and even a few
women. But you would be hard pressed to find a Wabash graduate
who can't at least stumble through the words of "Old Wabash."
Music is about inclusion. But by defining who belongs, it also
defines those who don't. Most Americans struggle to sing the Star
Spangled Banner. But even those who don't speak English can
recite the first four words! If border patrol agents used the
words to "Yankee Doodle" as a shibboleth for entry, it's hard to
see how a non-citizen would ever get in.
Music is inherently political. Even when it's not explicitly so,
it reflects the society that produces it, the audience that
listens to it, and the means by which the former finds the
latter. Early German nationalists knew that Beethoven could help
them define who was German. Later German nationalists knew that
too.
African Americans and Jews took music from the plantations and
shtetls they left behind, fashioning it into Blues and Jazz when
Classical conservatories wouldn't teach them and 'respectable'
concert halls wouldn't let them perform. They found a wider
audience when people like Elvis Presley 'borrowed' their songs,
recorded them, and made them famous. That music went on to define
a generation defined by its counter-cultural ethos - and was
brought back to Africa and the Caribbean (from whence it once
came) where national heroes like Bob Marley and Fela Kuti used it
to resist colonial oppression and dictatorship.
Modern leaders listened and learned from this, which is why Korea
promotes K-pop and Putin imprisons Pussy Riot. It's also why
Bruce Springsteen objected to Ronald Reagan's use of "Born in the
USA" - and why Ronald Reagan evidently didn't know (or didn't
care about) the words.
This course will focus on musical repertory related to specific
regimes, societies, movements, and historical periods. The course
will require students to examine music as propaganda and as
protest. It will also invite students to engage with contemporary
debates on such issues as censorship, cultural appropriation,
political violence, and intellectual property. Of particular
interest will be the role of music in the development of 19th
Century European Nationalisms (as with Beethoven and Wagner); the
inseparable relationship between music and politics in African
and Afro-Caribbean anti-Imperialism (as with Fela Kuti and Bob
Marley); and the role of music in the American Civil Rights
movement. Our goal is for students to understand the relationship
between music and politics both historically and in their own
lifetimes, equipping them to analyze music that is both political
and politicized.
|
|
BSC, LFA | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
MUS-220-01
Approaches to Music & Culture
OPEN
|
Music FIN M140 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM |
|
|
LFA | 25 | 0 / 25 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PE-011-01
Advanced Fitness
OPEN
|
Physical Education ATH FIELD |
8/26/26- 10/14/26 |
M W F
6:00AM-7:15AM |
1st half semester.
|
|
0 / 0 / 0 | 0.00 | |||||
| 26/FA |
PE-011-02
Advanced Fitness
OPEN
|
Physical Education ATH FIELD |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M TU W TH
4:20PM-5:20PM |
|
|
0 / 0 / 0 | 0.00 | |||||
| 26/FA |
PHI-109-01
Philosophical Arguments
OPEN
|
Philosophy HAY 001 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM |
Could a computer genuinely think? Are we in a simulation? Is
there a God? Are we free to choose how we will act in the world?
What do we owe to one another, and to ourselves? Is it really a
good idea to think critically, or should we trust what experts
tell us? Could a banana duct-taped to a wall really be a work of
art? How would you go about answering these questions?
Philosophers think through these questions, and many others, by
developing and critiquing arguments for possible answers to them.
This course will serve as an introduction to philosophy via an
in-depth study of philosophical arguments such as these. In the
course, you will learn to use argument-mapping software to
clearly and precisely articulate the structure of philosophical
arguments so that you can understand and evaluate them more
effectively. In addition to introducing you to some fascinating
philosophical topics, this course will greatly improve your
skills in reading and writing texts (including articles and
papers for other classes!) that contain arguments.
I'd also like to describe what this course will be about by
offering a point of caution about it. This course will be
difficult. 亚洲通 will work slowly and pay close attention to the
details. These are valuable habits that are very hard to practice
in today's technological milieu. Be honest with yourself: When's
the last time you really gave your full attention to something
challenging? 亚洲通're going to practice focusing on things that are
very difficult, and you will get better at it throughout the
course. But it will feel very slow, and very laborious at times.
I hope you will trust me that the payoff will be worth it.
|
|
HPR | 18 | 0 / 18 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PHI-110-01
Philosophical Ethics
OPEN
|
Philosophy CEN 215 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
8:00AM-8:50AM |
|
|
HPR | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PHI-110-02
Philosophical Ethics
OPEN
|
Philosophy DET 109 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM |
|
|
HPR | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PHI-124-01
Philosophy and Film
OPEN
|
Philosophy CEN 216 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU
1:10PM-2:25PM TH
1:10PM-3:55PM |
|
|
HPR | 18 | 0 / 18 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PHI-218-01
Philosophy of Commerce
OPEN
cross-listed with
PPE-218-01 |
Philosophy CEN 216 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM |
|
|
HPR | 30 | 0 / 30 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PHI-219-01
W.E.B. DuBois
OPEN
|
Philosophy CEN 215 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM |
This course offers an extended study of the social and political
philosophy of W.E.B. Du Bois (1868-1963). As someone who
dedicated his life's work to studying "the Negro problem" and
"the program of Negro freedom," Du Bois's reflections on racial
discrimination, social, political, and economic inequality, the
possibility of racial integration, and the meaning of racial
self-determination continue to inform how we think about racial
justice and injustice in the U.S. The course focuses on three
main questions in Du Bois's thought. The first question has to do
with the psychology of race. That is, what motivates white racial
prejudice? And how does racial discrimination affect Black
people's relation towards the self and others? The second
question regards social, political, and economic inequality. Do
poor whites and poor Blacks suffer from the same kind of
inequality? Or are there specific social factors that explain the
unequal distribution of inequality in the U.S.? Lastly, the third
question regards integration and self-determination. Is racial
integration possible in the U.S.? Is Black self-determination
compatible with racial integration? While the course centers on
Du Bois as a historical thinker, we will focus on how his social
and political philosophy can help us think about our present
racial relations.
|
|
GCJD, HPR | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PHI-240-01
Ancient Philosophy
OPEN
cross-listed with
CLA-240-01 |
Philosophy CEN 215 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
|
|
HPR, LFA | 30 | 0 / 30 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PHI-269-01
Consciousness and AI
OPEN
|
Philosophy CEN 300 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM |
What is the relationship between the three pounds of wet biomass
in your skull and the fact that you understand the sentence that
you are currently reading? This question, as with many good
philosophical questions, is simple to state but very difficult to
answer. On the one hand, you are a thinking being: you have
thoughts, feelings, desires, wishes, and a rich inner mental life
to which you alone have access. There is something that it is
like to be you. On the other hand, you are a physical being: you
are composed primarily of water and carbon, and constitute a
complex system of biochemical reactions. You are the sort of
thing that can be studied, and whose behavior can be explained,
by biochemistry, neuroscience, and psychology. What are we to
make of these two aspects of ourselves? In this course, we will
survey the major theories in analytic philosophy of mind as
frameworks for understanding the mind and its place in nature. 亚洲通
will then bring these frameworks to bear on one of the most
pressing philosophical questions of our moment: could an
artificial system be conscious, and if so, how would we know?
This question is no longer merely hypothetical. Contemporary AI
systems are trained on vast amounts of data and develop from that
training in ways that even their creators cannot predict. Is it
possible that such systems could develop functional analogs to
conscious states; internal states that influence their behavior
in ways that parallel human conscious experience? Whether such
states could constitute genuine experience, or merely its
simulacrum, is precisely the kind of question that the philosophy
of mind is uniquely equipped to address.
|
|
HPR | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PHY-101-01
Astronomy
OPEN
|
Physics GOO 104 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM |
|
|
QL, SL | 54 | 0 / 54 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PHY-109L-01
Physics I - Health Science Lab
OPEN
|
Physics GOO 201 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M
1:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
21 | 0 / 21 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
PHY-109L-02
Physics I - Health Science Lab
OPEN
|
Physics GOO 201 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU
1:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
21 | 0 / 21 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
PHY-111L-01
Physics I - Calculus Lab
OPEN
|
Physics GOO 201 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
W
1:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
12 | 0 / 12 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
PHY-111L-02
Physics I - Calculus Lab
OPEN
|
Physics GOO 201 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TH
1:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
16 | 0 / 16 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
PHY-277-01
Computational Physics
OPEN
|
Physics TBA TBA |
8/26/26- 10/14/26 |
TBA
TBA-TBA |
Many of interesting questions in physics are often best
approached using computational tools. This half-credit course
will be an introduction to simple methods of computer simulation,
including Monte Carlo simulations, linear systems, root finding,
among other topics. A student, having completed this course, will
be able to create small programs in Python to simulate problems
arising in physics or engineering, explain how the underlying
numerical techniques function and how they are expressed in code,
be able to document his code and explain it to others, and
understand the advantages and disadvantages in time and
complexity of various methods. This is a first-semester course.
|
|
16 | 0 / 16 / 0 | 0.50 | ||||
| 26/FA |
PPE-218-01
Philosophy of Commerce
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHI-218-01 |
Philosophy, Politics, Economic CEN 216 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM |
|
|
HPR | 30 | 0 / 30 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PPE-228-01
W.E.B. DuBois
OPEN
|
Philosophy, Politics, Economic CEN 215 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM |
This course offers an extended study of the social and political
philosophy of W.E.B. Du Bois (1868-1963). As someone who
dedicated his life's work to studying "the Negro problem" and
"the program of Negro freedom," Du Bois's reflections on racial
discrimination, social, political, and economic inequality, the
possibility of racial integration, and the meaning of racial
self-determination continue to inform how we think about racial
justice and injustice in the U.S. The course focuses on three
main questions in Du Bois's thought. The first question has to do
with the psychology of race. That is, what motivates white racial
prejudice? And how does racial discrimination affect Black
people's relation towards the self and others? The second
question regards social, political, and economic inequality. Do
poor whites and poor Blacks suffer from the same kind of
inequality? Or are there specific social factors that explain the
unequal distribution of inequality in the U.S.? Lastly, the third
question regards integration and self-determination. Is racial
integration possible in the U.S.? Is Black self-determination
compatible with racial integration? While the course centers on
Du Bois as a historical thinker, we will focus on how his social
and political philosophy can help us think about our present
racial relations.
|
|
GCJD, HPR | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PPE-233-01
Tocqueville and Fraternity
OPEN
cross-listed with
PSC-233-01 |
Philosophy, Politics, Economic MXI 109 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM |
|
|
BSC | 18 | 0 / 18 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PPE-238-01
Trade Politics
OPEN
|
Philosophy, Politics, Economic BAX 202 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
Trade politics is a complex nexus of domestic and international
politics, economic conditions, global and regional institutions,
business interests, and civil society. This course provides
students with both theoretical foundations and practical tools to
analyze trade politics. 亚洲通 begin with the international trade
system, focusing on policies for trade in goods andservices, as
well as tariffs and non-tariff barriers. 亚洲通 will examine how
these policies shape international relations and connect them to
current debates such as the trade wars. 亚洲通 then turn to the
winners and losers of trade. Who benefits financially from trade,
and whobears the costs? How do factors such as gender, race,
political ideology, education, and occupation shape public
opinion toward trade? 亚洲通 will consider how people from diverse
backgrounds understand and react to global trade, and how public
attitudes influence political, economic, and social policies.
Finally, students will gain quantitative literacy by learning MS
Excel for data management and visualization. Students will
analyze trade data from international organizations and
comparetrade developments in the Global North and South. Students
will also design, analyze, and present survey data. The course
concludes by reflecting on trade's impact on development
andequality.
There are no prerequisites. Students should come prepared for
active participation in student-centered learning
|
|
BSC, GCJD, QL | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PPE-351-01
Game Theory
OPEN
cross-listed with
ECO-241-01 |
Philosophy, Politics, Economic BAX 202 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM |
|
|
BSC, QL | 25 | 0 / 25 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PSC-111-01
Intro to Amer Govt & Politics
OPEN
|
Political Science MXI 109 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
|
|
BSC | 12 | 0 / 12 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PSC-121-01
Intro to Comparative Politics
OPEN
|
Political Science DET 109 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM |
|
|
BSC, GCJD | 14 | 0 / 14 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PSC-131-01
Intro to Political Theory
OPEN
|
Political Science CEN 305 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM |
|
|
BSC | 14 | 0 / 14 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PSC-141-01
Intro to Intn'l Relations
OPEN
|
Political Science BAX 214 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM |
|
|
BSC | 12 | 0 / 12 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PSC-210-01
Congressional Elections
OPEN
|
Political Science BAX 201 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM |
Will Democrats take control of Congress at the end of this year,
or will Republicans manage to hold on to their slim margins in
the House and Senate? How will political parties and candidates
mount their congressional election campaigns, and how will
voters, donors, and other political actors respond? What will the
implications be for President Trump's agenda, the 2028
presidential election, and the future of American politics? Timed
to coincide with the 2026 midterm elections, this course will
address these questions and more. 亚洲通'll examine previous
political science research findings on the dynamics of
congressional elections and conduct original research to explore
whether and how these findings are playing out on the ground in
real time this year.
|
|
BSC | 18 | 0 / 18 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PSC-220-01
Politics of Music & Vice Versa
OPEN
cross-listed with
MUS-204-01 |
Political Science BAX 114 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM |
The defining element of a 'Wabash Man' is a song. If you met
every graduate of our college, you would find rich people and
poor people, black people and white people, athletes and klutzes,
people from dozens of countries around the world, and even a few
women. But you would be hard pressed to find a Wabash graduate
who can't at least stumble through the words of "Old Wabash."
Music is about inclusion. But by defining who belongs, it also
defines those who don't. Most Americans struggle to sing the Star
Spangled Banner. But even those who don't speak English can
recite the first four words! If border patrol agents used the
words to "Yankee Doodle" as a shibboleth for entry, it's hard to
see how a non-citizen would ever get in.
Music is inherently political. Even when it's not explicitly so,
it reflects the society that produces it, the audience that
listens to it, and the means by which the former finds the
latter. Early German nationalists knew that Beethoven could help
them define who was German. Later German nationalists knew that
too.
African Americans and Jews took music from the plantations and
shtetls they left behind, fashioning it into Blues and Jazz when
Classical conservatories wouldn't teach them and 'respectable'
concert halls wouldn't let them perform. They found a wider
audience when people like Elvis Presley 'borrowed' their songs,
recorded them, and made them famous. That music went on to define
a generation defined by its counter-cultural ethos - and was
brought back to Africa and the Caribbean (from whence it once
came) where national heroes like Bob Marley and Fela Kuti used it
to resist colonial oppression and dictatorship.
Modern leaders listened and learned from this, which is why Korea
promotes K-pop and Putin imprisons Pussy Riot. It's also why
Bruce Springsteen objected to Ronald Reagan's use of "Born in the
USA" - and why Ronald Reagan evidently didn't know (or didn't
care about) the words.
This course will focus on musical repertory related to specific
regimes, societies, movements, and historical periods. The course
will require students to examine music as propaganda and as
protest. It will also invite students to engage with contemporary
debates on such issues as censorship, cultural appropriation,
political violence, and intellectual property. Of particular
interest will be the role of music in the development of 19th
Century European Nationalisms (as with Beethoven and Wagner); the
inseparable relationship between music and politics in African
and Afro-Caribbean anti-Imperialism (as with Fela Kuti and Bob
Marley); and the role of music in the American Civil Rights
movement. Our goal is for students to understand the relationship
between music and politics both historically and in their own
lifetimes, equipping them to analyze music that is both political
and politicized.
|
|
BSC, LFA | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PSC-233-01
Tocqueville and Fraternity
OPEN
cross-listed with
PPE-233-01 |
Political Science MXI 109 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM |
|
|
BSC | 18 | 0 / 18 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PSC-240-01
Trade Politics
OPEN
|
Political Science BAX 202 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
Trade politics is a complex nexus of domestic and international
politics, economic conditions, global and regional institutions,
business interests, and civil society. This course provides
students with both theoretical foundations and practical tools to
analyze trade politics. 亚洲通 begin with the international trade
system, focusing on policies for trade in goods andservices, as
well as tariffs and non-tariff barriers. 亚洲通 will examine how
these policies shape international relations and connect them to
current debates such as the trade wars. 亚洲通 then turn to the
winners and losers of trade. Who benefits financially from trade,
and whobears the costs? How do factors such as gender, race,
political ideology, education, and occupation shape public
opinion toward trade? 亚洲通 will consider how people from diverse
backgrounds understand and react to global trade, and how public
attitudes influence political, economic, and social policies.
Finally, students will gain quantitative literacy by learning MS
Excel for data management and visualization. Students will
analyze trade data from international organizations and
comparetrade developments in the Global North and South. Students
will also design, analyze, and present survey data. The course
concludes by reflecting on trade's impact on development
andequality.
There are no prerequisites. Students should come prepared for
active participation in student-centered learning
|
|
BSC, GCJD, QL | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PSC-300-01
Research/Stats Political Sci
OPEN
|
Political Science HAY 321 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM |
|
|
BSC, QL | 15 | 0 / 15 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PSY-101-01
Introduction to Psychology
OPEN
|
Psychology BAX 101 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM |
|
|
BSC | 40 | 0 / 40 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
PSY-105-01
Fatherhood
OPEN
cross-listed with
GEN-205-01 |
Psychology CEN 216 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM |
|
|
BSC | 40 | 0 / 40 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
REL-103-01
Islam & the Religions of India
OPEN
|
Religion CEN 216 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
|
|
HPR | 50 | 0 / 50 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
REL-141-01
Hebrew Bible/Old Testament
OPEN
|
Religion CEN 216 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
8:00AM-8:50AM |
|
|
HPR | 35 | 0 / 35 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
REL-171-01
History Christianity to Reform
OPEN
|
Religion CEN 216 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM |
|
|
HPR | 40 | 0 / 40 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
REL-173-01
Introduction to Theology
OPEN
|
Religion CEN 305 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM |
|
|
HPR | 25 | 0 / 25 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
REL-181-01
Religion in America
OPEN
|
Religion CEN 216 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM |
|
|
HPR | 40 | 0 / 40 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
REL-194-01
Religion and Film
OPEN
|
Religion CEN 305 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M F
2:10PM-3:00PM W
2:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
HPR, LFA | 25 | 0 / 25 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
REL-208-01
Healing: Religion & Sociology
OPEN
|
Religion HAY 319 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
|
|
BSC, HPR | 35 | 0 / 35 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
REL-260-01
Economy & Ancient Christianity
OPEN
|
Religion CEN 305 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM |
According to Paul, the only thing James and Peter asked of his
strange work towards the 'uncircumcised' was to "remember the
poor" (Gal 2:10). In this course, we will engage the tradition of
remembering the poor in mostly Jewish and Christian texts from
antiquity, as well as contemporary initiatives to address
poverty. 亚洲通 will consider the degree to which the New Testament
and early Christian texts 'speak' to economic issues, 'assume'
economic issues, 'adopt', 'adapt', 'challenge', and 'carry
forward'. Was Jesus part of the peasantry? What did the early
Christian movement broadly speaking think about wealth? Was money
shared? 亚洲通re the rich welcomed? Was salvation tied to money?
|
|
HPR | 15 | 0 / 15 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
REL-272-01
Christianity and Fatherhood
OPEN
|
Religion CEN 304 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM |
How have Christians understood and practiced fatherhood
throughout church history? What principles and sources of
authority have guided men and families as they have sought to
live out their faith in this area? This course examines Christian
convictions and customs in relation to fatherhood in Scripture
and the early church and western church history, with particular
focus on the American context. What has fatherhood looked like
among Christians? How have they viewed and raised their children,
and to what ends? What shapes might fatherhood take in the
contemporary world?
|
|
HPR | 15 | 0 / 15 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
REL-275-01
Religion and Cognitive Science
OPEN
|
Religion CEN 300 |
8/19/26- 10/14/26 |
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM |
Do our brains make us religious? Does evolution? Yes, says
cognitive science. But if so, how? And if so, then how can our
religious beliefs be "personal"? How can God be real? These are
our questions. The relatively new field of cognitive science is
the scientific study of the human mind, drawing on fields like
psychology, anthropology, archeology, linguistics, and
neuroscience. The course has 3 parts. First, we'll read what
some cognitive scientists have to say about religion, e.g. Pascal
Boyer, Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious
Thought. Second, we'll read some critiques of these ideas.
Third, in light of these critiques, we'll return to our initial
questions, and see what answers we get. This is a first-half
semester course.
|
|
HPR | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 0.50 | |||
| 26/FA |
REL-296-01
Rel & Classical Chinese Poetry
OPEN
|
Religion CEN 300 |
10/19/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM |
"In the heart, it's intention; coming forth in words, it's
poetry." So says the "Preface" to the Book of Songs, the ancient
classic of Chinese poetry. In this course, we will read
selections (in English) from three classical Chinese poets: Wang
亚洲通i, Li Bo [Li Bai], and Du Fu [Tu Fu]. 亚洲通 will study how they
use image and metaphor to convey their distinctive ideas about
nature, religion, and human life. As background, we'll also read
some selections from the Book of Songs, and from Confucius and
Buddhism. This is a second-half semester course.
|
|
HPR, LFA | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 0.50 | |||
| 26/FA |
RHE-101-01
Public Speaking
OPEN
|
Rhetoric FIN S206 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM |
|
|
LS | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
RHE-101-02
Public Speaking
OPEN
|
Rhetoric FIN S206 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM |
|
|
LS | 5 | 0 / 5 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
RHE-101-03
Public Speaking
OPEN
|
Rhetoric FIN S206 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
|
|
LS | 5 | 0 / 5 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
RHE-101-04
Public Speaking
OPEN
|
Rhetoric FIN S206 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM |
|
|
LS | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
RHE-201-01
Reasoning & Advocacy
OPEN
|
Rhetoric CEN 305 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM |
|
|
LS | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
RHE-270-01
Communicating Public Policy
OPEN
|
Rhetoric FIN S206 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
9:45AM-11:00AM |
What is public policy? How do publics and organizations mobilize,
act, and seek to change public policies? How do governmental
actors understand, communicate, and create public policy? This
course is designed to give students a working knowledge of
contemporary public policy questions, as well as develop
students' understanding of rhetorical theory and criticism. 亚洲通
will explore the relationships between rhetoric and public policy
through a series of case studies of different policy domains,
including foreign policy, immigration, and the environment.
Students will both analyze and invent their own policy
communication.
|
|
LFA | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
RHE-270-02
Rhe. of Catastrophe Recovery
OPEN
|
Rhetoric FIN S206 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM |
When Hurricane Katrina struck, what persuaded the people of New
Orleans that life could go on? Whether natural or human-made,
catastrophe leaves behind two wreckages: the physical ruins and
the communicative struggle to restore meaning. Focusing on the
latter, this course explores how individuals and communities use
rhetoric to rebuild a sense of identity, place, and possibility
in the aftermath of disaster, displacement, conflict, and
personal loss. Engaging theories of constitutive and restorative
rhetoric, place attachment, discourse renewal, risk
communication, memory studies, and more, students will develop a
critical understanding of how public discourse and personal
testimony function as key rhetorical sites of post-catastrophe
meaning-making.
|
|
LFA | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
RHE-320-01
Classical Rhetoric
OPEN
|
Rhetoric HAY 321 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM |
|
|
LFA | 15 | 13 / 2 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
SOC-208-01
Healing: Religion & Sociology
OPEN
|
Sociology HAY 319 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
|
|
BSC, HPR | 35 | 0 / 35 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
SPA-101-01
Elementary Spanish I
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 111 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM |
|
|
6 | 0 / 6 / 0 | 1.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
SPA-101L-01
Elementary Spanish I Lab
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 220 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M
8:00AM-8:50AM |
|
|
6 | 0 / 6 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
SPA-101L-02
Elementary Spanish I Lab
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 220 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M
3:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
6 | 0 / 6 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
SPA-101L-03
Elementary Spanish I Lab
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 220 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU
8:00AM-8:50AM |
|
|
6 | 0 / 6 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
SPA-103-01
Accelerated Elementary Spanish
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 212 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
|
|
WL | 8 | 0 / 8 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
SPA-103-02
Accelerated Elementary Spanish
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 212 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM |
|
|
WL | 8 | 0 / 8 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
SPA-103L-01
Accelerated Elem Spanish Lab
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 128 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU
2:40PM-3:30PM |
|
|
6 | 0 / 6 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
SPA-103L-02
Accelerated Elem Spanish Lab
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 211 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
W
8:00AM-8:50AM |
|
|
6 | 0 / 6 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
SPA-103L-03
Accelerated Elem Spanish Lab
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 211 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
W
3:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
6 | 0 / 6 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
SPA-103L-04
Accelerated Elem Spanish Lab
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 128 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TH
8:00AM-8:50AM |
|
|
6 | 0 / 6 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
SPA-103L-05
Accelerated Elem Spanish Lab
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 128 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TH
2:40PM-3:30PM |
|
|
6 | 0 / 6 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
SPA-103L-06
Accelerated Elem Spanish Lab
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 211 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
F
8:00AM-8:50AM |
|
|
6 | 0 / 6 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
SPA-201L-01
Intermediate Spanish Lab
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 212 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M
8:00AM-8:50AM |
|
|
7 | 0 / 7 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
SPA-201L-02
Intermediate Spanish Lab
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 212 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M
3:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
7 | 0 / 7 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
SPA-201L-03
Intermediate Spanish Lab
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 112 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU
8:00AM-8:50AM |
|
|
7 | 0 / 7 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
SPA-201L-04
Intermediate Spanish Lab
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 112 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU
2:40PM-3:30PM |
|
|
7 | 0 / 7 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
SPA-201L-05
Intermediate Spanish Lab
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 212 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
W
8:00AM-8:50AM |
|
|
7 | 0 / 7 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
SPA-201L-06
Intermediate Spanish Lab
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 212 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
W
3:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
7 | 0 / 7 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
SPA-201L-07
Intermediate Spanish Lab
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 112 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TH
8:00AM-8:50AM |
|
|
7 | 0 / 7 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
SPA-202L-01
Span Lang/Hisp Cultures Lab
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 112 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TH
2:40PM-3:30PM |
|
|
6 | 0 / 6 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
SPA-202L-02
Span Lang/Hisp Cultures Lab
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 212 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
F
8:00AM-8:50AM |
|
|
6 | 0 / 6 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
SPA-202L-03
Span Lang/Hisp Cultures Lab
OPEN
|
Spanish DET 212 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
F
3:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
6 | 0 / 6 / 0 | 0.00 | ||||
| 26/FA |
THE-101-01
Introduction to Theater
OPEN
|
Theater FIN EXP |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
10:00AM-10:50AM |
|
|
LFA | 20 | 0 / 20 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
THE-103-01
Improv for the Actor
OPEN
|
Theater FIN EXP |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
2:10PM-3:00PM |
Improvisational Theater emphasizes the performer and their wits
for building stories and creating art. Whether you find that
scary or freeing (or both), improv. will hone your skills of
listening, reacting, instinctual response, imagination and
vulnerability.
|
|
LFA | 16 | 0 / 16 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
THE-103-02
The Singing Actor
OPEN
|
Theater FIN EXP |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM |
This course is designed for both new and experienced vocalists
to enhance their onstage storytelling prowess. Students will
participate in musical theatre scene study and analysis, applying
improvisation, Laban Movement Analysis, and somatic body
practices to their solo storytelling toolkit. The course
culminates in a class-wide cabaret where students present work to
peers and pals for a night of storytelling and community,
celebrating the spontaneity of the singing actor.
|
|
LFA | 16 | 0 / 16 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
THE-104-01
Introduction to Film
OPEN
|
Theater FIN M120 |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M F
2:10PM-3:00PM W
2:10PM-4:00PM |
|
|
LFA | 24 | 0 / 24 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
THE-105-01
Introduction to Acting
OPEN
|
Theater FIN EXP |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
2:40PM-3:55PM |
|
|
LFA | 11 | 0 / 11 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
THE-202-01
Intro to Scenic Design
OPEN
|
Theater FIN TGRR |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
9:00AM-9:50AM |
|
|
LFA | 12 | 0 / 12 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
THE-217-01
The American Stage
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-310-01 |
Theater FIN TGRR |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
1:10PM-2:00PM |
|
|
LFA | 15 | 0 / 15 / 0 | 1.00 | |||
| 26/FA |
THE-219-01
Theatrical Makeup
OPEN
|
Theater FIN BS14 |
8/26/26- 10/14/26 |
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM |
This course focuses on the practical application of makeup for
the stage. Students will explore a multitude of techniques and
makeup products. From highlighting and contouring, to adding 3d
makeup elements and horror makeup, the class will practice a
range of makeup application. Firs-half semester course.
|
|
LFA | 10 | 0 / 10 / 0 | 0.50 | |||
| 26/FA |
THE-219-02
The Art of Fabric Manipulation
OPEN
|
Theater FIN BS14 |
10/19/26- 12/19/26 |
TU TH
1:10PM-2:25PM |
This course explores fabric manipulation through fabric dyeing,
aging, and distressing. The course examines different types of
dyes, color theory, and dyeing a range of fabric materials. This
course also studies how fabric ages and breaks down through time.
|
|
LFA | 10 | 0 / 10 / 0 | 0.50 | |||
| 26/FA |
THE-219-03
Queer Theatre
OPEN
cross-listed with
GEN-279-01 |
Theater FIN TGRR |
8/26/26- 12/19/26 |
M W F
11:00AM-11:50AM |
In this course we will study the history of the queer theatre
movement and how queer theatre makers were impacted by different
moments in American theatre history. Students will be asked to
examine how queerness and the societal acceptability of queerness
impacts the work of artists, American theatre, and queer
performance. Students will also be asked to examine their own
biases in relation to different forms of queer performance.
|
|
LFA | 15 | 0 / 15 / 0 | 1.00 | |||

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