University Curriculum Committee

November 13, 2008 Minutes

Brewster B104

 

Chair (presiding): Janice Neil

Regular Members: David Batts, Gregory Lapicki, Jane Manner, Janice Neil, Jonathan Reid, Paul Schwager.

Ex-Officio Members: Wintre Clark, Linner Griffin, , Donna Lillian, Ron Mitchelson.

Absent: Ralph Scott (excused), Kathryn Hashimoto

Other: Kevin Snyder

Presenting: Marsha Ironsmith, Linda Wolfe, Scott Curtis, Tom Crawford, Michele Eble, Hans Jonson, Tywanna Purkett, Peter Romary, Michael McCammon

 

        I.            Call to order at 2:00 p.m. by the chair.

a.       Chair informed the committee that Kevin Snyder has accepted a position at another university and would be leaving before the end of the semester. The committee expressed its appreciation for his outstanding work.

b.       Chair informed the committee that another group had scheduled the conference room at 4:00.

      II.            New Business

a.       None

    III.            Dr. Ironsmith presented the College of Arts & Sciences, Dept. of Psychology proposals:

a.       Revision of PSYC 3314

                                                               i.      Approved with minor revisions

b.       Revision of existing degree: BA in Psychology

                                                               i.      Approved

c.       Revision of existing minor: Psychology

                                                               i.      Approved

    IV.            Drs. Wolfe, Leibowitz and Matthews presented the College of Arts & Sciences, Dept. of Anthropology proposals:

a.       New course: ANTH 3176

                                                               i.      Approved with minor revisions

b.       New course: ANTH 3177

                                                               i.      Approved with minor revisions

c.       New course: ANTH 4990

                                                               i.      Approved with minor revisions

d.       New course: ANTH 4991

                                                               i.      Approved with minor revisions

e.       Revision of existing degree: BA in Anthropology

                                                               i.      Approved

      V.            Drs. Curtis & Crawford presented the College of Arts & Sciences, Dept. of Geography proposals:

a.       Courses were previously approved by the UCC, program moves to EPPC upon UCC approval

b.       Request for Authorization to Establish:  BS in Applied Atmospheric Science

                                                               i.      Approved

c.       Request for Authorization to Establish:  BS in Geographic Information Science and Technology

                                                               i.      Approved

    VI.            Drs. Eble, Albright, & Klein presented the College of Arts and Sciences, Dept. of English proposals:

a.       New course:  ENGL 3831

                                                               i.      Approved with minor revisions

b.       New course:  ENGL 3841

                                                               i.      Approved with minor revisions

c.       New course:  ENGL 3851

                                                               i.      Approved with minor revisions

d.       New course:  ENGL 3861

                                                               i.      Approved with minor revisions

e.       New course:  ENGL 3920

                                                               i.      Approved with minor revisions

  VII.            Drs. Johnson, Purkett, & Romary presented the College of Health and Human Performance, Dept. of Health Education and Promotion proposals:

a.       Banking of existing course:  HLTH 4348

                                                               i.      Approved

b.       New course:  HLTH 1100

                                                               i.      Approved with minor changes

c.       New course:  HLTH 1101

                                                               i.      Approved with minor changes

d.       New course:  HLTH 1102

                                                               i.      Approved with minor changes

e.       Revision of existing course:  HLTH 3500

                                                               i.      Approved with minor changes

f.         Revision of existing course:  HLTH 3501

                                                               i.      Approved with minor changes

g.       Revision of existing course:  HLTH 3502

                                                               i.      Approved with minor changes

VIII.            Drs. McCammon presented the College of Health and Human Performance, Dept. of Exercise and Sport Science proposals:

a.       Revision of existing course:  EXSS 4850

                                                               i.      Approved

    IX.            Discussion of Policies and Procedures for Undergraduate Certificate programs was tabled until a future meeting due to time constraints.

 

Committee adjourned at 4:00 p.m.

 

Respectfully submitted,

Paul Schwager, UCC Vice-Chair

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PSYC: PSYCHOLOGY

 

 

 

PAGE 171:

 

DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHOLOGY

 

Kathleen A. Row, Chairperson, 115 Rawl Building

 

BA in Psychology

 

In order to declare a major in psychology, an undergraduate must have a minimum cumulative GPA of 2.0 and at least a grade of “C” in PSYC 1000 or 1060. A faculty advisor will be assigned to each student to aid in planning an overall program. A student desiring to minor in psychology should consult the major department faculty advisor or the director of undergraduate studies of the Department of Psychology to determine the most appropriate sequence of courses for the minor. Undergraduate students majoring in psychology are encouraged to minor in biology, business, chemistry, child development and family relations, mathematics, philosophy, or sociology or to take a composite minor approved by the faculty advisor and chairperson. Minimum degree requirement is 126 s.h. of credit as follows:

 

1. Foundations curriculum (See Section 4, Foundations Curriculum Requirements for all Baccalaureate Degree Programs), including those listed below..........................................42 s.h.

MATH 1065. College Algebra (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics placement test) or MATH 1066. Applied Mathematics for Decision Making (3) (F,S,

SS) (FC:MA)

2. Foreign language through level 1004.....................................................................................12 s.h.

3. Core............................................................................................................................................35 s.h.

PSYC 1000. Introductory Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) or PSYC 1060. Honors Introduction to Psychology (3) (F,S) (FC:SO) Minimum grade of “C” required.

PSYC 2101. Psychological Statistics (4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: MATH 1065 or MATH 1066)

PSYC 2210. Research Methods in Psychology (4) (WI) (F,S) (FC:SO) (P: MATH 1065 or MATH 1066; PSYC 2101)

PSYC 3225. Psychology of Learning (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060) or PSYC 3226. Cognitive Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060) or PSYC 4333. Learning Theories and Applications (3) (F,S) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)

PSYC 3310. Introduction to Neuroscience (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060) or PSYC 3311. Neuropsychology (3) (F,S) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060) or PSYC 3312. Sensation and Perception (3) (F,S) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)

Choose two from:

PSYC 3206. Developmental Psychology (3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060) or PSYC 2201. Psychology of Childhood (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)

PSYC 3221. Social Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)

PSYC 3300. Psychology of Personality (3) (F,S) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)

PSYC 4375. Abnormal Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)

PSYC 5325. Introduction to Psychological Testing (3) (P: A statistics course; PSYC 1000 or 1060)

Choose one from:

PSYC 4000. Advanced General Psychology (3) (WI) (F,S) (P: PSYC major; PSYC 2210; two courses from the learning and cognition, biological bases, or general course groups)

PSYC 4250. Advanced Seminar (3) (WI) (F,S,SS) (P: PSYC 2210 and consent of instructor)

PSYC 4280. History of Psychology (3) (WI) (F,S) (P: PSYC major; PSYC 2210; two courses from the learning and cognition, biological bases, or general course groups)

PSYC 4402. Senior Thesis/Project (3) (WI) (F,S) (P: PSYC major; PSYC 4401; two courses from the learning and cognition, biological bases, or general course groups; GPA above 3.00 overall and in Psychology)

Choose 69 s.h. of electives from any psychology course below 6000, except for PSYC 2201.

4. Minor.....................................................................................................................................24-30 s.h.

5. General electives to complete requirements for graduation.

 

Psychology Minor

 

A minimum grade of “C” in PSYC 1000 or 1060 is required to declare a minor. Minimum requirement for psychology minor is 24 s.h. of credit as follows:

 

1. Core............................................................................................................................................15 s.h.

PSYC 1000. Introductory Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) or PSYC 1060. Honors Introduction to Psychology (3) (FC:SO)

PSYC 3225. Psychology of Learning (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060) or PSYC 3226. Cognitive Psychology (3) (F,S) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060) or PSYC 4333. Learning Theories and Applications (3) (F,S) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060) PSYC 3310. Introduction to Neuroscience (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060) or PSYC 3311. Neuropsychology (3) (F,S) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060) or PSYC 3312. Sensation and Perception (3) (F,S) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)

Choose two from:

PSYC 3206. Developmental Psychology (3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060) or PSYC 2201. Psychology of Childhood (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)

PSYC 3221. Social Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)

PSYC 3300. Psychology of Personality (3) (F,S) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)

PSYC 4375. Abnormal Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)

PSYC 5325. Introduction to Psychological Testing (3) (P: Statistics course; PSYC 1000 or 1060)

2. PSYC electives............................................................................................................................9 s.h.

 

 

 

PAGE 495  (PSYC Courses):

 

2101. Psychological Statistics (4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) 3 lecture and 2 lab hours per week. P: MATH 1065 or equivalent or MATH 1066; PSYC 1000 or 1060. Descriptive statistics. Measures of central tendency, variability, and correlation. Probability, with emphasis on sampling distributions used for prediction and hypothesis testing. Selection, computation, and interpretation of parametric and nonparametric inferential statistics, including introduction to analysis of variance.

 

2201. Psychology of Childhood (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) May not count toward PSYC major or minor. P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. May receive credit for one of PSYC 2201, 3206. Psychological bases of growth and development of children. Brief introduction of major theories and scientific findings and their application to learning, cognitive development, motivation, personality, and social relations (including parent-child, peers, and school relations).

 

2210. Research Methods in Psychology (4) (WI) (F,S) (FC:SO) P: PSYC 2101or equivalent. Methods of research, including design, measurement, analysis, interpretation, and presentation.

 

2250. Selected Topics in Psychology (3) (FC:SO) P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Important current developments. Topics vary according to faculty preferences.

 

2275. Psychology of Adjustment (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Overall dynamic adjustive process in individuals in situations of stress, frustration, conflict, disease, disability, and other psychologically thwarting situations.

 

3206. Developmental Psychology (3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. May receive credit for one of PSYC 2201, 3206.   Psychological development throughout life span. Emphasis on perceptual, cognitive, social, and personality development.

 

3221. Social Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Interaction of individual and society. Topics include study of basic psychological factors such as perception and motivation, which shape and reflect social influence; nature, formation, and change of attitudes; attitude measurement; conformity; role expectations; leadership and dynamics.

 

3225. Psychology of Learning (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Introductory survey of experimental methods, basic research, principles, and theories of learning and forgetting.

 

3226. Cognitive Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) Focus on human research and cognition including attention, perception, consciousness, memory, concept learning, language, symbolic behavior, and problem solving.

 

3241. Personnel and Industrial Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) May receive credit for one of MGMT 4242, PSYC 3241. P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Systems approach to study employee-employer relationships influencing productivity and satisfaction. Secondary emphasis on employee selection, job analysis, performance appraisal, and training. Research applied to industrial, governmental, and military organizations.

 

3290. Comparative and Evolutionary Psychology (3) (FC:SO) P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Examines similarities and differences among species (including humans) by relating behaviors to reproductive success and adaptation to disparate environments.

 

3300. Psychology of Personality (3) (F,S) (FC:SO) P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Theories of personality. Emphasis on structure, development, and dynamics.

 

3310. Introduction to Neuroscience (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) Same as NEUR 3310 P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Neuroanatomy and neurophysiology and their relationship to behavior.

 

3311. Neuropsychology (3) (F,S) (FC:SO) P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Clinical and cognitive neuropsychology. Basic anatomy of nervous system and neuronal physiology, cortical lesion syndromes, brain disorders affecting higher functions, and basic research on attention, laterality, language, and thought.

 

3312. Sensation and Perception (3) (F,S) P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Anatomy and functioning of the various sensory/ perceptual systems, including empirical research, controversies, and theories of perception.

 

3314. Psychology of Religion (3) (FC:SO) P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Effects of religious doctrine upon individual’s behavior, beliefs, values, attitudes, anxieties, and feelings of guiltPsychological perspectives on religious behavior, cognition and affective experience, including research methods, spiritual development, biological and evolutionary approaches to religious experience and behavior, altruism, and current theoretical approaches.

 

3777. Ethnocultural Influences on the Development of the Self (3) P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Importance of various ethnocultural factors (gender, race, age, nationality, education, occupation, religion, geographical location, family background) which impact psychological development of self.

 

4000. Advanced General Psychology (3) (WI) (F,S,SS) P: PSYC major; PSYC 2210; 2 courses from learning and cognition, biological bases, or general course groups. In-depth overview of psychology as a science organized around five main questions: How do humans (and, where relevant, animals) act, how do they know, how do they interact, how do they develop, and how do they differ from each other?

 

4250. Advanced Topics Seminar (3) (WI) (F,S,SS) May be repeated with change of topic for a maximum of 6 s.h. P: PSYC 2210 and consent of instructor. In-depth coverage of primary research sources in a psychological topic.

 

4280. History of Psychology (3) (WI) P: PSYC major; PSYC 2210; 2 courses from learning and cognition, biological bases, or general course groups. Psychological thought from ancient Greek philosophers to present.

 

4305. Educational Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) P: PSYC 2201 or 3206 or 3240 or equivalent. Psychological principles applied to educational settings, including learning, motivation, classroom management, and psychological assessment.

 

4312. Laboratory Methods in Behavioral Neuroscience (3) Formerly PSYC 5312, 5313 1 lecture and 4 lab hours per week. P: PSYC 3310, 3311; or consent of instructor. Basic techniques of animal surgery, histological, examination, drug administration, and behavior testing.

 

4315. Neuroscience: Literature and Laboratory Experience (3) (F,S) Formerly PSYC 5315, 5316 1-hour seminar and 8 hours lab per week. May be repeated for maximum of 12 s.h. May count a maximum of 12 s.h. toward PSYC major. P: PSYC 2210; 3310 or 3311; consent of instructor. Recently published research in behavioral neuroscience and lab work on ongoing research project.

 

4333. Learning Theories and Applications (3) (F,S) P: PSYC 1000. Introductory survey of the basic theories and principles of learning, including classical and operant conditioning, and successful applications of these principles in a variety of settings.

 

4335. Psychology of Women (3) (FC:SO) P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Psychological issues pertaining to women. Impact of sex and gender on cognitive and personality development, mental health, methodological issues in research, roles of women in psychology, and influence of feminist theories.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ANTH: ANTHROPOLOGY

 

 

 

PAGE 125:

 

DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY

 

Linda Wolfe, Chairperson, 231 Flanagan Building

 

BA in Anthropology

 

Minimum degree requirement is 126 s.h. of credit as follows:

1. Foundations curriculum (See Section 4, Foundations Curriculum Requirements for all Baccalaureate Degree Programs.)...........................................................................................42 s.h.

2. Foreign language through level 1004.....................................................................................12 s.h.

3. Core .....................................................................................................................................16-17 s.h.

ANTH 2000. Archaeology Around the World (3) (F,S) (FC:SO)

ANTH 2010. Societies Around the World (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) or ANTH 2200. Introduction to Cultural Anthropology (3) (F,S)

ANTH 2015. Introduction to Biological Anthropology (3) (WI*) (F,S) (FC:SC) (RP: BIOL course)

ANTH 2016. Biological Anthropology Laboratory (1) (F,S) (FC:SC) (C: ANTH 2015)

ANTH 3050. Enthnographic Field Methods (3) (S) (P: ANTH 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor) or ANTH 3077. Archaeological Methods (3) (S) (P: ANTH 2000 or consent of instructor) or ANTH 4400, 4401. Human Skeletal Analysis (4,0) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 2015, 2016 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 4025. Theory in Anthropology (3) (WI) (FS) (P: ANTH 2010 or 2200, 2000 and 2015/16 or consent of instructor; RP: ANTH 3050 or 3077 or 4400, 4401)

4. Subfields (Choose one in each subfield above 2999.)............................................................9 s.h.

Archaeology:

ANTH 2000. Archaeology Around the World (3) (F,S) (FC:SO)

ANTH 3011. Hunter-Gatherer Lifeways (3) (S) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2000 or 2005 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3012. Lifeways of Pastoral Nomads (3) (S) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2000 or 2005 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3111. North American Archaeology (3) (OY) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2000 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3113. Archaeology of the Old Testament World (3) (OY) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2000 or PHIL 1695 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3114. Archaeology of the New Testament World (3) (OY) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2000 or PHIL 1696 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3115. Caribbean Archaeology (3) (F) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2000 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3116. Latin American Archaeology (3) (OY) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2000; or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3117. Prehistory of the Middle East (3) (S) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2000; or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3175. Archaeological Field Training (6) (SS) (P: ANTH 3077 or equivalent)

ANTH 4201. Special Topics in Archaeology (3) (P: ANTH 2000; or consent of instructor)

ANTH 5120. Archaeology of the Southeastern US (3) (P: ANTH 2000 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 5125. Historical Archaeology (3) (P: ANTH 2000 or consent of instructor)

Biological Anthropology:

ANTH 2015. Introduction to Biological Anthropology (3) (WI*) (F,S) (FC:SC) (RP: A BIOL course)

ANTH 2016. Biological Anthropology Laboratory (1) (F,S) (FC:SC) (C: ANTH 2015)

ANTH 3020. Primate Behavior and Social Organization (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 2015, 2016; or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3026. Forensic Anthropology (3) (S) (P: ANTH 2016; or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3027. Human Health and Disease Ecology (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 2015, 2016; or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3028. Human Adaptation and Variation (3) (S) (P: ANTH 2015; or consent of instructor)

ANTH 4203. Special Topics in Biological Anthropology (3) (P: ANTH 2015; or consent of instructor)

ANTH 4225. Human Evolution (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 2015, 2016; or consent of instructor)

Cultural Anthropology:

ANTH 2005. Environmental Anthropology (3) (S) (FC:SO)

ANTH 2010. Societies Around the World (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO)

ANTH 2200. Introduction to Cultural Anthropology (3) (F,S) (FC:SO)

ANTH 3002. Cultures of East Asia (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3003. Cultures of Africa (3) (OY) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3004. Cultures of the South Pacific (3) (EY) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3005. North American Indians (3) (EY) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3009. Motherhood of God in Asian Traditions (3) (EY) (FC:SO)

ANTH 3016. Cultures of the Caribbean (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3017. Cultures of Mexico and Guatemala (3) (OY) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3018. Cultures of South and Central America (3) (EY) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3150. Applying Anthropology to Contemporary Cultural Issues (3) (S) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3176. Cultural Anthropology Field School I (3) (SS) (RP: ANTH 1050 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3177. Cultural Anthropology Field School II (3) (SS) (RP: ANTH 1050 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3200. Women’s Roles in Cross-Cultural Perspective (3) (EY) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 3252. Medical Anthropology (3) (OY) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 4050. Psychological Anthropology (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 4054. Anthropology of Religion (3) (OY) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 4202. Special Topics in Cultural Anthropology (3) (P: ANTH 2200 or 2010; or consent of instructor)

ANTH 4253. Social Anthropology (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 4260. Cultural Ecology (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 5030. Economic Anthropology (3) (P: ANTH 2200 or consent of instructor)

ANTH 5065. Maritime Anthropology (3) (P: ANTH 2200 or consent of instructor)

One of the following two courses may be taken to fulfill the course requirement for a course above 2999 in cultural anthropology:

ANTH 3720. Writing Systems of the World (3) (F) (Same as ENGL 3720) (P: ENGL 1200)

ANTH 3770. Language Universals (3) (Same as ENGL 3770)

5. ANTH electives............................................................................................................................6 s.h.

The following courses, including those listed above, may be taken as electives:

ANTH 2760. Afro-Caribbean Language and Culture (3) (S) (Same as ENGL 2760) (P: ENGL 1200)

ANTH 3720. Writing Systems of the World (3) (F) (Same as ENGL 3720) (P: ENGL 1200)

ANTH 3770. Language Universals (3) (Same as ENGL 3770)

ANTH 4990. Internship in Applied Anthropology (3) (F,S,SS) (P: ANTH major with consent of department chair and supervising faculty member)

ANTH 4991. Advanced Internship in Applied Anthropology (3) (F,S,SS) (P: ANTH major with consent of department chair and supervising faculty member)

(ANTH 5010, 5175 may not count as ANTH electives.)

6. Minor and general electives to complete requirements for graduation.

 

 

 

PAGE 328:

 

ANTH: ANTHROPOLOGY

 

1000. Introduction to Anthropology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) Anthropological studies of human culture.

 

1050. Global Understanding (3) (F, S, SS) (FC:SO) Virtual exchange with a variety of countries to explore human diversity and the impact of globalization.

 

2000. Archaeology Around the World (3) (F,S) (FC:SO) Prehistory of major geographic regions and cultural

areas of the world from origins of human culture to beginning of recorded history.

 

2005. Environmental Anthropology (3) (S) (FC:SO) Human adaptation to different environments from prehistoric to modern times.

 

2010. Societies Around the World (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) Ethnographic survey of world culture areas showing similarities and variations in cultural patterns.

 

2015. Introduction to Biological Anthropology (3) (WI*) (F,S) (FC:SC) Same as BIOL 2015 May count toward foundations curriculum science requirement for all except anthropology majors. May not count toward foundations curriculum social sciences requirement. RP: BIOL course. Evolutionary theory, human evolution, and formation of human variability, adaptation and genetics, and our relationship with other primates.

 

2016. Biological Anthropology Laboratory (1) (F,S) (FC:SC) Same as BIOL 2016 May not count toward foundations curriculum science requirement for anthropology majors. May not count toward foundations curriculum social sciences requirement. C: ANTH 2015. Laboratories in human genetics, population genetics, anthropometry, anthroposcopy, dermatoglyphics, blood pressure, blood typing, osteometry, primate taxonomy, and human evolution.

 

2025. Sexual Behavior from an Anthropological Perspective (3) (F) (FC:SO) P: Introductory ANTH, PSYC, or SOCI course or consent of instructor. Human sexual behavior from an evolutionary and cross-cultural, mainly non-western, viewpoint.

 

2200. Introduction to Cultural Anthropology (3) (F,S) (FC:SO) Nature of human culture. Emphasis on concepts and methods of  cross-cultural study of human societies.

 

2760. Afro-Caribbean Language And Culture (3) (S) Same as ENGL 2760 P: ENGL 1200. Description and analysis of the languages spoken by the descendents of Africans in the Caribbean.

 

3002. Cultures of East Asia (3) (FC:SO) P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor. Regions, cultures, historic development, and role in global economy of East Asia (China, Japan, Korea, and Vietnam) and Southeast Asia (Thailand, Burma, Laos, Cambodia, Philippines, Malaysia, and Indonesia).

 

3003. Cultures of Africa (3) (OY) (FC:SO) P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor. Traditional cultures of Africa south of the Sahara.

 

3004. Cultures of the South Pacific (3) (EY) (FC:SO) P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor. Traditional cultures of Melanesia, Micronesia, and Polynesia.

 

3005. North American Indians (3) (EY) (FC:SO) P:  ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor. Origin and cultural development of aboriginal peoples of North America. Survey of representative Indian populations with respect to native economic, social, and religious organization.

 

3009. Motherhood of God in Asian Traditions (3) (EY) (FC:SO) Same as RELI 3000; WOST 3000 Female representation of deities in Eastern traditions, including Hinduism, Mahayana Buddhism, and Taoism. Religious and social impact of such representation.

 

3011. Hunter-Gatherer Lifeways (3) (S) P: ANTH 1000 or 2000 or 2005 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor. Cross-cultural examination of hunter-gatherer lifeways using ethnographic, archaeological, and ethnoarchaeological data.

 

3012. Lifeways of Pastoral Nomads (3) (S) P: ANTH1000 or 2000 or 2005 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor. Cultures of the people of Africa, the Middle East and Central Asia who subsist on animal husbandry.

 

3016. Cultures of the Caribbean (3) (S) (FC:SO) P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor. Archipelago and adjacent coastal regions of North, South, and Central America. Focus on multicultural history of area and its place in contemporary world culture.

 

3017. Cultures of Mexico and Guatemala (3) (OY) (FC:SO) P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor. Indigenous peoples of Mexico and Guatemala. Emphasis on history, social institutions, belief systems, and present- day status in relation to national development.

 

3018. Cultures of South and Central America (3) (EY) (FC:SO) P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor. Indigenous populations of lower Central and South America. Social organization, ecology, adaptation, and cultural emphasis on  particular groups and contemporary trends and issues.

 

3020. Primate Behavior and Social Organization (3) P: ANTH 2015, 2016; or consent of instructor. Comparative examination of prosimians, monkeys, and apes in natural and experimental situations that enhance understanding of human behavior and social organization.

 

3026. Forensic Anthropology (3) (S) P: ANTH 2015, 2016, or consent of instructor. May not count toward foundations curriculum requirement. Human osteology, establishing a biological profile, analysis of trauma and manner of death, and the legal duties of the forensic anthropologist.

 

3027. Human Health and Disease Ecology (3) P: ANTH 2015, 2016; or consent of instructor. Interaction between environment, behavior, and illness. Environmental niches conducive to maintenance and spread of disease. Methods of examining diseases in prehistoric societies.

 

3028. Human Adaptation and Variation (3) (S) P: ANTH 2015; or consent of instructor. Evolutionary perspective of the adaptive nature of contemporary human physical diversity.

 

3050. Ethnographic Field Methods (3) (S) P: ANTH 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor. Lectures, readings, andfieldwork. Application of formal and informal ethnographic research techniques.

 

3077. Archaeological Methods (3) (S) P: ANTH 2000 or consent of instructor. Basic archaeological methods and techniques in site survey, site types, excavation, recording processing, presentation, chronometry, and analysis of materials.

 

3111. North American Archaeology (3) (OY) (FC:SO) P: ANTH 1000 or 2000 or consent of instructor. Culture, history, and development of prehistoric cultures of North America from earliest times to European colonization.

 

3113. Archaeology of the Old Testament World (3) (OY) Same as RELI 3113 P: ANTH 1000 or 2000 or PHIL 1695 or consent of instructor. Survey of Bronze and Iron Age cultures of Syria-Palestine, ca. 3500-586 BC/BCE, with emphasis on use of archaeological materials in historical reconstruction.

 

3114. Archaeology of the New Testament World (3) (OY) Same as RELI 3114 P: ANTH 1000 or 2000 or PHIL 1696 or consent of instructor. Survey of Persian, Hellenistic, Roman, and Byzantine periods in Syria-Palestine, 539 BC/BCE to 640 AD/CE, with emphasis on use of archaeological materials in historical reconstruction.

 

3115. Caribbean Archaeology (3) (F) P: ANTH 1000 or 2000 or consent of instructor. Archaeology of Circum Caribbean area from Archaic Period to end of Colonial Period.

 

3116. Latin American Archaeology (3) (OY) P: ANTH 1000 or 2000; or consent of instructor. Archaeology of Latin America from initial human colonization (Late Pleistocene) until European contact, including impact of food production, and development of social complexity.

 

3117.  Prehistory of the Middle East (3) (S) P: ANTH 1000 or 2000 or consent of instructor. Prehistoric cultures of Mesopotamia and surrounding areas with an emphasis on changes to the socio-economic organization in response to environment and cultural factors.

 

3150. Applying Anthropology to Contemporary Cultural Issues (3) (S) P: ANTH1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor. Experiential learning about real life conditions both globally and within local communities in eastern North Carolina.

 

3175. Archaeological Field Training (6) (SS) 40 hours of field work per week (summer). P: ANTH 3077 or equivalent. Practical application of archaeological methods and cultural analysis in field research situations.

 

3176. Cultural Anthropology Field School I (3) (SS) May be taken concurrently with ANTH 3177. May count maximum of 6 s.h. of ANTH 3176, 3177, 4501, 4502, 4503, 4990, and 4991 toward any degree offered in the anthropology department. RP: ANTH 1050 or consent of instructor. Practical application of ethnographic methods and analysis in a cross-cultural field setting.

 

3177. Cultural Anthropology Field School II (3) (SS) May be taken concurrently with ANTH 3176. May count maximum of 6 s.h. of ANTH 3176, 3177, 4501, 4502, 4503, 4990, and 4991 toward any degree offered in the anthropology department. RP: ANTH 1050 or consent of instructor. Practical application of ethnographic methods and analysis in a cross-cultural field setting.

 

3200. Women’s Roles in Cross-Cultural Perspective (3) (EY) (FC:SO) P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor. Comparative study of cross-cultural development and diversity of women’s roles.

 

3252. Medical Anthropology (3) (OY) (FC:SO) P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor. Comparative and holistic study of cultural behavior in context of health and disease.

 

3300. Language and Culture (3) (FC:SO) P:  ANTH 1000 or ANTH 2010 or ANTH 2200, or consent of instructor. Introduction to the understanding of the structure and function of language in its anthropological linguistic and cultural context.

 

3720. Writing Systems of the World (3) (F) Same as ENGL 3720 P: ENGL 1200. Writings systems and their relationship to language, literacy, and multicultural communication.

 

3770. Language Universals (3) (WI) Same as ENGL 3770 P: ENGL 1200. Analysis of components of human language and how they are uniquely configured within the human species, shaped by the brain and evolution.

 

4000, 4001. Selected Topics in Anthropology (3,3) May count a maximum of 6 s.h. P: ANTH 1000; 6 s.h. in ANTH above 2999. Specialized topics and current developments.

 

4025. Theory in Anthropology (3) (WI) (FS) P: ANTH 2010 or 2200, 2000 and 2015/16 or consent of instructor; RP: ANTH 3050 or 3077 or 4400, 4401. Historical development of major theoretical schools within anthropology through study of recurrent issues debated by key theorists in discipline.

 

4050. Psychological Anthropology (3) (FC:SO) P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor. Influence of culture and social institutions on formation of social norms, individual and group personality, and cross-cultural cognitive development.

 

4054. Anthropology of Religion (3) (OY) (FC:SO) P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor. Comparative and cross-cultural study of religion in relationship to culture and society. Emphasis on role of culture in shaping expression of religious experience.

 

4201. Special Topics in Archaeology (3) P: ANTH 2000; or consent of instructor. Specialized topics and current developments.

 

4202. Special Topics in Cultural Anthropology (3) P: ANTH 2200 or 2010; or consent of instructor. Specialized topics and current developments.

 

4203. Special Topics in Biological Anthropology (3) P: ANTH 2015; or consent of instructor. Specialized topics and current developments.

 

4225. Human Evolution (3) P: ANTH 2015, 2016; or consent of instructor. Data, methods, and theoretical problems in human evolution.

 

4253. Social Anthropology (3) (FC:SO) P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor. Social organization. Emphasis on kinship and descent.

 

4260. Cultural Ecology (3) (FC:SO) P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of instructor. Relationship of human populations to their environments. Basic principles and approaches of cultural ecology examined and applied to case study materials.

 

4400, 4401. Human Skeletal Analysis (4,0) (S-OY) P: ANTH 2015, 2016; or consent of instructor. Analysis of human skeleton. Emphasis on techniques required for archaeological and anthropological research.

 

4501, 4502, 4503. Independent Study (1,2,3) (4503: WI*) (F,S,SS) P: ANTH 1000; consent of instructor and dept chair Intensive research in selected subdiscipline of anthropology.

 

4550, 4551. Anthropology Honors (3,3) P: Junior standing in ANTH; minimum cumulative 3.0 GPA and minimum 3.5 GPA in ANTH; minimum of 2.0 s.h. in ANTH; or consent of dept chair. Extensive program of carefully supervised reading and research in an area of anthropology. Written report in format of professional paper.

 

4990. Internship in Applied Anthropology (3) (F,S,SS) P: ANTH major with consent of department chair and supervising faculty member. 180 work and 42 academic hours. May be taken concurrently with ANTH 4991. May count maximum of 6 s.h. of ANTH 4501, 4502, 4503, 4990, and 4991 toward any degree offered in the anthropology department. Supervised internship with application of anthropological principles to work in the public sector. Parallel reading and study required.

 

4991. Advanced Internship in Applied Anthropology (3) (F,S,SS) P: ANTH major with consent of department chair and supervising faculty member. 180 work and 42 academic hours. May be taken concurrently with ANTH 4990. Students may count a maximum of 6 s.h. of ANTH 4501, 4502, 4503, 4990, and 4991 toward any degree offered in the anthropology department. Supervised internship in the public sector resulting in an internship report based on an independent research project undertaken at the work site.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ENGL: ENGLISH

 

 

 

PAGE 392  (ENGL Courses):

 

3830. Introduction to Play Writing (3) (WI*) (F) May not count toward foundations curriculum humanities requirement. P: ENGL 1200. Fundamentals of play writing: finding a voice with a point of view, writing dialog, scene construction, characterization, and plot development.

 

3831. Plays from the Writer’s Perspective (3) P: ENGL 1200. Study and theory of play forms and techniques as practiced by contemporary writers.

 

3835. Persuasive Writing (3) (WI) (F) P: ENGL 1200. Study and practice of elements of persuasion in academic and public texts.

 

3840. Introduction to Poetry Writing (3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) May not count toward foundations curriculum humanities requirement. P: ENGL 1200. Practice in poetry writing.

 

3841. Poetry from the Writer’s Perspective (3) P: ENGL 1200. Study and theory of poetic forms and techniques as practiced by contemporary poets.

 

3850. Introduction to Fiction Writing (3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) May not count toward foundations curriculum humanities requirement. P: ENGL 1200. Practice in prose fiction writing. Emphasis on the short story.

 

3851. Fiction from the Writer’s Perspective (3) P: ENGL 1200. Study and theory of fictional forms and techniques as practiced by contemporary writers.

 

3860. Introduction to Nonfiction Writing (3) (WI*) (F,S) May not count toward foundations curriculum

humanities requirement. P: ENGL 1200. Techniques of writing, researching, and marketing nonfiction prose. Emphasis on writing skills.

 

3861. Creative Nonfiction from the Writer’s Perspective (3) P: ENGL 1200. Study of creative nonfiction forms and techniques as practiced by contemporary writers.

 

3870. Introduction to Editing and Abstracting (3) (WI*) (F,S) May not count toward foundations curriculum humanities requirement. P: ENGL 1200. Administrative, manuscript, copy, and production editing of nonfiction books, periodicals, and corporate documents.

 

3880. Writing for Business and Industry (3) (WI) (F,S,SS) May not count toward foundations curriculum humanities requirement. P: ENGL 1200. Composition with writing practice for students in business and industry.

 

3885. Writing and Publications Development/Process (3) (WI) (S) May not count toward foundations curriculum humanities requirement. P: ENGL 1200; consent of instructor. Development and writing processes (planning, preparing, production) of professional communication documents, such as computer documentation instructions, employee manual, and policy and procedural manuals. Aspects of publication management (scheduling and budgeting).

 

3890. Critical Writing (3) (WI) (S-OY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Emphasis on critical theory and critical writing.

 

3895. Topics in Technical and Professional Writing (3) (WI*) (S) May not count toward foundations curriculum humanities requirement. P: ENGL 1200; consent of instructor. Intensive study of special topic(s) in technical and professional communication announced by instructor before preregistration period.

 

3900. American and International Film History, Part I (3) (F) 3 lecture and 2 lab hours per week. P: ENGL 2900 or consent of instructor. Social, industrial, and aesthetic history of the major films, genres, regulatory bodies and economic structures that defined cinema from its inception in the mid-1890s through the onset of World War II.


3901. American and International Film History Part II (3) (S) 3 lecture and 2 lab hours per week. P: ENGL 2900 or consent of instructor. Social, industrial and aesthetic history of the major films, genres, regulatory bodies and economic structures that shaped cinema from World War II to the present.

 

3920. Film Theory and Criticism (3) (WI) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 2900 or consent of the instructor. Overview of the major theoretical and critical approaches to the study of cinema from the 1920s to the present.

 

4000. Introduction to Literary Theory (3) (F,SS) P: English major, minor, or concentration or consent of dept. Comparative study of current approaches to reading literature in various contexts, beginning with New Criticism. Covers approaches such as reader-response, psychoanalytic, poststructuralist, feminist, and postcolonial.

 

4010. Medieval Literature (3) (WI) (S-OY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Literature from fifth to fifteenth centuries. Excludes Chaucer.

 

4020. Chaucer (3) (WI) (F-OY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Selections from Chaucer’s poetry.

 

4030. Milton (3) (WI) (S-EY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Emphasis on Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained, Samson Agonistes, and selected prose.

 

4040. Literature of the New World to 1820 (3) (WI) (S-OY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Various literatures of North America from writings about earliest explorations and encounters to those of early US. British, Spanish, French, Native American, and African American.

 

4050. Prose and Poetry of the English Renaissance (3) (WI) (F-EY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Emphasis on beginnings of forms and types.

 

4070. Shakespeare: The Histories (3) (WI*) (F-EY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Close reading and critical study.

 

4080. Shakespeare: The Comedies (3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Close reading and critical study.

 

4090. Shakespeare: The Tragedies (3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Close reading and critical study.

 

4100. Seventeenth-Century Literature (3) (WI) (F-EY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Prose and poetry of

seventeenth century England.

 

4120. Eighteenth-Century Literature (3) (WI) (S-EY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Prose and poetry of neo-classic and pre-romantic periods in British literature.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

EXSS: EXERCISE AND SPORT SCIENCE

 

 

 

PAGE 265  (Department of Exercise and Sport Science, BS in Health Fitness Specialist:

 

2. Core............................................................................................................................................48 s.h.

EXSS 1101. Physical Conditioning (1) (F,S,SS) (P: EXSS 1000 or 1001)

EXSS 1114. Aerobic Dance (1) (F,S,SS) (P: EXSS 1000 or 1001)

EXSS 2000. Introductory Exercise and Sport Science (3) (F,S,SS)

EXSS 2202. Motor Learning and Performance (3) (F,S,SS)

EXSS 2850. Structural Kinesiology (1) (F,S,SS)

EXSS 3804. Measurement of Physical Activity and Fitness (3) (F,S,SS) (P: ASIP 2112 or MIS 2223; EXSS 2000; or consent of instructor)

EXSS 3805. Physiology of Exercise (3) (F,S,SS) (P: Health and human performance major or minor or consent of dept chair; BIOL 2130 or BIOL 2140, 2141, 2150, 2151; EXSS 2850)

EXSS 3850. Introduction to Biomechanics (3) (F,S,SS) (P: BIOL 2130 or BIOL 2140, 2141, 2150, 2151; EXSS 2850; PHYS 1250,1251; or consent of instructor)

EXSS 3880. Personal Fitness Training (3) (F,S,SS) (P: EXSS 3805)

EXSS 4806. Exercise Evaluation and Prescription (4) (WI) (F,S,SS) (P: EXSS 3805; health and human performance major or minor; or consent of dept chair)

EXSS 4850. Exercise Leadership (3) (F,S) (P: EXSS 1114 or 1214, 3805; Declared EXSS major or consent of instructor)

EXSS 5020. Exercise Adherence (3) (P: PSYC 1000; P/C: EXSS 4806; health and human performance major or minor; or consent of dept chair)

EXSS 5800. Physical Activity and Aging (3) (P: GERO 2400 or consent of instructor)

HLTH 4200. Planning and Evaluation in Worksite Health Promotion (3) (F,S,SS) (P: Completion of core courses)

Choose a minimum of an additional 2 s.h. approved EXSS electives

Choose 9 s.h. from the following HLTH classes:

ATEP 2800. Medical Nomenclature in Human Performance (2) (F) (P: HLTH 1000)

ATEP 3350. Concepts in Pharmacology (3) (F)

HLTH 2125, 2126. Safety Education and First Aid (3,0) (F,S,SS) (P: HLTH 1000 or 1050; C for 2125: HLTH 2126; C for 2126: HLTH 2125)

HLTH 2220, 2221. Basic Athletic Training (3,0) (F,S,SS) (P: HLTH 1000 or 1050; C for 2220: HLTH 2221; C for 2221: HLTH 2220)

HLTH 3010. Health Problems I (3) (F,S,SS) (P: BIOL 2130 or 2140; HLTH 1000 or 1050; or consent of instructor)

HLTH 3030. Health Behavior (3) (WI) (F,S,SS) (P: HLTH 1000 or 1050; PSYC 1000)

HLTH 4000. Methods of Training and Staff Development (4) (P: PSYC 3221 or consent of instructor)

HLTH 4604. Applied Principles of Health Promotion (3) (F,S) (P: BIOL 2130 or 2140; NUTR 2105; PSYC 1000; or consent of instructor)

HLTH 5900. Stress Management (3) (S) P: Undergraduate course in anatomy and physiology; graduate standing; or consent of instructor)

 

 

 

PAGE 270 :

 

Exercise and Sport Science Minor

 

Minimum requirement for the exercise and sport science minor is 24 s.h. of credit as follows:

 

1. Core..............................................................................................................................................3 s.h.

EXSS 2000. Introductory Exercise and Sport Science (3) (F,S,SS)

2. Electives (must comprise at least 15 s.h. of EXSS courses).....................................................21 s.h.

ATEP 2800. Medical Nomenclature in Human Performance (2) (F,S,SS) (P: HLTH 1000)

EXSS 2202. Motor Learning and Performance (3) (F,S,SS)

EXSS 2850. Structural Kinesiology (1) (F,S,SS)

EXSS 3300. Applied Sports Psychology (3) (F) (P: PSYC 1000)

EXSS 3301. Physical Education and Sport in Modern Society (3) (F,SS).

EXSS 3804. Measurement of Physical Activity and Fitness (3) (F,S,SS) (P: ASIP 2112 or MIS 2223; EXSS 2000; or consent of instructor)

EXSS 3805. Physiology of Exercise (3) (F,S,SS) (P: Health and human performance major or minor or consent of dept chair; BIOL 2130 or BIOL 2140, 2141, 2150, 2151; EXSS 2850)

EXSS 3850. Introduction to Biomechanics (3) (F,S,SS) (P: BIOL 2130 or BIOL 2140, 2141, 2150, 2151; EXSS 2850; PHYS 1250, 1251; or consent of instructor)

EXSS 3906. Physical Education for Special Populations (3) (WI) (F,S,SS) (P: Upper-division standing; EXSS 2323; SPED 2000; or consent of instructor)

EXSS 4804. Measurement and Evaluation in Exercise and Sport Science (3) (F,S,SS) (P: Upper-division standing; EXSS 2323; MATH 1065; health and human performance major or minor or consent of dept. chair)

EXSS 4806. Exercise Evaluation and Prescription (4) (WI) (F,S,SS) (P: Health and human performance major or minor; EXSS 3805; or consent of chair)

EXSS 4807. Advanced Exercise Physiology (3) (F) (P: EXSS 4806, CHEM 2750, 2753 (C or better), and consent of instructor)

EXSS 4808. Cardiopulmonary Physiology (3) (S) (P: EXSS 4806, CHEM 2750, 2753 (C or better), and consent of instructor)

EXSS 4809. Exercise Prescription for Clinical Populations (3) (F,S,SS) (P: EXSS 4806)

EXSS 4850. Exercise Leadership (3) (F,S) (P: EXSS 1114 or 1214, 3805; Declared EXSS major or consent of instructor)

EXSS 5020. Exercise Adherence (3) (P: PSYC 1000; P/C: EXSS 4806; HHP major or minor or consent of instructor)

EXSS 5303. Physical Activity Programs for Individuals with Developmental, Emotional, and Learning Disabilities (3) (P: EXSS 3545 or 3546; SPED 5101; or consent of instructor)

EXSS 5305. Motor Development (3) (P: EXSS 2800 or equivalent or consent of instructor)

EXSS 5800. Physical Activity and Aging (3) (P: GERO 2400 or consent of instructor)

EXSS 5903. Physical Activity Programs for Individuals with Orthopedic, Neurologic, and Sensory Impairments (3) (P: BIOL 2130 or equivalent)

HLTH 3010. Health Problems I (3) (F,S,SS) (P: BIOL 2130 or 2140; HLTH 1000 or 1050; or consent of instructor)

HLTH 3030. Health Behavior (3) (WI) (F,S,SS) (P: HLTH 1000 or 1050; PSYC 1000)

HLTH 4200. Planning and Evaluation of Worksite Health Promotion (3) (F,S,SS) (P: Completion of core courses in worksite health promotion)

HLTH 4604. Applied Principles of Health Promotion (3) (F,S) (P: BIOL 2130 or 2140; NUTR 1000 or 2105; PSYC 1000; or consent of instructor)

NUTR 3101. Clinical Nutrition for Allied Health Professions (3) (F,S)

PSYC 4333. Learning Theories and Applications (3) (P: PSYC 1000)

 

 

 

PAGE 401  (EXSS Courses) :

 

4850. Exercise Leadership (3) (F,S) 2 lecture and 2 lab hours per week. P: EXSS 1114 or 1214, 3805; Declared EXSS major or consent of instructor. Leadership experiences in physical activity settings. Knowledge and skills associated with leading others to become physically active. Exercise leadership experiences to develop instructional skills for diverse physical activity settings.

 

 

HLTH: HEALTH EDUCATION AND PROMOTION

 

 

 

PAGE 428 (HLTH Courses):

 

1100. Personal Safety Issues (1) (F,S,SS) Overview of legal protection, obligation, and consequences related to personal safety.

 

1101. Threat Assessment and Conflict Resolution (1) (F,S,SS) A survey of effective threat assessment, management, and conflict prevention strategies.

 

1102. Peer Mediation (1) (F,S) Techniques and skills to serve as a mediator and organize a peer mediation program. Practical skills to de-escalate conflict at school, at work and in life.

 

 

 

PAGE 429 (HLTH Courses):

 

3500, 3501, 3502. Peer Health II: Practical Experience (1, 2, 3) (F,S) P for 3500: HLTH 1000; P for 3501, 3502: HLTH 2500. Peer education experiences/opportunities to apply skills and knowledge learned in HLTH 2500.

 

3500. Planning, Implementation and Evaluation in College Health Promotion: Nutrition (3) (F,S) P: HLTH 1000 or 1050; HLTH 2500 or NUTR 2105. Theory and application of content and methodologies to be utilized in college health promotion programs with an emphasis on nutrition education.

 

3501. Planning, Implementation and Evaluation in College Health Promotion: Sexuality (3) (F,S) P: HLTH 1000 or 1050; HLTH 2500 or HLTH 2050.  Application of methods in college-based sexual health programs.

 

3502. Planning, Implementation and Evaluation in College Health Promotion: Alcohol, Tobacco and Other Drugs (3) (F,S) P: HLTH 1000 or 1050; HLTH 2500 or REHB 2003.  Application of methods in college-based ATOD prevention education programs.

 

3515. AIDS HIV Disease in Modern Society (3) (S) P: HLTH 1000 or 1050 or consent of instructor. Key issues surrounding AIDS epidemic. Focus on social, psychological, political, economic, legal, ethical, and health aspects.

 

3520. Introduction to Global Health (3) (S) P: HLTH 1000 or 1050; or consent of instructor. An overview of how health problems and issues in other parts of the world compare and contrast with those in the U.S.

 

4000. Methods of Training and Staff Development (4) 4 lecture and skill demonstration hours per week. P: PSYC 3221 or consent of instructor. Group and training methodologies in health setting. Emphasis on need assessment, program implementation, and evaluation of workshops, conferences, and short courses.

 

4010. Senior Seminar: Tutorial in Health Issues Research (3) (F,S) 2 1-hour lectures and 2 2-hour labs per week. P: Senior standing or school and community health majors; completion of all core courses; or consent of instructor. Guidance in development of investigative study appropriate to student’s needs and interests.

 

4100. Community Health Profile (3) P: HLTH 4000 or consent of instructor. Basic concepts and tools for identifying community health education needs. Develop community health profile for county of internship (HLTH 4990).

 

4200. Planning and Evaluation in Worksite Health Promotion (3) (F,S,SS) P: Completion of core courses. Role of evaluation. Emphasis on measuring instrument design, evaluation, planning, and interpretation of evaluation results.

 

4305. Class Management in Health Occupations (3) (F) Strategies for managing behaviors in the health education classroom and related clinical settings.

 

4323. Methods of Teaching Health Education (3) (F,S) P: Admission to upper division. Theory and application of content and methodologies to be utilized in secondary school health program.

 

4324. Internship in Health Education (10) (F,S) Full-time, semester-long internship. P: Admission to upper division; EDUC 3200; HLTH 2123; completion of HLTH 4323 with a minimum grade of C; PSYC 1000; C: HLTH 4326. Observation and supervised teaching in an assigned health education public school classroom.

 

4326. Internship Seminar: Issues in Health Education (1) (F,S) P: Admission to upper division; C: HLTH 4324. Individualized study of problems or issues pertinent in school health education.

 

4348. Health Education Problems (3) May receive credit for one of HLTH 3020, 4348. Current health problems in US with focus on nature of problems, including sociological conditions and cultural and governmental factors which contribute to their causes and solutions.

 

4500, 4501, 4502. Independent Study (1,2,3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) P: Consent of instructor. Individualized program developed through student initiative in consultation with designated instructor as extension of formal course offerings.