University Curriculum Committee

Minutes of 03/08/07

 

Present:

 

Regular Members:   D. Batts, G. Lapicki, J. Lewis, J. Manner, J. Neil

 

Ex Officio Members:  C. Boklage, D. Long, R. Mitchelson

 

Administrative:  D. Coltraine, K. Snyder

 

Excused:  L. Griffin, P. Schwager, J. Tisnado

 

Absent:  L. McNeill

 

Guests: 

 

  1. J. Neil called the meeting to order at 2:00 p.m.

 

  1. The minutes of the February 22, 2007 meeting were approved without dissent.

 

  1. Old Business:  None. 

 

  1. Request from the School of Music for a new course, MUSC 4660, and revision of the BM in Performance (Wind and Percussion Concentrations) was approved.

 

  1. Request from the Department of Biology for a new course, BIOL 2800, was approved. 

 

  1. Request from the Department of Geography to bank five existing courses, PLAN 3000, PLAN 3010, PLAN 4132, PLAN 4152, and PLAN 5035 was approved.  Request for two new courses, PLAN 3030 and PLAN 4096, was approved, with minor changes to the course description and catalog copy for PLAN 4096.  Requests for revision of the BS in Urban and Regional Planning and revision of the existing Minor in Planning were approved. 

 

  1. Request from the Department of English for three new courses, ENGL 3660, ENGL 3670, and ENGL 4370, was approved.  Requests for three new courses, ENGL 3770, ENGL 3815, and ENGL 4930, and to unbank ENGL 3490 were tabled; these requests will be resubmitted.  Request to revise the BA in English was tabled, pending approval of the related courses.

 

  1.  New Business: 

 

    1. Discussion of proposed revisions to the UCC’s course submission procedures.  Dr. Dale Knickerbocker will be invited to the next UCC meeting to discuss the proposal.
    2. D. Long announced that the SGA was concerned about the adequacy of student input into certain decisions of the Faculty Senate and its committees.  Members noted that the SGA representative to the UCC has not attended any meetings since September.

 

  1.  Meeting was adjourned at 3:50 p.m. by Chair J. Neil.

 

Submitted by Jan Lewis, UCC Secretary

 

 

East Carolina University

University Curriculum Committee (UCC)

B-104 Brewster

 

Minutes for Thursday, March 8, 2007

 

The following Catalog revisions were approved by the UCC:

 

MUSC: MUSIC

 

PAGE 239:

 

Pedagogy (3 s.h.):

MUSC 4657. Directed Study in Instrumental Pedagogy for Brass, Percussion, Strings, or Woodwinds (3) (F,S) (P: Acceptance in performance degree program; consent of instructor)

Performance groups (12 s.h.):

Minimum of 8 semesters large ensemble

Minimum of 4 semesters of MUSC 1805. String Chamber Music (1) (F,S)

Performance groups for guitar majors:

Minimum of 8 semesters of MUSC 1805. String Chamber Music (1) (F,S) and 4 semesters of large ensemble

Music history and literature electives (6 s.h.)

Free electives (5 s.h.)

Voice Performance:

Applied music (18 s.h.):

16 s.h. voice

Present a half junior recital and a full senior recital

2 s.h. minor

Students are required to pass a departmental piano proficiency examination. In preparation for the exam, students must enroll in MUSC 1305,1315 (Functional piano for singers) for 2 semesters. Students desiring further preparation may take piano minor, piano accompanying, MUSC 1105, 1115, 2105, and/or 2115 for no credit.

Music history and literature (4 s.h.):

MUSC 4496. Opera History (2) (WI) (P: MUSC 2416)

MUSC 4596. Historical Development of Solo Vocal Literature (2) (WI) (P: MUSC 2416)

Performance groups (10 s.h.):

Minimum of 8 semesters large choral ensemble

Minimum of 2 semesters of opera workshop or theater

Foreign language and diction (21 s.h.):

Minimum of 6 s.h. FREN

Minimum of 6 s.h. GERM

Minimum of 3 s.h. ITAL

MUSC 1627. Italian Lyric Diction for Singers (2) (F)

MUSC 1637. French Lyric Diction for Singers (2) (S)

MUSC 1647. German Lyric Diction for Singers (2) (S)

Voice pedagogy (3 s.h.):

MUSC 3637. Voice Pedagogy (3) (S)

Wind or Percussion Performance:

Applied music (28 s.h.):

24 s.h. major instrument

MUSC 1105, 1115. Beginning Group Piano (1,1) (F,S)

MUSC 2105, 2115. Intermediate Group Piano (1,1) (F,S) (P: MUSC 1115)

Present a half junior recital and a full senior recital

Pedagogy (3 s.h.):

MUSC 4657. Directed Study in Instrumental Pedagogy for Brass, Percussion, Strings, or Woodwinds (3) (P: Acceptance in performance degree program; consent of instructor)

Performance groups (12 s.h.):

Minimum of 8 semesters large ensemble

Music majors may count only two semester hours of Marching Band Field Experience (MUSC 1706, 1 s.h.) for large ensemble credit. Marching Band (MUSC 1705, 2 s.h.) may not count toward large ensemble credit for music majors. Music majors taking more than 2 s.h. of MUSC 1706 or 1705 must sign a release form to be made available in the music office and in the SOM Undergraduate Handbook. The form will help clarify that hours above the required 2 s.h. of MUSC 1706 will not count as part of the Music Education degree plan at ECU, and that these extra hours may lead to additional hours on a student’s transcript before graduation.

Minimum of four semesters small ensemble.

Percussion Performance:

Applied music (28 s.h.):

24 s.h. major instrument

MUSC 1105, 1115. Beginning Group Piano (1,1) (F,S)

MUSC 2105, 2115. Intermediate Group Piano (1,1) (F,S) (P: MUSC 1115)

Present a half junior recital and a full senior recital

Pedagogy (3 s.h.):

MUSC 4660. Percussion Pedagogy and Literature (3) (P: Upper division standing in applied music)

Performance groups (12 s.h.):

Minimum of 8 semesters large ensemble

Music majors may count only two semester hours of Marching Band Field Experience (MUSC 1706, 1 s.h.) for large ensemble credit. Marching Band (MUSC 1705, 2 s.h.) may not count toward large ensemble credit for music majors. Music majors taking more than 2 s.h. of MUSC 1706 or 1705 must sign a release form to be made available in the music office and in the SOM Undergraduate Handbook. The form will help clarify that hours above the required 2 s.h. of MUSC 1706 will not count as part of the Music Education degree plan at ECU, and that these extra hours may lead to additional hours on a student’s transcript before graduation.

Minimum of four semesters small ensemble.

 

 

PAGE 447:

 

MUSC: MUSIC PEDAGOGY

 

4660. Percussion Pedagogy and Literature P: Upper division standing in applied music. Study of pedagogical methods and performance materials for percussion instruments of Western art music.

 

 

 

BIOL: BIOLOGY

 

PAGE 328:

 

2800. Biological Instruction (2) (F, S) 1 lecture and 3 lab hours per week.  Open to biology or biochemistry majors by invitation only.  P: BIOL 1100, 1101, 1200, 1201; or consent of instructor. Instruction and supervised experience in methods and practice of teaching introductory biology.

 

 

 

PLAN: PLANNING

 

PAGE 142:

 

BS in Urban and Regional Planning

 

Students entering the Department of Planning Program are encouraged to declare their major as soon as possible in accordance with university requirements. Minimum degree requirement is 126 s.h. of credit as follows:

 

1. Foundations curriculum requirements (See Section 4, Foundations Curriculum Requirements for all Baccalaureate Degree Programs), including those listed belowStudents intending to major in planning should be cognizant of prerequisites for required courses in the planning curriculum and make such courses a part of their foundations curriculum coursework....................................................42 s.h.

COMM 2410. Public Speaking (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:FA) or COMM 2420. Business and Professional Communication (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:FA)

2. Core ............................................................................................................................................2736 s.h.

PLAN 1900.  Planning for the Human Environment (3) (F, S, SS)

PLAN 3000. Urban Planning (3) (F,SS) or PLAN 3010. Regional Planning (3) (S,SS)

PLAN 3015. Planning for Circulation (3) (S) or PLAN 5065. Land Use Planning (3) (F)

PLAN 3020. Environmental Planning (3) (F)

PLAN 3021. Introduction to Planning Techniques (3) (F)

PLAN 3022. History and Theory of Planning (3) (WI) (F)

PLAN 3030.  Urban and Regional Planning (3)

PLAN 3031. Quantitative Analysis in Planning (3) (S) (P: PLAN 3021 or consent of instructor)

PLAN 3032. Planning Legislation and Administration (3) (WI) (S)

PLAN 3038. Planning Internship (3) (F,S,SS) (P: Completion of a minimum of 80 s.h. course work, including 4 of the 5 required core courses specified above; consent of a planning faculty member and the program director based on the student’s submitting a written proposal indicating the applicability of the planning internship to his or her educational and professional objectives Completion of a minimum of 9 s.h. of planning courses and consent of internship coordinator)

PLAN 4003. Urban Form and Design (3) (F) or PLAN 4046. Planning and Design Studio (3) (S)

PLAN 4096.  Planning Studio (3) (F,S) (P: PLAN 3022; PLAN 3051; or consent of instructor)

PLAN 4099. Practicum in Planning (3) (F,S) (WI)

3. Skills courses...............................................................................................................................126 s.h.

COMM 2410. Public Speaking (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:FA) or COMM 2420. Business and Professional Communication (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:FA)

ENGL 3880. Writing for Business and Industry (3) (WI) (F,S,SS) (P: ENGL 1200) or ITEC 3290. Technical Writing (3) (WI) (F,S,SS) (P: ENGL 1200)

MATH 2228. Elementary Statistical Methods I (3) (F,S,SS) (P: MATH 1065 or equivalent) or MATH 2283. Statistics for Business (3) (F,S,SS) (P: MATH 1065 or 1066 or equivalent) or GEOG 3400. Quantitative Techniques in Geography (3) (F) (P: GEOG 2400 or consent of instructor) or GEOG 2400. Spatial Data Analysis (3) (F,S)

PLAN 3051. Introduction to GIS in Planning (3) (F) (P: GEOG 3410 or consent of instructor)

4. Area of emphasis (In consultation with the planning advisor, choose one area from the following.)........................................................................................................................................9 s.h.

Coastal Planning and Development: Choose 9 s.h.

PLAN 3015. Planning for Circulation (3) (S)

*PLAN 3018, 3028, 3038. Planning Internship (1,2,3) (F,S,SS) (P: Completion of a minimum of 80 s.h. course work, including 4 of the 5 required core courses specified above; consent of a planning faculty member and the program director based on the student’s submitting a written proposal indicating the applicability of the planning internship to his or her educational and professional objectives Completion of a minimum of 9 s.h. of planning courses and consent of internship coordinator)

PLAN 3041. Computer Applications in Planning (3) (F)

PLAN 4015. Emergency Management Planning (3) (F,SS)

PLAN 4021. Advanced GIS Applications in Planning (3) (S) (P: PLAN 3051 or GEOG 3410 or consent of instructor)

PLAN 4041. GPS Applications in Planning (3) (S,SS) (P: PLAN 3051 or consent of instructor)

PLAN 4132. Land Use Law (3) (S)

PLAN 4152. Environmental Law (3) (S)

PLAN 5025. Coastal Area Planning and Management (3) (P: Consent of instructor)

PLAN 5045. Environmental Resources Planning and Management (3)

PLAN 5065. Land Use Planning (3) (F)

*PLAN 5121. Problems in Planning (2,3) (P: Consent of instructor)

*PLAN 5131. Problems in Planning (2,3) (WI) (P: Consent of instructor)

PLAN 5985. Historic Preservation Planning (3)

* May count a maximum of 3 s.h. from PLAN 3018, 3028, 3038, and a maximum of 3 s.h. from 5121, 5131 toward the degree.

Urban and Regional Planning: Choose 9 s.h.

PLAN 3000. Urban Planning (3) (F,SS)

PLAN 3015. Planning for Circulation (3) (S)

*PLAN 3018, 3028, 3038. Planning Internship (1,2,3) (F,S,SS) (P: Completion of a minimum of 80 s.h. course work, including 4 of the 5 required core courses specified above; consent of a planning faculty member and the program director based on the student’s submitting a written proposal indicating the applicability of the planning internship to his or her educational and professional objectives Completion of a minimum of 9 s.h. of planning courses and consent of internship coordinator)

PLAN 3041. Computer Applications in Planning (3) (F)

PLAN 4003. Urban Form and Design (3) (F)

PLAN 4021. Advanced GIS Applications in Planning (3) (S) (P: PLAN 3051 or GEOG 3410 or consent of instructor)

PLAN 4025. Housing and Neighborhood Planning (3) (F)

PLAN 4041. GPS Applications in Planning (3) (S,SS) (P: PLAN 3051 or consent of instructor

PLAN 4046. Planning and Design Studio (3) (F,S)

PLAN 4132. Land Use Law (3) (S)

PLAN 4142. Technology Law and Economic Development (3) (F)

PLAN 5035. Community Planning for Health Facilities (3)

PLAN 5045. Environmental Resources Planning and Management (3)

PLAN 5065. Land Use Planning (3) (F)

*PLAN 5121. Problems in Planning (2,3) (P: Consent of instructor)

*PLAN 5131. Problems in Planning (2,3) (WI) (P: Consent of instructor)

PLAN 5985. Historic Preservation Planning (3)

*May count a maximum of 3 s.h. from PLAN 3018, 3028, 3038, and a maximum of 3 s.h. from 5121, 5131 toward the degree.

5. Minor or concentration area (In consultation with the planning advisor, choose a minor from another discipline or two concentration areas from below, with a minimum of 9 s.h. chosen from each of the two areas.)......................................................................................................................24 s.h.

Accounting and Public Finance:

ACCT 2101. Survey of Financial and Managerial Accounting (3) (F,S) (P: MATH 1065 or 1066)

ECON 4214. Public Finance (3) (FC:SO) (P: ECON 2133, 3144)

FINA 3004. Survey of Financial Management (3) (F,S) (P: ACCT 2101 or 2401; ECON 2113; MATH 2283)

POLS 3242. Municipal Policy and Administration (3)

POLS 3253. Government Fiscal Administration (3) (S) (RP: POLS 1010)

Coastal Resources:

BIOL 3660. Introduction to Marine Biology (3) (F,S,SS) (P/C: BIOL 2250, 2251)

BIOL 3661. Introduction to Marine Biology Laboratory (1) (F,S) (C: BIOL 3660)

GEOG 3002. Coastal Geography (3) (WI) (S) (P: GEOG 1200 or 3200 or consent of instructor)

GEOL 1550. Oceanography (4) (S) (FC:SC)

HIST 5520. Maritime History of the Western World Since 1815 (3)

SOCI 3410. Introduction to Maritime Sociology (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or SOCI 2110)

Community Health:

EHST 2110. Introduction to Environmental Health Science (3) (F,S)

EHST 3600. Air Pollution (3) (F) (P: EHST 2110 or consent of instructor)

EHST 5800. Solid and Hazardous Waste Management (3) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161)

HLTH 3001. Principles of Community Health Education (2) (S)

HLTH 3030. Health Behavior (3) (WI) (S) (P: PSYC 1000)

HPRO 4300. Survey of the Allied Health Professions (2)

Decision Science:

MIS 2223. Introduction to Computers (3) (F,S,SS)

MIS 3063. Introduction to Management Information Systems (3) (F,S,SS) (P: MIS 2223)

MIS 4103. Decision Support Systems (3) (F,S) (P: MIS 3063)

OMGT 3123. Operations Management (3) (F,S,SS) (P: Minimum grade of C in MATH 1066, 2283; C: MGMT 3202 or 3302)

OMGT 3223. Business Decision Modeling (3) (F,S,SS) (P: Minimum grade of C in MIS 2223, MATH 1066 or 2119 or 2121 or 2171, 2283)

Economic Development:

ECON 3144. Intermediate Microeconomics (3) (F,S) (FC:SO) (P: ECON 2113)

ECON 3244. Intermediate Macroeconomics (3) (F,S) (FC:SO) (P: ECON 2133)

ECON 3353. Economics of Underdeveloped Countries (3) (FC:SO) (P: ECON 2133)

ECON 4020. Industrial Organization (3) (WI) (S) (FC:SO) (P: ECON 3144)

ECON 4850. Resource Economics (3) (FC:SO) (P: ECON 2133, 3144)

Environmental Resources:

BIOL 1060. Environmental Biology (4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC)

ECON 4850. Resource Economics (3) (FC:SO) (P: ECON 2133, 3144)

GEOG 2300. Geography of Environmental Resources (3) (F)

GEOL 1700. Environmental Geology (4) (F,S) (FC:SC)

PHYS 1050. Physics and the Environment (4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC)

POLS 3256. Environmental Politics (3) (F)

Historic Preservation and Design:

CMGT 2210, 2211. Construction and Civil Materials (3,0) (F,S,SS)

HIST 3205. History of American Urban Life (3)

HIST 5920. Techniques of Museum and Historic Site Development (3)

HIST 5985. Historic Preservation Planning (3)

IDMR 2700. Historic Interiors I: 3000 BC Through Mid-Nineteenth Century (3) (WI) (S)

IDMR 2750. Historic Interiors II: Late Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (3) (WI) (F)

IDMR 4750. Interior Design for Adaptive Reuse (3) (WI) (S) (P: AMID 3600, 3700)

International Development:

ECON 3353. Economics of Underdeveloped Countries (3) (FC:SO) (P: ECON 2133)

ECON 4373. International Trade (3) (S) (FC:SO) (P: ECON 2133, 3144)

GEOG 2003. Economic Geography (3) (WI) (F,S) (FC:SO)

POLS 4360. Politics of Developing Areas (3) (FC:SO)

Land Use and Real Estate:

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

FINA 3554. Principles of Real Estate (3) (F,S) (P: ACCT 2401; ECON 2133)

FINA 4564. Real Estate Appraisal (3) (F) (P: FINA 3554)

POLS 3241. Urban Political Systems (2) (S)

SOCI 3225. Urban Sociology (3) (FC:SO) (P: SOCI 2110)

Personnel Management and Administration:

MGMT 3202. Fundamentals of Management (3) (F,S,SS) (P: ECON 2113)

MGMT 4342. Organizational Change and Development (3) (F) (P: MGMT 3202 or 3302)

MGMT 4402. Human Resource Management (3) (F,S) (P: MGMT 3202 or 3302)

POLS 3242. Municipal Policy and Administration (3) (RP: POLS 3241)

POLS 3252. Public Administration (3) (F) (FC:SO)

POLS 3254. Governmental Personnel Administration (3) (RP: POLS 3252 or consent of instructor)

Recreation:

GEOG 2019. Geography of Recreation (3) (F) (FC:SO)

RCLS 2000. Introduction to Leisure Services (3) (F,S)

RCLS 2601. Leisure in Society (3) (FC:SO)

RCLS 3300. Outdoor Programming (3) (S) (P: Declared RCLS major or minor; RCLS 2000)

Societal Issues and Policies:

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

SOCI 2110. Introduction to Sociology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO)

SOCI 2111. Modern Social Problems (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: SOCI 2110)

SOCI 3225. Urban Sociology (3) (FC:SO) (P: SOCI 2110)

SOCI 3289. Community Organization (3) (S) (FC:SO) (P: SOCI 2110)

SOCI 4345. Racial and Cultural Minorities (3) (F) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or SOCI 2110)

SOCI 4347. Social Inequality (3) (S) (FC:SO) (P: SOCI 2110)

6. Electives to complete degree requirements for graduation.

 

NOTE: Excluding foundations curriculum requirements, no one course may be used to fulfill two or more degree requirements.

 

Planning Minor

 

The planning minor offers two options: coastal planning and development, and urban and regional planning. Minor requires 24 s.h. of credit as follows:

 

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

      PLAN 1900.  Planning for the Human Environment (3) (F, S, SS)

PLAN 3000. Urban Planning (3) (F,SS)

PLAN 3010. Regional Planning (3) (S,SS)

PLAN 3020. Environmental Planning (3) (F)

PLAN 3021. Introduction to Planning Techniques (3) (F)

PLAN 3022. History and Theory of Planning (3) (F)

PLAN 3030 Urban and Regional Planning (3) (F)

PLAN 3032. Planning Legislation and Administration (3) (WI) (S)

 

2. Option (Choose one) Electives............................................................................................9 s.h.

Coastal Planning and Development:

PLAN 3021. Introduction to Planning Techniques (3) (F)

PLAN 4015. Emergency Management Planning (3) (F,S,SS)

PLAN 4025. Housing and Neighborhood Planning (3) (F)

PLAN 4132. Land Use Law (3) (S)

PLAN 4152. Environmental Law (3) (S)

PLAN 5025. Coastal Area Planning and Management (3) (S,SS) (P: Consent of instructor)

PLAN 5035. Community Planning for Health Facilities (3)

PLAN 5045. Environmental Resources Planning and Management (3) (S)

PLAN 5065. Land Use Planning (3) (F)

PLAN 5985. Historic Preservation Planning (3)

Urban and Regional Planning:

PLAN 3015. Planning for Circulation (3) (S)

PLAN 3021. Introduction to Planning Techniques (3) (F)

PLAN 4025. Housing and Neighborhood Planning (3) (F)

PLAN 4132. Land Use Law (3) (S)

PLAN 4142. Technology Law and Economic Development (3) (F)

PLAN 5025. Coastal Area Planning and Management (3) (P: Consent of instructor)

PLAN 5035. Community Planning for Health Facilities (3)

PLAN 5045. Environmental Resources Planning and Management (3)

PLAN 5065. Land Use Planning (3) (F)

PLAN 5985. Historic Preservation Planning (3)

 

 

PAGE 463:

 

1900. Planning for the Human Environment (3) (F,S,SS) Theories, concepts, and methodologies used to plan for man and environment. Planning process examined in context of urban, regional, environmental, site, and institutional scenarios.

 

3000. Urban Planning (3) (F,SS) Philosophy, theories, and principles involved in planning urban areas. History of urban planning profession, analysis of urban planning process, overview of institutional context within which planning occurs, and discussion of problems confronting contemporary urban areas.

 

3010. Regional Planning (3) (F,S,SS) Philosophy, theories, and principles of regional planning. History of regional planning and analysis of problems, issues, and techniques in planning regions.

 

3015. Planning for Circulation (3) (S) Theories and principles involved in planning for circulatory systems in urban and regional settings. Historical aspects of circulation, overview of planning concerns, and discussion of practice of planning

as related to transportation.

 

3018, 3028, 3038. Planning Internship (1,2,3) (F,S,SS) Minimum of 50 hours of professional work per semester hour of credit. P: Completion of minimum of 80 s.h. of course work, including 4 of the 5 required core courses specified in BS in urban and regional planning degree; approval by member of planning faculty and dept chair Completion of a minimum of 9 s.h. of planning courses and consent of internship coordinator based upon student’s submitting written proposal indicating applicability of planning internship to his or her educational and professional objectives. Supervised experience with professional planning personnel in approved agency or organization.

 

3020. Environmental Planning (3) (F) Concepts and issues of the environment in relation to planning and management principles and practices.

 

3021. Introduction to Planning Techniques (3) (F) 2 lecture and 2 lab hours per week. Communication, computation, data analysis, and other analytical techniques for effective urban and regional planning.

 

3022. History and Theory of Planning (3) (WI) (F) Past and present planning concepts, methods, and theories. In depth examination of evolution of cities and history of planning in US.

 

3030. Urban and Regional Planning (3) Philosophy, theories and principles involved in urban and regional planning, including an analysis of problems confronting urban areas, and the development of regions and their resources.

 

3031. Quantitative Analysis in Planning (3) (S) P: PLAN 3021 or consent of the instructor. Basic application in demographic, economic, land use, and transportation methods in policy context to develop effective community planning.

 

3032. Planning Legislation and Administration (3) (WI) (S) State enabling acts, zoning ordinances, subdivision regulations, and other legislative bases essential to effective planning. Administrative methods and theory presented in context of planning practice.

 

3041. Computer Applications in Planning (3) (F) 2 lecture and 2 lab hours per week. Various computer hardware, software, and operating systems for effective planning and design at urban and regional scales.

 

3051. Introduction to GIS in Planning (3) (F) 2 hours lecture and 2 hours lab per week. P: PLAN 3041 or consent of instructor. Overview of principles and applications of GIS in planning. Focuses on use of GIS to facilitate decision making in planning process.

 

4003. Urban Form and Design (3) (S) General types, scales, features, and determinants of urban form. Design concepts, problems, and potentials associated with urban development projects of varying scales.

 

4015. Emergency Management Planning (3) (F,SS) Case studies examine emergency management planning and techniques. Emphasis on mitigation of, preparation for, response to, and recovery from natural and technological disasters.

 

4021. Advanced GIS Applications in Planning (3) (S) 2 lecture and 2 lab hours per week. P: PLAN 3051 or GEOG 3410 or consent of instructor. Overview of advanced principles and applications of GIS in planning using vector, raster, and TIN data models. Focuses on use of GIS to facilitate and support decision-making in planning process.

 

4025. Housing and Neighborhood Planning (3) (F) Substantive and methodological issues related to housing and neighborhood planning. Current local, state, and federal statutory planning requirements in housing and community development examined in relationship to planning process.

 

4041. GPS Applications in Planning (3) (S,SS) 2 lecture and 1 lab hours per week. P: PLAN 3051 or consent of instructor. Provides an in-depth survey of Global Positioning Systems (GPS) technology developments, applications, concepts,and operation. Emphasis is on field data collection, processing, and integration with GIS to provide accurate mapping for many essential decision-making and planning applications.

 

4046. Planning and Design Studio (3) (F,S) 2 lecture and 2 lab hours per week. Analytical and practical skills involved in real world planning, development, and management.

 

4096. Planning Studio (3) (F,S) 4 studio hours per week. P: PLAN 3022; PLAN 3051; or consent of instructor. Collaborative studio investigating an advanced issue in planning. Work is conducted in teams, often for a community client.

 

4099. Practicum in Planning (3) (F,S) (WI) 1 lecture and 2 lab hours per week. Culmination of undergraduate

preparation for professional practice. Planning process used to prepare high-quality planning document.

 

4132. Land Use Law (3) (S) Survey of land use law in United States; covering the legal authority for land use regulations and legal requirements of zoning ordinances and land use decisions.

 

4142. Technology Law and Economic Development (3) (F) Introduces concepts and principles required for successful local government tech-based economic development; and to laws pertaining to protecting, licensing, and managing intellectual property.

 

4152. Environmental Law (3) (S) Acquaints student with basic concepts and mechanisms of federal and state environmental law and policy.

 

5025. Coastal Area Planning and Management (3) (S) 2 classroom and 3 studio hours per week. P: Consent of instructor. Conceptual approach to planning and management problems, policies, and practices in coastal area.

 

5035. Community Planning for Health Facilities (3) Theories, methodologies, and principles essential to establishing an effective community planning process for health facilities.

 

5045. Environmental Resources Planning and Management (3) Frame of reference for studying natural resources for purpose of development.

 

5065. Land Use Planning (3) (FS) 2 lecture and 2 lab hours per week. Social, economic, physical, and environmental aspects of urban land use and planning. Other tools for effective planning.

 

5121, 5131. Problems in Planning (2,3) (5131:WI) 3 hours per week per credit hour. P: Consent of instructor. Analysis of specific problem in planning to be approved prior to registration.

 

5985. Historic Preservation Planning (3) Same as HIST 5985 Historic preservation planning. Examines theoretical, legal, historical, and design bases of preservation planning.

 

PLAN Banked Courses

 

3000. Urban Planning (3)                                             

3010. Regional Planning (3)                                        

4001. Field Methods in Planning (3)                            

4005. Environmental Impact Assessment in Planning (3)                                                        

4040. Community Facilities Planning and Capital Budgeting (3)                                                        

4086. Site Design (3)

4132.  Land Use Law (3)

4152.  Environmental Law (3)

5015, 5016. Transportation Planning and Transportation Planning Studio (2,1)

5035. Community Planning for Health Facilities (3)

5055. Soils and Planning (3)

5095. International Development Planning (3)

5111. Problems in Planning (1)

 

 

PAGE 150:

 

5. Cognates (Choose from the following.).........................................................................................6 s.h.

ACCT 2101. Survey of Financial and Managerial Accounting (3) (F,S) (P: MATH 1065 or 1066)

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

ANTH 3077. Archaeological Methods (3) (S) (P: ANTH 2000 or consent of instructor)

ART 1906. Art History Survey (3) (F,S) (FC:FA) (P: ART 1905 or 1910)

ART 1907. Art History Survey (3) (F,S) (FC:FA) (P: ART 1905 or 1910)

ART 2905. Masterpieces in the Visual Arts and Literature (3) (FC:FA)

ART 5900. Art of the United States (3) (P: ART 1906, 1907)

ENGL 3870. Introduction to Editing and Abstracting (3) (F,S) (P: ENGL 1200)

IDMR 2700. Historic Interiors I: 3000 BC Through Mid-Nineteenth Century (3) (WI) (F)

IDMR 2750. Historic Interiors II: Late Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (3) (WI) (S)

MGMT 3202. Fundamentals of Management (3) (F,S,SS)

MUSC 2227. Introduction to American Music from Colonial Times to the Present (3) (FC:FA)

PHIL 2275. Professional Ethics (3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) (FC:HU)

PLAN 3000. Urban Planning (3) (F,SS)

6. Electives to complete requirements for graduation.

 

 

PAGE 151:

 

3. Cognates..........................................................................................................................................9 s.h.

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

ART 1906. Art History Survey (3) (F,S) (FC:FA) (P: ART 1905 or 1910)

ART 1907. Art History Survey (3) (F,S) (FC:FA) (P: ART 1905 or 1910)

ART 2905. Masterpieces in the Visual Arts and Literature (3) (FC:FA)

ART 5900. Art of the United States (3) (P: ART 1906, 1907)

ENGL 3870. Introduction to Editing and Abstracting (3) (F,S) (P: ENGL 1200)

IDMR 2700. Historic Interiors I (3)

IDMR 2750. Historic Interiors II: Late Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (3) (WI) (F)

PLAN 3000. Urban Planning (3) (F,SS)

 

 

PAGE 161:

 

2. Electives (Choose from the following.) ......................................................................................15 s.h.

GEOG 3410. Fundamentals of GIS (3)

GEOG 3430. Geographic Information Systems I (3) (F,S) (P: GEOG 3410 or equivalent)

PLAN 3000. Urban Planning (3) (F,SS)

PLAN 3032. Planning Legislation and Administration (3) (WI) (S)

PLAN 3051. Introduction to GIS in Planning (3)

POLS 3031. Introduction to Behavioral Methodology (3) (S) (FC:SO)

POLS 3041. Women and Public Policy (3) (FC:SO) (P: POLS 1010 or consent of instructor)

POLS 3240. State and Local Government (3) (FC:SO) (P: POLS 1010 or consent of instructor)

POLS 3241. Urban Political Systems (3) (S)

POLS 3242. Municipal Policy and Administration (3)

POLS 3253. Government Fiscal Administration (3) (S) (RP: POLS 1010)

POLS 3254. Governmental Personnel Administration (3) (RP: POLS 3252 or consent of instructor)

POLS 3255. Domestic Public Policy (3) (S)

POLS 3256. Environmental Politics (3) (F)

POLS 3257. International Environmental Policy (3) (S)

POLS 4310. Public Policy and the Media (3) (S) (FC:SO)

POLS 4991. Internship in Public Administration (1) (F,S,SS) (P: Consent of instructor)

POLS 4992. Internship in Public Administration (2) (F,S,SS) (P: Consent of instructor)

PSYC 3241. Personnel and Industrial Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO)

PAGE 165:

 

Applied Social Research:

SOCI 4200. Advanced Techniques in Quantitative Sociology (3) (P: MIS 2223; SOCI 3213)

SOCI 4201. Advanced Techniques in Applied Research (3) (P: SOCI 3216)

Choose one from:

SOCI 3215. Introduction to Qualitative Sociology (3) (P: SOCI 2110 or consent of instructor)

SOCI 4202. Special Topics in Applied Social Research (3) (P: SOCI 2110; a statistics or research design course)

SOCI 4950. Practicum in Sociology (3) (F,S) (P: SOCI major; 27 s.h. in SOCI with a minimum grade of C in each course; consent of dept chair, practicum coordinator, and faculty member who will supervise the practicum)

Choose 15 s.h., including at least two disciplines other than sociology from:

ANTH 3050. Ethnographic Field Methods (3) (S) (P: ANTH 1000 or consent of instructor)

COMM 2030. Communication Research (3) (F,S) (P: COMM 1001, 1002)

COMM 3110. Persuasion Theories (3) (P: COMM 1001, 1002)

COMM 3180. Intercultural Communication (3) (P: COMM 1001, 1002)

ECON 2113. Principles of Microeconomics (3) (F,S,SS)

ECON 2133. Principles of Macroeconomics (3) (F,S,SS) (P: ECON 2113)

GEOG 2003. Economic Geography (3) (WI) (F,S)

GEOG 3430. Geographic Information Systems I (3) (F,S) (P: GEOG 3410 or equivalent)

MKTG 3832. Marketing Management (3) (F,S,SS) (P: ECON 2113)

MKTG 4662. Marketing Research (3) (WI) (F,S,SS) (P: MKTG 3832; MATH 2283)

MKTG 4732. Consumer Behavior (3) (F,S,SS) (P: MKTG 3832)

PLAN 3000. Urban Planning (3) (F,SS)

PLAN 3010. Regional Planning (3) (S)

PLAN 3021. Introduction to Planning Techniques (3) (F)

PLAN 3022. History and Theory of Planning (3) (WI*) (F,S)

PLAN 5025. Coastal Area Planning and Management (3) (P: Consent of instructor)

POLS 3242. Municipal Policy and Administration (3)

POLS 3252. Public Administration (3) (F)

POLS 3253. Government Fiscal Administration (3) (S) (RP: POLS 1010)

POLS 3254. Governmental Personnel Administration (3) (RP: POLS 3252 or consent of instructor)

POLS 3255. Domestic Public Policy (3) (S)

PSYC 3241. Personnel and Industrial Psychology (3) (F,S,SS)

PSYC 5343. Psychology of Organizational Behavior (3) (P: Graduate standing; PSYC 3241; or consent of instructor)

 

 

 

ENGL: ENGLISH

 

PAGE 368:

 

3420. The Short Story (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. History, development, and analysis of short story.

 

3430. Mystery Fiction (3) (S-OY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Development of detective, crime, suspense, and espionage fiction during last century.

 

3450. Northern European Mythology (3) (F,S-OY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Major myths of Norse and Celtic people and their impact on English and American literature.

 

3460. Classical Mythology (3) (S) (FC:HU) Same as CLAS 3460 P: ENGL 1200. Major myths of ancient Greece and Rome and their impact on English and American literature.

 

3470. Modern Fantasy (3) (S-EY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. History, development, types, and nature of fantasy during past century.

 

3480. Science Fiction (3) (F,S) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Development of genre from turn of century.

 

3570. American Folklore (3) (WI) (F,S,SS) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Types of American folklore with concentration on legends and tales.

 

3600. Classics from Homer to Dante (3) (WI) (F) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Classical and Medieval literature from Homer to Dante.

 

3610. Human Values in Literature (3) (F-EY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Great works of literature that express enduring human values.

 

3630. The Bible as Literature (3) (S) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Various literary genres in the Bible.

 

3640. Literature and Religion (3) (F-OY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Interrelationships of literature and religion. Exemplary literary artists vary.

 

3660. Representing Environmental Crisis (3) (F) P: ENGL 1200. Introduction to discursive and narrative representations of environmental crisis in various texts.

 

3670. Narrating Food and Environment (3) (S) P: ENGL 1200. Introduction to literary narratives of the connection between nature, culture, and food production.

 

3710. Advanced English Grammar (3) (S) May not count toward foundations curriculum humanities requirement. P: ENGL 2710 or equivalent. Principles of modern linguistic theory presented and applied to contemporary American English. Utilizes transformational-generative grammar model. Emphasis on practical applications to English language and literature.

 

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

 

3730. The Structure of English: Phonology and Morphology (3) (F) Formerly ENGL 5501 May not count toward foundations curriculum humanities requirement. P: ENGL 1200. Contemporary linguistic theory and its practical application to teaching phonological and morphological components of English language.

 

3740. The Structure of English: Syntax and Semantics (3) (S) Formerly ENGL 5502 May not count toward foundations curriculum humanities requirement. P: ENGL 1200. Contemporary linguistic theory and its practical application to teaching syntactic and semantic components of English language.

 

3750. Introductory Linguistics (3) (S) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Methods and techniques of linguistic analysis. Sample problems on phonological, morphological, syntactic, graphemic, and historic reconstruction levels. Emphasis on non-Indo-European languages.

 

3760. Linguistic Theory for Speech and Hearing Clinicians (3) (F,S) May not count toward foundations curriculum humanities requirement. P: ENGL 1200. Linguistic theory for precise formalization of adult language systems on morphophonological, syntactic, and semantic levels. Emphasis on practical applications to clinical speech therapy.

 

3810. Advanced Composition (3) (WI) (F,S,SS) May not count toward foundations curriculum humanities requirement. P: ENGL 1200. Advanced study of kinds of composition. Practice in effective writing.

 

3820. Scientific Writing (3) (WI) (F,S,SS) May not count toward foundations curriculum humanities requirement. P: ENGL 1200. Practice in assimilation and written presentation of scientific information.

 

3830. Introduction to Play Writing (3) (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.

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

3860. Introduction to Nonfiction Writing (3) (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.

 

3870. Introduction to Editing and Abstracting (3) (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) (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.

 

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) (F-EY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Close reading and critical study.

 

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

 

4090. Shakespeare: The Tragedies (3) (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.

 

4150. The Romantic Period (3) (WI) (S-OY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Major poets.

 

4170. Victorian Literature (3) (WI) (F-OY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Major writers.

 

4200. American Literature, 1820-1865 (3) (WI) (F-OY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Major writers of Transcendental period. Poe, Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne, Melville, and Whitman.

 

4230. North Carolina Literature (3) (WI) (S-OY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Representative group of literary works examined from various critical perspectives.

 

4250. American Literature, 1865-1920 (3) (WI) (S) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Representative writers of period between the Civil War and World War I. Twain, Dickinson, James, Crane, Wharton, and Dreiser.

 

4300. Recent British and American Writers (3) (WI) (S) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Major works and trends in literature since World War II.

 

4340. Ethnic American Literature (3) (WI) (S-OY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Examines multicultural literature, including African American, Native American, Jewish American, Hispanic American, and Asian American writers.

 

4360. World Literature in English (3) (WI) (S-EY) (FC:HU) Formerly ENGL 3100 P: ENGL 1200. Examines literature written in English worldwide, exclusive of the US and England.

 

4370. Literature and Environment (3) (F) P: ENGL 1200. Survey of American and/or British literary narratives focusing on the relationship between imagination and nature.

 

4510, 4520. Directed Readings (3,3) (F,S,SS) P: ENGL major with consent of dept chair; ENGL 1200. Based on needs and interests of individual student.

 

4530, 4540. Special Topics Seminars (3,3) (F,S) P: Consent of instructor; ENGL 1200. Topics announced by instructor at pre-registration period.

 

4550, 4555. Senior Honors Seminar (3,3) (F,S) 2 3-hour units in succession, but no grade or credit is recorded until the completion of the second 3-hour unit. P: ENGL 1200. Tutorially-directed readings in selected area and research writing.

 

4710. Teaching English as a Second Language: Theories and Principles (3) (F) Formerly ENGL 5503 May not count toward foundations curriculum humanities requirement. P: ENGL 1200. Current theories and principles of teaching English to non-native speakers or speakers of nonstandard dialects.

 

4720. Applied Linguistics for Language Teachers (3) (S) Formerly ENGL 5504 May not count toward foundations curriculum humanities requirement. P: ENGL 4710. Pedagogical application of linguistic theory. Emphasis on teaching English as a second language.

 

4730. Language and Society (3) (S) P: ENGL 1200. Explores language in relation to society.

4890. Practicum: Careers in Writing (3) (F,S,SS) May not count toward foundations curriculum humanities requirement. Supervised internship. Minimum of 140 work and academic hours per semester. P: ENGL 1200; consent of instructor. Practical, professional writing in office or agency. Parallel readings and study.

 

4891. Practicum: Careers in Writing (3) (F,S,SS) May not count toward foundations curriculum humanities requirement. Supervised internship. Minimum of 140 work and academic hours per semester. P: ENGL 1200; consent of instructor. Practical, professional writing in office or agency. Parallel readings and study.

 

4910. Survey of Film Styles and Movements (3) (F) (FC:HU) P: 6 s.h. of literature or consent of instructor. World art and early history of films.