2017-2018 Undergraduate Catalog/Handbook 
    
    May 02, 2024  
2017-2018 Undergraduate Catalog/Handbook [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Descriptions


The undergraduate course numbering system is as follows:

0100 - Lower Level Courses
0200 - Upper Level Courses
0300 - Upper Level Courses
 

Not every course listed in this Bulletin is offered annually. Definite information about course offerings and class hours is available at the time of registration through the Office of the Registrar. Insufficient enrollment or changing conditions may occasionally necessitate the withdrawal of scheduled courses. Please check with appropriate departments to determine if the courses sought are being offered and when they are scheduled.

 

Social Work

  
  • SOCW 0340 - Introduction to Generalist Practice


    Credits: 3

    Provides an introduction to the generalist practice process, the problem-solving model, critical thinking, the values and ethics of social work, recording methods, basic interviewing skills and how to apply this knowledge and these skills across various types of practice situations (with individuals, families, groups, communities, and organizations).

    Pre/co-requisite: SOCW 0241 .
  
  • SOCW 0341 - Generalist Practice with Communities and Organizations


    Credits: 3

    Examines the skills needed to develop and carry out community development and social activism interventions. Covers basic skills for developing organizations creating organizational change, and administering organizations.

    Prerequisites: Acceptance in Social Work major and SOCW 0340 .
  
  • SOCW 0342 - Generalist Practice with Individuals


    Credits: 3

    This course focuses on skills of assessment and intervention with individuals. Students examine models of micro practice, hone critical thinking skills, and develop methods for dealing with ethical dilemmas.

    Prerequisites: Acceptance in Social Work major and SOCW 0340 .
  
  • SOCW 0343 - Generalist Practice with Families and Groups


    Credits: 3

    Introduces students to the knowledge and skills needed to plan and guide social work groups and the knowledge and skills to work with family systems.

    Prerequisites: Acceptance in Social Work major and SOCW 0340 .
  
  • SOCW 0351 - Social Work Practicum I


    Credits: 6-8

    Social work majors in their senior year are required to complete a two-semester, 400 hour, hands on social work experience in an approved agency under the supervision of a professional social worker. Included is a weekly seminar that provides further integration of practice with the skills, knowledge, and values and ethics of the field.

    Prerequisites: Acceptance in Social Work major and SOCW 0340 .
  
  • SOCW 0352 - Social Work Practicum II


    Credits: 6-7

    This is the second half of the senior year field experience.

    Prerequisites: acceptance in social work major and SOCW 0351 .
  
  • SOCW 0353 - Senior Capstone I


    Credits: 2

    For Social Work Majors only. Social work majors propose, receive approval, and being to carry out a two-semester independent professional project that demonstrates integration of the six ares of the curriculum: 1) generalist social work practice, 2) diversity and social justice. 3) social welfare policy and planning, 4) human behavior and the social environment, 5) research, and 6) field education.

    Prerequisites: SOCW 0204   and SOCW 0301  
    Corequisite: SOCW 0351  
  
  • SOCW 0354 - Senior Capstone II


    Credits: 2

    For Social Work Majors only.  This course is the second half of the independent professional project that demonstrates integration of the six ares of the curriculum: 1) generalist social work practice, 2) diversity and social justice. 3) social welfare policy and planning, 4) human behavior and the social environment, 5) research, and 6) field education.

    Prerequisites: SOCW 0204   and SOCW 0301  
    Corequisite: SOCW 0352  
  
  • SOCW 0360 - Diversity and Social Justice


    Credits: 3

    This course examines the existence of multiple, intersecting, and interlocking systems of advantage and disadvantage among the diverse social identity groups in the United States.  the centrality of diversity competent practice with individuals, families, groups, and communities are emphasized.

    Prerequisites: EGST 0101   or EGST 0102  
  
  • SOCW 0399 - Independent Study


    Credits: 1-6

    Permission of instructor.


Theatre Arts

  
  • THEA 0104 - Introduction to Theatre


    Credits: 3

    This course is an historical survey of the origins, nature, evolutions, and development of theatre and its related arts. Students learn the theory and practice of the theatre arts, including playwriting, acting, directing, set and lighting design, theatre architecture, costuming and makeup, technical production, and theatre management. Students acquire tools with which to experience, analyze, and appreciate good theatre and the wisdom it can offer, whether as audience members or as part of theatre productions.

  
  • THEA 0121 - Acting Styles: Techniques, Theory and Practice


    Credits: 3

    Students gain a basic understanding of theatre as a performing art through a study of acting styles and periods in an historical and cultural context. Students also apply the theory and technique in a practical format. Acting Styles focuses on three major periods from a choice ranging from classical to contemporary. Approaches to teaching and learning include lecture, discussion, collaborative projects, character analysis through script study, theatre exercises and guest speakers. Students attend campus and area theatrical productions, write critical reviews, and perform scenes.

  
  • THEA 0151 - Introduction to Performance


    Credits: 3

    This course provides a perspective on and appreciation of theatre by studying the historical origins, development, and evolution of performance throughout the ages and across cultures. The course is designed for students of varying disciplines and offers a unique lens through which to view performance in theatre and in life. Students learn about the nature of performance and some of the significant theories and figures in the history of performance, and are introduced to various performance concepts, principles, and techniques, as well as different approaches to actor training. Students learn about and work on the performer’s instrument: the body, the voice, and the imagination. Many practical exercises are employed, which may include areas such as storytelling, dramatic structure, sensory work, movement, improvisation, psychophysical action, mask work, stage combat, etc. Students also will supply their knowledge and training to create performance pieces.

  
  • THEA 0152 - Scenography


    Credits: 3

    This course provides a perspective on and an appreciation of theatre by studying the historical development, continuum, and evolution of the values, methods, and theories of the practitioners of the New Stagecraft, the collaborative relationship between the director and the designer, and the basic principles of visual and aural theatrical design. The course will expose students to the significant theories and movements that have shaped the visual style of the American stage; will familiarize students with theatre’s significant figures, techniques, conventions, styles, and terminology; will promote productive dialogue among student directors, actors, designers, writers, and technicians; and will impart a greater appreciation of the performing arts.

  
  • THEA 0251 - Theatre Management


    Credits: 3

    The course addresses the organization and business practices of theatrical companies and of theatre production. The course will acquaint students with the roles of the producer and the managing director. The requirements and responsibilities of both commercial and non-profit theatrical production will be addressed, as well as the roles and functions of various management personnel. The course will include such topics as fund raising, subscription sales, publicity and promotion, community relations, agents, unions, stage management, and long- and short-term planning.

  
  • THEA 0252 - Acting I


    Credits: 3

    An introductory course in the art and craft of the actor designed to make the student aware of personal outer and inner resources and to provide the student with work habits and tools to approach the actor’s task with understanding.

  
  • THEA 0255 - Directing I


    Credits: 3

    A study of the process of play direction and practice in the staging of scenes from the most common styles of plays.

  
  • THEA 0260 - Script Analysis & Interpretation


    Credits: 3

    This course will employ various disciplined, systematic approaches to analyzing and understanding a work of dramatic literature and their application to classical, modern, and contemporary plays, and it will facilitate a greater understanding and appreciation of the art and craft of dramatic writing. The course is designed for students of varying disciplines. The course will challenge and assist students in the development of their critical, analytical, and creative abilities. Knowledge acquired in this course will assist students in their analysis and understanding of other literary works, and will increase their appreciation of the work of the creative writer. The course also will provide insight into how one’s interpretation of a dramatic text can be translated into concrete graphic, visual, and aural terms for a theatre audience.

  
  • THEA 0261 - Theatre History: Early Stages


    Credits: 3

    This course is an interdisciplinary study of the development, continuum, and evolution of Western theatre in a world cultural context. The course will focus on the agendas and legacies of key figures and movements in the development of Western theatre from its origins in ritual and ceremonial dance to the community performances of the Middle Ages. The relationship of Western theatre to Eastern examples, the development of the theatre as a physical structure, the development of various concepts of character and dramatic action, and the changing relationship of life on the stage to life off the stage will be examined through the study of selected dramatists, theoreticians, directors, designers, and performers.

    Prerequisites: ENGL 0101  and ENGL 0102 .
  
  • THEA 0262 - Theatre History: Renaissance to Romanticism


    Credits: 3

    This course is an interdisciplinary study of the development, continuum, and evolution of Western theatre in a world cultural context. The course will focus on the agendas and legacies of key figures and movements in the development of Western theatre from the European Renaissance to the emerging world stage of the nineteenth century. The relationship of Western theatre to Eastern examples, the development of the theatre as a physical structure, the development of various concepts of character and dramaticaction, and the changing relationship of life on the stage to life off the stage will be examined through the study of selected dramatists, theoreticians, directors, designers, and performers.

    Prerequisites: ENGL 0101  and ENGL 0102 .
  
  • THEA 0263 - Theatre History: The Modern Stage


    Credits: 3

    This course is an interdisciplinary study of the development, continuum, and evolution of Western theatre in a world cultural context. The course will focus on the agendas and legacies of key figures and movements in the development of Western theatre from the realist/naturalist movements of the nineteenth century to the world theatre of the 1940s. The relationship of Western theatre to Eastern examples, the development of the theatre as a physical structure, the development of various concepts of character and dramatic action, and the changing relationship of life on the stage to life off the stage will be examined through the study of selected dramatists, theoreticians, directors, designers, and performers.

    Prerequisites: ENGL 0101  and ENGL 0102 .
    (formerly ENGL 0263)
  
  • THEA 0330 - Special Topics in Theatre


    Credits: 3

    This course focuses upon selected subjects in the theatre arts of performance and design, theatre stagecraft and technology, theatre history, theatre management, or dramatic literature chosen in keeping with the instructor’s field of specialization and in response to student interest and/or emerging trends in theatre.

  
  • THEA 0343 - Sound Design for Theatre


    Credits: 3

    This course teaches students the principles, theories, technology, and craftsmanship of sound design for live theatrical production. Topics include script analysis for the designer, developing a design concept, researching period music, developing a sound score, translating characters’ internal psychological and emotional states into sound, and organizing the documentation of a design. Emphasis is placed on digital multi-track recording and editing. Students will be expected to plan and to implement a number of sound design projects using computer-aided sound design software. Students also will explore basic audio theory and technology, the components of sound systems, and their applications to a live theatrical environment.

  
  • THEA 0350 - Dramaturgy


    Credits: 3

    This courses applies aspects of script analysis, dramatic theory and criticism, and theatre history to the study of individual works of drama. Dramaturgy involves the study of the principles of dramatic composition, structure, style, and theory as they relate to a dramatic work, and research on that work’s historical setting and time of composition, on its author’s body of work, on its published criticism, and on its production history. Students will learn what makes a dramatic work theatrically viable, how to assess its strengths and weaknesses, and how to rectify its shortcomings.

    Prerequisites: THEA 0260  or ENGL 0365 .
  
  • THEA 0353 - Theatre Workshop


    Credits: 6

    This is an intensive course for students who have acquired the basic skills of stagecraft and theatrical production, and who are interested in learning their application to the execution of theatrical designs. It is a hands-on, experiential course in which students develop and put to practical use a number of theatre and stagecraft technology skills. Students will build and paint scenery, hang and focus lights, collect and record sound, participate in costume construction, collect and build properties, and have the opportunity to serve on the running crews for the semester’s theatrical offerings. Each student is required to fulfill assigned hours and to attend work calls outside of regularly scheduled class and shop hours.

    Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor.
  
  • THEA 0354 - Costume Design


    Credits: 3

    Students will acquire an appreciation and an understanding of costume design as a unique form of artistic expression. Students will learn about style, about the designer’s creative process, and how to analyze and interpret play scripts and characters from the costume designer’s perspective. They will also learn about the processes of executing costume design, including the tools and techniques of costume construction. The course will provide a cultural and historical perspective, revealing how the pressures of place and time have influenced the fashions of various periods and how costume design has evolved and developed over time. Criteria will be established to enable students to evaluate and to articulate their reactions to costume designs and to the design experience.

  
  • THEA 0356 - Stagecraft Techniques


    Credits: 3

    Construction techniques and terminology, the use and safe operation of tools, carpentry skills, reading blueprints, and scene painting techniques are included in this course which serves as preparation for THEA 0353  Theatre Workshop.

  
  • THEA 0357 - Acting II


    Credits: 3

    Working on a role, students apply the elements of Acting I to text, character analysis, and performance. Scenes and short works will be performed for class criticism.

    Prerequisites: THEA 0252 .
  
  • THEA 0358 - Production Seminar


    Credits: 3

    A topics course. Topic will depend upon the playwright and the play chosen for production. Production Seminar is a culminating course designed to apply the skills actors, designers, and technicians learn in their performance and design/technical courses, and to provide practical experience in the mounting of a theatrical production. The course will be devoted to preparing, building, performing, and evaluating a theatrical production for a public audience.

    Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor. Enrollment by audition or interview; open to all students who qualify.
  
  • THEA 0359 - Acting for Film and Television


    Credits: 3

    Students will learn how to apply the craft of acting to the demands of acting on-camera for film and television, as well as the techniques and craft required for on-camera acting. Students will be introduced to such aspects of on-camera acting as the terminology of the media, cold reading techniques necessary for auditioning, the camera shots and camera angles, the limitations of the frame, professional behavior on a set, and the actor’s responsibility. Students will engage in a number of exercises as well as monologue and scene work for the camera.

    Prerequisites: THEA 0252  and THEA 0357 .
  
  • THEA 0360 - Theatre Production


    Credits: 6

    This is an intensive hands-on course for students interested in learning and gaining experience in standard technical craft practices for the theatre. The class will familiarize students particularly with the specific equipment and skills needed for the preparation and construction of costumes for a theatrical production. Students will also learn and apply fundamental construction tools, techniques and skills in other technical/craft areas of scenery lighting, sound, scene painting, makeup, and properties. Student may also participate in the running crews for the semester’s theatrical productions. Each student will be required to fulfill assigned hours and to attend work calls outside the regularly scheduled class and shop hours.

    Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor is required for admission to the course.
  
  • THEA 0362 - Research Seminar in Theatre


    Credits: 3

    Advanced research in theatre, including guided individual study of an approved topic. Members of the department will assist students whose special interests coincide with their specialized areas.

    Prerequisites: Permission of instructor.
  
  • THEA 0368 - Directing II


    Credits: 3

    Through directing at least one act play, class criticism, and analysis, students will learn the role of director as interpreter, organizer, teacher, and stage manager.

    Prerequisites: THEA 0255 .
  
  • THEA 0380 - Professional Theatre Seminar


    Credits: 1

    Students will learn about the realities and demands of graduate school and of making a career in the worlds of professional theatre, film, and television. Topics will include but are not limited to auditioning techniques for theatre and for film and television; headshots, resumes, portfolio preparation and presentation; creating personal web sites; marketing oneself; personal wardrobe and makeup; interviewing techniques, how to research, select, apply, and prepare for graduate school; and the professional working environments of New York and Los Angeles. Required of all Theatre Arts majors.

    Prerequisites: Junior or Senior standing in the Theatre Arts program.
  
  • THEA 0389 - Scene Design


    Credits: 3

    The course will convey an appreciation and understanding of scenic design as a unique form of artistic expression and the artistic skills and craftsmanship necessary to a scenic designer. Students will learn how to analyze and interpret a script from the scenic designer’s perspective and to translate one’s concepts into concrete visual and graphic terms. Students will acquire a working understanding of theatre history and style as they relate to scenic design. The course will stress process and methodology and will expose students to the scenic designer’s creative process, touching on such areas as analysis, research, sketching, rendering, model building, and ground plan development.

  
  • THEA 0390 - Lighting Design


    Credits: 3

    This course teaches the science and the art of the discipline of lighting design. Students will learn the tools of the trade and how to use them to enhance a theatrical production. It will acquaint students with the lighting designer’s process and how the designer analyzes, interprets, and translates a script into a cogent design concept, and how the designer uses the tools and the latest technology of the trade to execute the design.

  
  • THEA 0398 - Internship in Theatre


    Credits: 3-12

    A practical internship program for senior Theatre Arts majors who want to gain real-world experience in on-the-job training in an area of theatre. Students will participate for a stipulated period of time under professional supervision and evaluation, and will be observed periodically by college faculty. The internship must be proposed by the student and approved by the Theatre Arts faculty. Any additional requirements of an internship - for example, journal or report writing or an oral presentation - will be determined by the faculty.

    Prerequisites: Permission of program coordinator.
  
  • THEA 0399 - Independent Study


    Credits: 3-6

    A course by special arrangement for independent study in an area of special interest or need in theatre and/or drama. The student will work with a faculty member qualified to supervise the independent study project.

    Prerequisites: Permission of instructor and department chair.

Gerontology

  
  • GERO 0101 - Introduction to Gerontology


    Credits: 3

    An introduction to the societal and cultural factors which impact aging individuals.  Explains the interrelatedness of social, psychological, and physical aging.  Topics to be covered include, but are not limited to, societal and biological theories of aging, societal and individual consequences of demographic changes in an aging society, current issues in social gerontology, and aging.

  
  • GERO 0370 - Gerontology Internship


    Credits: 1-6

    An internship with a community agency or organization that involves participation in a relevant gerontological working environment.  Students who take this course will gain professional experience by applying their gerontological knowledge in their internship setting.

    Prerequisites: GERO 0101 SOCI 0321 PSYC 0208  and MOVP 0310 
  
  • GERO 0399 - Independent Study in Gerontology


    Credits: 1-6

    Credit for independent study is granted for special academic work approved by the Gerontology Advisor.  The work will be supervised by a faculty member.  This work may involve library research and subsequent preparation of a scholarly paper; design and completion of an experimental project or field study; advanced study and application of concepts in Gerontology.  At the end of the projects a final written report will be submitted to the faculty supervisor and the Gerontology Advisor.

    Prerequisites: GERO 0101 SOCI 0321 PSYC 0208 , and MOVP 0310 

Anthropology

  
  • ANTH 0101 - Introduction to Anthropology


    Credits: 3

    This course is a survey introduction to all of the major fields of anthropology and human adaptation, cultural learning, and endeavor.  Students will learn that anthropology and the study of cultural knowledge is inherently holistic, comparative and interdisciplinary.  In this course we use the broad and current definition of the discipline as a five field program of study that recognizes global development, post-colonial economic, and political forces at work in the world today.  The five fields that students will be introduced to in their introductory coursework and can develop beyond the requirements include: 1) cultural anthropology, 2) archeology, 3) biological/medical anthropology, 4) linguistics, and 5 ) applied anthropology.  There is no pre-requisite to this course, first-year students are encourages to take this course.

  
  • ANTH 0200 - Methods of Ethnography from 1900-Present


    Credits: 3

    This course will create an historical and cultural context for understanding the basic qualitative research from in anthropology since 1900 with a focus on American monographs (with examples from British, French, and German works and ethnographic styles and formats).

  
  • ANTH 0201 - Cultural Anthropology


    Credits: 3

    An overview of cultural anthropology as a discipline and to the concepts and techniques essential for understanding different cultures, both contemporary and past. Includes analysis of universal aspects of human experience, including the family, economic, political, religious, artistic, and linguistic systems, examined in cross-cultural perspective. A brief examination of hunters and gatherers, tribal and peasant peoples, among others and an introduction to the dynamics of cultural contact, cultural evolution, and change.

    SOCI 0200
  
  • ANTH 0250 - Special Topics in Anthropology


    Credits: 3

    An intermediate treatment of a specialized are with Anthropology.

    Prerequisites: ANTH 0101  
  
  • ANTH 0313 - Chinese Culture and Society


    Credits: 3

    This course is about the basics of the Chinese society and culture.  It sets out to decode the mystery of the Chinese civilization, its past, its present, and its possible future.  It examines how Chinese society’s basic characteristics have developed as a result of the interactions of historical, geographic, economic, philosophical, political and religious factors.  It also considers how these factors are reflected in the contemporary dynamics of Chinese society and culture.  The thematic overview of the course focuses on the development of a civilization - how it has developed through the centuries and how it reveals itself in its contemporary form.

    Prerequisites: ANTH 0101   or POLS 0110  or SOCI 0101  
    SOCI 0313
  
  • ANTH 0320 - Political Anthropology


    Credits: 3

    Using culture as a lens this course focuses on the political development.  Specifically using anthropological tools we will focus on the development and impact of the cultural origins on modern political processes and its institutions, both Western and non-Western; the meaning and courses of political identity in complex contemporary societies; and, the prospects for democracy and the Western styles political institutionalization among and within the world’s divers civilizations.

    Prerequisites: ANTH 0101  
  
  • ANTH 0350 - Special Topics in Anthropology


    Credits: 3

    An advanced in-depth treatment of a limited and/or specialized area within Anthropology.

    Prerequisites: ANTH 0101  
 

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