Apr 29, 2024  
2019-2020 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
2019-2020 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Descriptions


 
  
  • GERMN 270 - Study Abroad: Selected Geographical Area


    Credits: (3-12)
    Individual or group study in a particular geographical area in the German-speaking world. Students will complete language skills courses at an approved foreign language institute or university equivalent to 200-level foreign language Mount courses. May be repeated for credit.
  
  • GERMN 301 - German Composition


    Credits: (3)
    Students learn to express themselves clearly and correctly in written German and offer insight into German-speaking culture. Prerequisite(s): GERMN 202  or equivalent
  
  • GERMN 302 - Advanced German Conversation


    Credits: (3)
    Students learn to express themselves clearly and correctly when they speak German and to understand German spoken in a variety of contexts. Prerequisite(s): GERMN 202  or equivalent. GERMN 301  is not a prerequisite for GERMN 302. Native speakers are not permitted to enroll in conversation courses.
  
  • GERMN 310 - Business German


    Credits: (3)
    This course acquaints students with the world of German business and economics and provides the student with German business language. The course continues to strengthen the students’ understanding of German, especially the reading, writing, and speaking skills. Prerequisite(s): GERMN 202  or equivalent.
  
  • GERMN 320 - German Culture


    Credits: (3)
    A study of the various historical or contemporary aspects of culture of Germany or Austria-art, music, cuisine, film, drama, religion and society. Prerequisite(s): GERMN 202  or equivalent.
  
  • GERMN 330 - Die Deutschen


    Credits: (3)
    This course acquaints the student with German history and contemporary German society. Though the focus is Germany, Austria and Switzerland will also be discussed. Prerequisite(s): GERMN 202  or equivalent
  
  • GERMN 340 - Topics in German Language/Translation


    Credits: (3)
    The study of a particular aspect of the German language; for example, phonetics, business German, film, advanced translation, etc. Prerequisite(s): GERMN 202  or equivalent.
  
  • GERMN 350 - Introduction to German Literature I: Early German Literature


    Credits: (3)
    The objective of this course is to provide students of advanced German with an overview of early German literature. The course materials and class activities will continue to strengthen and reinforce the students’ command of German. Prerequisite(s): GERMN 202  or equivalent.
  
  • GERMN 351 - Introduction to German Literature II: Masterpieces of German Literature


    Credits: (3)
    The objective of this course is to provide the advanced students of German with an overview of German literary and non-literary works. The course materials and classroom activities will continue to strengthen and reinforce the student’s command of German. Prerequisite(s): GERMN 202  or equivalent.
  
  • GERMN 370 - Study Abroad: Selected Geographical Area


    Credits: (3-12)
    Individual or group study in a particular geographical area in the German-speaking world. Students will complete language skills courses at an approved foreign language institute or university equivalent to 300-level foreign language Mount courses. May be repeated for credit.
  
  • GERMN 398 - Independent Study


    Credits: (1-3)
    Supervised individual work in selected areas of German language, literature, or culture. Permission of the instructor, the department chair and the dean of academic services is required.
  
  • GERMN 400 - Modern German Literature


    Credits: (3)
    Selected works by major modern German-speaking writers in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. The texts, in German, will deal with the Post-World War II period. Prerequisite(s): GERMN 202  or equivalent.
  
  • GERMN 410 - Der deutsche Krimi


    Credits: (3)
    The objective of this course is to introduce the advanced students of German to the German Krimi, or German detective and crime stories. The course materials and classroom activities will continue to strengthen and reinforce the students’ command of German. Prerequisite(s): GERMN 202  or equivalent.
  
  • GERMN 420 - Troubled Visions: German Cinema


    Credits: (3)
    The objective of this course is to study German Cinema both as a unique medium and as a carrier of important cultural values. The course materials and classroom activities will continue to strengthen and reinforce the students’ command of German. Prerequisite(s): GERMN 202  or equivalent.
  
  • GERMN 460 - Special Topics


    Credits: (3)
    Study of some particular aspect of the German language, literature or culture. Prerequisite(s): GERMN 202  or equivalent.
  
  • GERMN 475 - Study Abroad: Selected Geographical Area


    Credits: (3-12)
    Individual or group study in a particular geographical area in the German-speaking world. Students will complete culture or literature courses at an approved foreign language institute or university equivalent to 400-level foreign language Mount courses. May be repeated for credit.
  
  • GERMN 480 - Internship


    Credits: (credits to be determined)
    An off-campus work experience that develops German language proficiencies. Permission of the instructor, the department chair.
  
  • GERMN 498 - Senior Seminar


    Credits: (1)
    Through a review and reconsideration of significant cultural and literary readings studied throughout the major program, students will demonstrate in writing and speaking their ability to “read,” the products of a culture, to synthesize its practices, and finally to interpret and reflect upon the perspectives of the target German-speaking cultures. Prerequisite(s): Senior standing.
  
  • GNSCI 106 - Environmental Sustainability


    Credits: (4)
    This course is designed to fulfill the Natural World domain requirement. It explores the nature of science through in-depth discovery of contemporary issues in the discipline of Environmental Sustainability. Students will gain an understanding of the scientific worldview, the process of scientific inquiry, the enterprise of science, and the role of science in history and society. By using quantitative reasoning and critical thinking, students will solve problems in an integrated lecture and lab setting. Specific issues addressed in this course include climate change, energy resources and policy, food and water security, and loss of biodiversity. Students with junior standing or higher can complete this course to fulfill the 300-level leadership portfolio requirement. (As needed)
  
  • GNSCI 130 - Physical Science: Chemistry of Food


    Credits: (4)
    This integrated laboratory and lecture course surveys the chemical and physical aspects of food; carbohydrates, lipids (fats), proteins, alcohols, vitamins, and additives, as well as a variety of cooking and preparation processes. Students will also gain an understanding of foodborne illnesses. The course will also include the current interest in genetically modified foods and molecular gastronomy techniques, popular with many chefs today. Students will gain a better understanding of the food we eat, the preparation, taste, and nutrition. Prerequisite(s): none. (As needed)
  
  • GNSCI 131 - Biological Science: Biology of Healthcare


    Credits: (4)
    This course examines the role of biological science in healthcare through an in-depth exploration of a selected group of anatomical and physiological conditions and topics that challenge medicine in the 21st century. Lecture and laboratory combine critical thinking and quantitative reasoning that enable students to investigate and analyze these healthcare issues and simultaneously gain an understanding of the scientific worldview, the role of science in history and society, the enterprise of science, and the process of scientific inquiry. Integrated lecture and lab. Prerequisite(s): none. (As needed)
  
  • GNSCI 132 - Biological Science: Infectious Disease


    Credits: (4)
    This subject will include a survey of various infectious diseases, their vectors, and their global, economic, and social implications. In the course of the semester the student will develop a basic understanding of science and biology including; public health, immunology, epidemiology, and physiology. This course will proceed through and discuss topics of foodborne, waterborne, bloodborne, and vectorborne disease, disaster epidemiology, vaccination and vaccine compliance, and bioterrorism, using contemporary and relevant examples and publications. The student will develop fluency in reading about, researching, and discussing these topics with the help of current articles, studies and media. Integrated lecture and lab. Prerequisite(s): none. (As needed)
  
  • GNSCI 133 - Physical Science: Astronomy


    Credits: (4)
    This laboratory-based course is designed to introduce the student to the role that observational astronomy has played in the development of scientific thought and our understanding of the universe, from the Big Bang to the distant future. Topics will include the history of astronomy, the physics and chemistry underlying the functioning of the universe, the development of the telescope, extraterrestrial threats to life on earth, as well as a detailed examination of our solar system and beyond, from its beginning to its eventual end. Laboratory experiments will include telescopic observations as well as computer simulations. Integrated lecture and lab. Prerequisite(s): none. (As needed)
  
  • GNSCI 134 - Biological Science: Biotechnology


    Credits: (4)
    This is an integrated laboratory and lecture course. Topics will be covered in a way that is accessible to non-science majors. This course is an exploration of contemporary biotechnology and the underlying science and ethics; how DNA, genes and cells work. Students will gain an understanding of recombinant DNA technology, cloning and gene therapy. Additional topics covered will include the application of biotechnology to pharmaceuticals, industry, agriculture, cancer, medicine, forensics, genetically modified foods and organisms. Prerequisite(s): none. (As needed)
  
  • GNSCI 135 - Physical Science: Forensic Science


    Credits: (4)
    This laboratory-based course is designed to introduce the student to the scientific aspects of forensic investigation as well as the ethical issues facing the forensic scientist. Topics include a broad range of forensic procedures such as physical and chemical methods for visualizing fingerprints, ballistics including bullet identification and gunshot residue analysis, blood detection and characterization, testing of controlled substances, DNA profiling, and fiber and hair analysis. Students will experience some of the analytical and instrumental methods used in investigating crimes, with an emphasis on the measurement accuracy and traceability required in criminalistics. Numerous case studies from the literature will be evaluated and the course will culminate in the investigation of a simulated crime followed by student presentations of their investigation to a jury. Integrated lecture and lab. Prerequisite(s): none. (As needed)
  
  • GNSCI 136 - Physical Science: Earth Science


    Credits: (4)
    Earth Science is an introductory survey course that explores earth processes including the fields of geology, paleontology (fossils), climatology (weather) , ocean and fresh water dynamics, estuaries (Chesapeake Bay), biodegradation and carbon cycling, extraction and depletion of earth resources such as oil, gas and fresh water, and mechanisms of climate change. Specific topics in astronomy such cosmology are explored. Emphasis is placed on how earth science processes have determined geo-historical events and human circumstances. This course satisfies all known educational elementary certification requirements in Earth Science in the Mid-Atlantic States and serves as a basis for informed decision making of earth science related policy of land, water, atmosphere and resource use. Integrated lecture and lab. Prerequisite(s): none. (As needed)
  
  • GNSCI 137 - Biological Science: Evolution of Social Behavior


    Credits: (4)
    This course is designed to fulfill the core science requirement. It explores the nature of science through in-depth discovery of contemporary issues in the discipline of Sociobiology, which is the study of the evolution of social behavior in animals and humans. Students will gain an understanding of the scientific worldview, the process of scientific inquiry, the enterprise of science, and the role of science in history and society. By using quantitative reasoning and critical thinking, students will solve problems in an integrated lecture and lab setting. Specific issues addressed in this course include cooperation and conflict, mate preferences, communication, and morality. (As needed)
  
  • GNSCI 138 - Biological Science: Nutrition &Lifestyle


    Credits: (4)
    This science course will introduce nutrition principles, computerized analysis, and food as medicine using evidence-based research that covers anatomy, physiology and biological processes. Students will analyze their own nutrient recommendations and nutritional needs & recognize the health impact these decisions make toward their future health. Traditional and current medical nutrition therapies will be read using scholarly research and evidence based libraries that focus on the chronic epidemics and pandemics the US population and government now faces including weight control, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, dental health, cancer and malnutrition. Labs will include computerized analysis of diet intakes, recipe evaluations of whole foods. Students will understand and develop critical thinking skills for reading and evaluating nutrition science research from both original and lay sources. (As needed)
  
  • GNSCI 139 - Biological Science: Plants and Society


    Credits: (4)
    This laboratory course is designed to fulfill the core science requirement. It explores the nature of science through in-depth discovery of contemporary issues in the discipline of Plant Biology. Students will gain an understanding of the scientific worldview, the process of scientific inquiry, the enterprise of science, and the role of plants in history and society. By using quantitative reasoning and critical thinking, students will solve problems in an integrated lecture and lab setting. Specific issues addressed in this course include impact of agricultural development on society, economic effects of specific plants, and historically important plants and their development through both traditional breeding and biotechnology. (As needed)
  
  • GNSCI 141 - Biological Science: Health and Disease


    Credits: (4)
    This course is designed to fulfill the Natural World domain requirement and is designed to be accessible for students with little scientific background. The first half of the course will explore the fundamentals of immunity from a cell biology perspective, building towards a whole body view of the immune response and the mechanisms and effectiveness of vaccination. The second half of the course will cover the fundamentals of viral, bacterial and human immune diseases by using various “case-study” diseases as guides. Students will gain an understanding of the proper functioning of the immune system, and understand how various pathogens and disease circumvent the human immune response to cause disease. Additionally, this course will rely on student interaction and participation to frame our discussions in the context of current world events, “popular science culture” and relevant scientific and social topics. This course will be complimented by in depth discussions, critical and analytic reading, and labs designed to further the students understanding of the scientific method and general biological mechanisms. (As needed)
  
  • GNSCI 142 - Biological Science: Pollinators and Global Change


    Credits: (4)
    Through an in-depth examination of pollinator biology and the contemporary threats to pollinators, students will explore the process of doing science and the role of science in society. By using critical thinking and quantitative methods, students will solve problems in an integrated lecture and lab setting, and upon completion, students will have the tools necessary to understand and critically evaluate the science that they encounter in their lives. In the first half of the course, specific topics covered will include pollinator biology and diversity, plant-pollinator interactions, and the importance for pollinators in natural and agricultural system. With a solid foundation in pollinator biology and ecology, students will be prepared to explore components of global change and their causes and evaluate how and why these changes negatively affect pollinators. The course will conclude with a synthesis of the status of pollinators and steps that can be taken to conserve pollinators. This General Science course is designed to fulfill the core science requirement. (As needed)
  
  • GNSCI 143 - Biological Science: Vaccines


    Credits: (4)
    This laboratory course is designed to fulfill the Natural World domain requirement. It explores the nature of science through in-depth discovery of contemporary issues in the discipline of Vaccines. Students will gain an understanding of the scientific worldview, the process of scientific inquiry, the enterprise of science, and the role of science in history and society. By using quantitative reasoning and critical thinking, students will solve problems in an integrated lecture and lab setting. Specific issues addressed in this course include: components and functions of the immune system; biotechnology; vaccine characteristics, development, testing, use, efficacy, and safety; and the vaccine debate. (As needed)
  
  • GNSCI 144 - Biological Science: Global Climate Change


    Credits: (4)
    This course is designed to fulfill the Natural World Domain requirement. It explores the nature of science through in-depth discovery of issues related to global climate change. Students will gain an understanding of the scientific worldview, the process of scientific inquiry, the enterprise of science, and the role of science in history and society. By using quantitative reasoning and critical thinking, students will solve problems in an integrated lecture and lab setting. Using data from the most recent assessment report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the course will address causes of and evidence for climate change. We will discuss current and future impacts of climate change on biodiversity and human welfare (including human health, food and water security, and national security). We will also explore strategies for mitigation of and adaptation to climate change. (As needed)
  
  • GNSCI 145 - Physical Science: Meteorology


    Credits: (4)
    This laboratory-based course is designed to introduce the student to the interactions of the various components of the atmosphere that comprise our weather, both on a local scale and a global one. Topics will include the history of meteorology, the physics and chemistry underlying the processes of weather, severe weather occurrences, climate change, pollution, as well as forecasting and the role of the meteorologist in society. Laboratory experiments will include atmospheric observations, graphic interpretations, and computer simulations. Integrated lecture and lab. As needed
  
  • GNSCI 146 - Biological Science: Evolution and Human Disease


    Credits: (4)
    This course will investigate how an evolutionary approach to the study of human health and disease can lead to a deeper understanding of the causes of disease and more effective ways to prevent and treat disease. We will begin by discussing the basic principles of evolutionary theory, and then we will use an evolutionary framework to address issues related to human health, including infectious diseases, cancer, nutrition and diet, addiction, and aging. Students will use quantitative reasoning and critical thinking skills in an integrated lecture and lab setting to analyze these issues in evolutionary medicine and gain an understanding of the nature of science, the process of scientific inquiry, the enterprise of science, and the role of science in society.
  
  • GNSCI 150 - Special Topics in General Science


    Credits: (4)
    Special Topics in General Science.
  
  • GREEK 101 - Beginning Modern Greek I


    Credits: (3)
    This introductory course aims to develop basic communicative proficiency in Modern Greek and also offer insight into Greek culture. (Fall)
  
  • GREEK 102 - Beginning Modern Greek II


    Credits: (3)
    This introductory course aims to develop basic communicative proficiency in Modern Greek and also offer insight into Greek culture. Prerequisite(s): GREEK 101   (Spring)
  
  • HIGE 307 - Modern South Africa


    Credits: (3)
    Provides an introduction to the history of the Western Cape of southern Africa, which is today part of the Republic of South Africa. The course is organized around two chronological units: the pre-industrial Western Cape to 1870 and South Africa from 1870 to the present. The first unit explores the interaction between hunter-gatherers and pastoralists, frontiers of interaction between European colonists and the Khoisan, the construction of colonial identities, and slavery, racism, class formation, and politics. Topics in the second unit include: British imperialism, Afrikaner nationalism, “coloured identity,” the growth of working class consciousness, rural transformation and agricultural development, the struggle against apartheid, townships, the 1994 elections, tourism, and South Africa’s relationship with the United States.
  
  • HIGE 311 - History of Mexico


    Credits: (3)
    Beginning with Cortes’ violent conquest of the Aztec empire and continuing to Mexico’s present, this course introduces and challenges the traditional narratives of modern Mexican history. Students will study the history, art, literature, and politics of our often misunderstood neighbor to the south, while analyzing such important themes as native responses to conquest and colonization; the role of religion and the Church in Mexican society; Mexico’s struggles with modernity; and Mexican relations with the United States, including current debates on immigration, trade, and drug-cartel related violence.
  
  • HIGE 316 - Central America and the Caribbean


    Credits: (3)
    Provides an introduction to the history of Central America and the Hispanic Caribbean (Cuba, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic) since the early nineteenth century. The course explores the dialogue between the “national,” political histories of the independent states that formed after centuries of Spanish colonial rule and the heterogeneous experiences of workers, farmers, peasants, artisans, and slaves. Within this framework, students will gain an understanding of aspects of land and labor systems, gender relations, race and ethnicity, community and class formation, state formation, and religion.
  
  • HIGE 324 - Rebels of the Atlantic: Age of Revolutions


    Credits: (3)
    This course will examine the growth of slavery across the various European empires in the Americas (Spanish, Portuguese, English, French, and Dutch). While plantations differed between the European colonies, slave labor was a constant. Thus, in the face of extreme exploitation, how did slaves respond? Beginning in the sixteenth century with the revolt of Enriquillo in Santo Domingo, the class will trace developments of resistance and marronage up to the late-nineteenth century by examining topics like runaway communities in Brazil, Jamaica, and Surinam; as well as uprisings in Cuba, Haiti, and the U.S.
  
  • HIGE 335 - Native American History


    Credits: (3)
    This course surveys Native American history from pre-European settlement to the present. Through short lectures, readings, discussion, presentations, and writing assignments, we will examine major themes in the history of America’s Native peoples. Topics will include Native American cultures prior to European invasions, early contact between Native and European cultures, Native American roles in colonial and revolutionary America, Indian removal and resistance, response to consolidation and reservations, assimilation policy, the Indian New Deal, termination, self-determination, and contemporary Native American cultures. Students will be challenged to engage with Native American cultures and to use their study of this material to reflect on their own traditions and backgrounds.
  
  • HINW 322 - Food, Water, Power, Dignity


    Credits: (3)
    The effects of post-1992 globalization on the “Bottom Billion”. Special emphasis on cultural and political responses to environmental and economic stress, especially within mega cities.
  
  • HINW 323 - China’s Most-Recent Rise


    Credits: (3)
    While China’s economic liberalization began during the Cold War, the last twenty years have seen its return as a world power. To what effect, and is it sustainable?
  
  • HINW 326 - Environmental Challenges of Developing Nations


    Credits: (3)
    The world’s rich, post-industrial, developed nations got that way by exploiting their environments. Today, many of the economic and environmental “rules” are different…How have the still-developing nations responded?
  
  • HINW 331 - Resisting States


    Credits: (3)
    The last 500 years have seen the invention and refinement of the nation-state, in all of its power and “glory”. But some have resisted, including Burmese, Algerians, Czechs, and others without countries. Are there continuities in their efforts or results?
  
  • HINW 332 - Weak State Nuclear War


    Credits: (3)
    The dominant nuclear paradigms were developed in the 1950s and -60s by a pair of superpowers - the USA and USSR. But when far weaker states, such as Israel, Pakistan, and North Korea, build nuclear strategies and arsenals, how does their weakness inform their process?
  
  • HINW 335 - Native American History


    Credits: (3)
    This course surveys the diverse experiences of Native American people from the pre-Columbian invasions to the present.
  
  • HINW 337 - Medes and Othered Barbarians


    Credits: (3)
    Othering is a sociological process in which people define both themselves and those outside their communities. How has Othering evolved since ancient times? Did the Greeks Other in the same way as did the Romans? Do we Other the same today?
  
  • HINW 338 - Non-West Middle Classes


    Credits: (3)
    Both the function and myth of the middle class are northern Atlantic inventions, born in Europe and the United States. But what about modern middle classes in other parts of the world, such as Brazil, India, and China? Do their middle classes serve the same functions and occupy the same economic, political, and cultural spaces within their countries?
  
  • HINW 395 - History Non-West: Special Topics


    Credits: (3)
    Special topics in non-Western History and culture offered to fulfill the History and Non-West requirements.
  
  • HIST - - History


    Credits: (3)
    Students fulfill this requirement by taking a course in U.S. History, World History, or a special topic in History.
  
  • HIST 104 - Harry Potter and the Middle Ages


    Credits: (3)
    You’ve read all the books; you’ve seen all the movies. Now you’re in college. Is it time to leave Harry Potter behind, along with your stuffed animals and band posters? No! It’s time to combine your love of the Potterverse with your new role as an apprentice in the modern descendant of the medieval universitas, the guild of scholars. In “Harry Potter and the Middle Ages,” we will explore the medieval historical, intellectual, and literary background to Rowling’s series of novels. The exploration of such topics as medieval magic and science, heresy and witchcraft, medieval manuscripts, alchemy, bestiaries, and medieval universities will provide us with a deeper understanding of both the Middle Ages and the Potter books.
  
  • HIST 107 - Historically Based Games


    Credits: (3)
    This course explores the way in which history is imagined, presented, formed, and deformed in historically based, deep strategy games. Utilizing game theory, primary sources, and secondary readings, the course will analyze classic and contemporary games in an effort to answer such questions as: How does the narrative form of such games relate to their content? How can games serve as a pedagogical device? What do games reflect about our understanding of various historical periods? As a final project, students will develop their own historically based deep strategy game.
  
  • HIST 120 - Pirates!


    Credits: (3)
    Stories about pirates, privateers, and other seaborne raiders have captured the popular imagination for as long as people have traveled across water. The “Golden Age” of piracy (from about 1650 to 1726) has provided the Caribbean with some of its most memorable legends. “Pirates” provides a foundation in the key themes, events, controversies, and individuals involved in Atlantic and Caribbean piracy before, during, and after the “Golden Age,” why they were important at a particular point in a particular place and why they ceased to be so. The purpose of the class is to introduce and discuss how people in, and connected through, the Atlantic World from the 1500s to the 1700s answered questions about piracy related to the above themes, and how these issues have shaped the popular portrayal of Caribbean piracy since the 18th century.
  
  • HIST 151 - Reagan’s America in the 1980’s


    Credits: (3)
    In his campaign for re-election to the presidency in 1984, Ronald Reagan released a television commercial that began with the line, “It’s morning in America again.” “Under the leadership of President Reagan,” the commercial concluded, “our country is prouder and stronger and better.” Reagan’s campaigns for the nation’s highest office stressed the themes of patriotism and individual responsibility, while his presidential administrations oversaw an economic agenda that privileged wealth production and a foreign policy that focused on defense spending and third world interventions. Reagan’s economic and foreign policies influenced the major events of the decade for sure, while his politics helped to shape the wider culture, a period often characterized as “the greed decade” (and one Madonna called “a material world” in a hit song). This course complicates the traditional narrative of the 1980s, which begins and ends with Ronald Reagan. Students explore and debate Reagan’s politics, policies, and mass appeal while also paying close attention to four defining themes of the 1980s: (1) rapid advancements in personal computer and entertainment/video game technology; (2) the trials of industrial labor; (3) the Cold War, specifically U.S.-Central American relations; and (4) the HIV/AIDS scare. Students will write brief argumentative essays on each of these four themes, as well as complete a creative project of their own design.
  
  • HIST 160 - The Age of the American Civil War, 1848-1877


    Credits: (3)
    An examination of the causes, conduct, and aftermath of the bloodiest conflict in American history. Through lectures and the discussion of readings drawn from the period, the course will examine antebellum American society and the break-up of the Union, the course of the war, and the political and social changes it engendered, and the effort to “Reconstruct” the defeated South.
  
  • HIST 201 - Class, Race, & Baseball


    Credits: (3)
    Class, Race, and Baseball covers the history of “America’s Pastime” from its creation in 1845 to the present. In so doing, it examines social and political changes in American society from the vantage point of this popular sport. The struggle for player free agency, the Black Sox scandal, the rise of the Negro Leagues, Jackie Robinson and baseball’s integration, expansion, and the steroids era will all be covered in this course.
  
  • HIST 202 - Making History


    Credits: (3)
    One of three courses required for students who major in history. The course is designed to stoke the fires of enthusiasm for the conscious and deliberate analysis of the human interaction and activity that is central to historical discourse. Examines how historians piece together what they can about the past to produce a record of human activity that has meaning today. Each semester, working with a member of the department, students will address a particular theme and undertake research using primary and secondary sources. The professor may require students to work together on a course project or on other collaborative endeavors. Ideally, students should be able to apply what they learn in other department electives. This course should be taken no later than the sophomore year.
  
  • HIST 205 - Ancient Greece


    Credits: (3)
    Imagine yourself spending a day in the Athens of the fifth century B.C.: debating legislation in the Assembly with Pericles, discussing philosophy in the agora with Socrates and Alcibiades, admiring the sculpture and architecture of the Parthenon, perhaps attending a performance of a tragedy or a comedy. Ah, the glory that was Greece. But wait a minute. Weren’t those Greeks a bunch of hypocrites? What kind of democracy excludes women and allows slaveholding? And wasn’t all that culture stolen from Egypt, anyway? Did you know that the ancient opinion of Athenian democracy was not that it wasn’t democratic enough, but that it was too democratic? Far from worrying that women and slaves had no power, the ancients grumbled that democracy gave power to the poor. This course explores these apparent contradictions. We encounter the Greeks on their own terms through the study of primary sources, and are introduced to modern interpretations of ancient history through our reading of secondary sources.
  
  • HIST 206 - Ancient Rome


    Credits: (3)
    The theme of this course is romanitas, or “Roman-ness”-what it meant to be a Roman. Through our reading, discussion, and writing about primary sources, we will discover the meaning of this term from the legendary founding of Rome in 753 B.C. until the overthrow of the last western emperor in A.D. 476. In the first half of the course, after a brief look at the Etruscan heritage and the legends of the Roman monarchy, we will consider the Roman Republic, established in 509 B.C. We will study the creation of romanitas in the institutions, values and ideas of the Republic; the expansion of romanitas as Rome grew from a single city-state to the head of an Italian confederacy to the ruler of an empire ringing the Mediterranean; and challenges to romanitas during the Roman Revolution. The second half of the course will be devoted to Imperial Rome, which began in 27 B.C. Topics will include the revival of romanitas during the early Empire; further expansion of romanitas during the “Roman peace”; and more challenges to romanitas during Rome’s decline and fall. We will conclude by inquiring how romanitas survived the end of antiquity and was transformed in the beginning of the Middle Ages.
  
  • HIST 207 - Introduction to Archival Science


    Credits: (3)
    This course will introduce students to the science of caring for historic documents and photographs. Students will gain extensive hands-on experience working with archival materials from the Mount Archives. Major themes in this course will include: arrangement and description, preservation, and digital curation. Upon completion of this course, students will have the basic knowledge and background to confidently pursue internship opportunities in archives and historical societies.
  
  • HIST 208 - Technology and the Digital Liberal Arts


    Credits: (3)
    This course will introduce students to the evolving role of technology in liberal arts research and its impact on how we approach the interpretation and understanding of human nature. Students will gain hands-on experience with some of the core technologies used in modern liberal arts research and will explore the practical and philosophical questions that arise from implementing digital research methodologies.

     

  
  • HIST 210 - The High Middle Ages


    Credits: (3)
    Ignorant barbarians or knights in shining armor? Dark Ages or Age of Faith? We in the twentieth century are heir to two contrasting images of the Middle Ages. One, the legacy of the Renaissance, sees the medieval era as the “Dark Ages”: centuries of gloom, barbarism, ignorance, and filth. The other is the creation of the nineteenth-century Romantics, who, reacting against the rationalism and classicism of the Enlightenment, saw new value in medieval culture. From the Romantics we get our picture of the Middle Ages as a time of knights and ladies, castles and cathedrals. Both these sets of images compete in our minds. But as scholars, we must attempt to get past these inherited preconceptions and discover the Middle Ages for ourselves. We will spend most of our time on the period around 1200, during the papacy of Innocent III (r. 1198 - 1216). Innocent III had his hand in most of the important developments of this period, from the growth of papal power to the suppression of heresy to new religious movements like the Franciscans to the Crusades to Magna Carta. We will explore each of these subjects using primary sources.
  
  • HIST 222 - Age of Discovery


    Credits: (3)
    This course examines European encounters with America, Asia, and Africa from the age of Columbus through the end of the early modern period. Taking trade, violence, and missionary activity as its primary themes, this course will analyze the causes and consequences of the expansion of European power across the globe. We will also analyze native responses to Europeans; the large scale changes engendered in Western Civilization by global encounters; and the emergence of Europe as a global scientific, political, and military power.
  
  • HIST 224 - The Age of Dante


    Credits: (3)
    The lifetime of Dante (1265?-1321) was an age of great vitality in Italy, an age that produced not only the Divine Comedy, one of the literary masterpieces of the Middle Ages, but also the historical writing of Dino Compagni, the political theory of Remigio dei Girolami, and the art of Giotto.  In this course we will study the age of Dante from an interdisciplinary perspective, placing literary and artistic developments in their historical, and especially civic, context.  We will begin with political developments in medieval Italy, especially Florence, and the political theory they inspired:  the birth of the commune; conflicts between Guelfs and Ghibellines, Magnates and Popolani, and Black and White Guelfs.  Religion in the commune is our next topic, as we consider the new spirituality of the mendicant orders and their role in Florentine religious life.  This will provide a context for our study of the art of the Trecento, or fourteenth century:  the paintings of Duccio, Giotto, and Lorenzetti.  Throughout the semester we will also be reading Dante’s Divine Comedy.
  
  • HIST 227 - Tudor and Stuart Britain


    Credits: (3)
    This course examines a period of remarkable transformation in Great Britain: from the medieval kingdom of Henry VII in 1485 to the powerful, commercial nation-state of Queen Anne in 1714. From witches to Shakespeare, the Reformation to the Glorious Revolution, students will study various aspects of Tudor and Stuart life to understand this change, considering not only political and religious developments, but also the gendered, cultural, and social relationships of British citizens during this period.
  
  • HIST 241 - American Military History 1775-1902


    Credits: (3)
    This course surveys the evolution of American military strategy and operations from the mid-eighteenth century to the beginning of the twentieth century.  Major conflicts examined include the American Revolution, the War of 1812, the Mexican War, the Civil War, and the Spanish-American War.  While the course focuses on the higher levels of military command and strategy, selected military campaigns are explored in more detail.  A systematic field study of a major battle from the Civil War is included. 
  
  • HIST 253 - The American Revolution


    Credits: (3)
    This course will explore political, social, and military developments in the era of the American Revolution. Through a combination of secondary and primary readings, we will examine the contest for power between Britain and the colonies and within the colonies themselves as they moved toward independence and into nationhood. The course will examine traditional views of the Revolution as well as more recent interpretations that stress such issues as class conflict, the role of women, African Americans, and Indians, and the importance of the Revolution in generating worldwide political and social change.
  
  • HIST 255 - Age of Jefferson and Jackson, 1790-1848


    Credits: (3)
    Investigates the evolution of American society from the beginnings of the federal republic to the end of the Jacksonian period. Special attention is devoted to the influence of Jefferson and Jackson, changes in politics and culture, and the interrelationship of Europeans, Africans, and Native Americans during this formative half-century.
  
  • HIST 257 - The Atlantic Experience to 1877


    Credits: (3)
    Our understanding of early American history is essential to how we situate ourselves in today’s society. The complex origins of American life are based in the experience of travel across the Atlantic Ocean and demonstrate an amazing diversity of ideas and beliefs. This class is a survey of American history from the colonial period through the Civil War, and will cover topics such as the slave trade, ethnic relations, political struggles, and the arguments over the formation of an American identity apart from the global stage. Through in-class lectures, multimedia, the textbook, and document based readings, this class will equip you to understand the historical themes that shape our lives today, in addition to teaching you how to form your own opinions based on the facts. This course is especially useful for education majors and those entering public service.
  
  • HIST 262 - World War I


    Credits: (3)
    This course explores the causes, conduct, and consequences of World War I, with an emphasis on the formulation and execution of grand political and military strategy, the role of senior political and military leadership on both sides, and the impact of total war on a continental scale.  While the course focuses on the higher levels of military command and strategy, selected military campaigns are examined in more detail, and the experience of war is explored at the lowest military echelons through the reading of two classic memoirs of the conflict.
  
  • HIST 263 - World War II


    Credits: (3)
    This course explores the causes, course, and consequences of World War II, with an emphasis on the formulation and execution of grand political and military strategy, the role of senior leadership on both sides, and the impact of total war on a global scale.  While the course focuses on the higher levels of military command and strategy, selected military campaigns are examined in more detail, and the experience of war is explored at the lowest military echelons through the readings of two classic memoirs of the conflict.
  
  • HIST 266 - Nazi Germany


    Credits: (3)
    Popular references to National Socialism conjure images of goose-stepping automatons and raving, murderous madmen. This introduction to Nazi Germany challenges popular conceptions of Nazis as monsters by exploring the multi-causal sources of the National Socialist dictatorship. We will trace the rise and fall of the Nazi Party in Germany from 1933-1945. Our exploration of Nazi Germany will focus on the roles individuals played in sustaining and resisting the regime and its genocidal project. We will examine the complex motivations that drove people’s (in)action during the Nazi era. The class will cover topics such as Nazi ideology and aesthetics, daily life in the Third Reich, women and families under Nazi rule, Nazi foreign policy and the Second World War, complicity and resistance, the Holocaust, and the Nuremberg Trials. We will examine secondary historical accounts of the Third Reich in addition to a variety of primary sources (including diaries, memoirs, films, etc.).
  
  • HIST 268 - The Civil Rights Era


    Credits: (3)
    The struggle for African American social, economic, and political equality from the early twentieth century to the present will be the focus of this course. First-hand accounts, documentaries, and secondary sources will be used to explore the major movements, leaders, and achievements of the Civil Rights Movement.
  
  • HIST 269 - African American Women’s History


    Credits: (3)
    This course is intended to familiarize students with the major themes and issues in African American women’s history from America’s founding to the present. In this survey of black women’s experiences, students will not only engage with primary sources written by or about black women, but will also consider how historians have understood or constructed their histories. In addition to readings, films, and discussions over the course of the semester, students will learn about African American women’s history by completing a semester project on a black woman of their choosing.
  
  • HIST 276 - U.S. Women’s History to 1877


    Credits: (3)
    Explores the experiences of women from the colonial era to the beginnings of the women’s rights movement in the nineteenth century. It will examine the private lives of women, including marriage and family, sexuality and reproduction, and labor and education, and women’s participation in the public sphere, paying particular attention to how changing conceptions of gender have expanded or limited women’s social and cultural roles. While this course will explore the unity of women’s lives in the American past, it will also explore the ways race, ethnicity, and class have shaped women’s experiences. Students will gain an understanding of how gender was historically constructed and of important interpretive issues in early American women’s history.
  
  • HIST 277 - Modern U.S. Women’s History


    Credits: (3)
    Students will examine the lives and experiences of American women from the onset of the women’s rights movement in the second half of the 19th century to the recent past of the late 20th century. While this course focuses on women’s efforts to achieve political equality, it also explores women’s changing roles in relation to work, education, family life and popular culture. This course pays close attention to the ways that class, race, and ethnicity have shaped women’s experiences and the social movements of this period. Students will gain an understanding of significant events in modern women’s lives, the ways in which gender is and has been constructed, and the major interpretive issues shaping women’s history.
  
  • HIST 280 - European Military History:1600-1815


    Credits: (3)
    This course surveys the evolution of European military strategy and operations from the beginnings of modern warfare in the early seventeenth century to the end of the Napoleonic Wars.  Major conflicts examined include the Thirty Years War, the Wars of Louis XIV, the Wars of Frederick the Great, and the Wars of Napoleon.  While the course focuses on the higher levels of military command and strategy, selected military campaigns are explored in more detail.
  
  • HIST 291 - U.S. Catholic History


    Credits: (3)
    Explores the development of Catholic communities in North America from early contacts between Europeans and Native Americans through the massive influx of Catholic immigrants in the nineteenth century to debates over authority and religious liberty in the twenty-first century. Using a variety of texts, ranging from personal narratives and sermons to film and literature, students will gain an understanding of the theological, political, and cultural tensions shaping the lives of Catholics in the United States from various ethnic, geographic, and economic backgrounds. Students will also draw on the history of Catholicism in Maryland.
  
  • HIST 297 - ST: Special Topics in History


    Credits: (3)
    A course designed to supplement regular course offerings by permitting the pursuit of knowledge about subjects of varied interest suggested by faculty or students. (As needed)
  
  • HIST 303 - The Holocaust


    Credits: (3)
    This course on the Holocaust examines the mass killing of Jews and other victims in the context of Nazi Germany’s quest for race and space during World War II. Using sources that illuminate victim experiences, perpetrator perspectives, and bystander responses, we investigate the Nazi racial state, the experiments in mass killing, the establishment of a systematic genocidal program, collaboration and complicity, resistance and rescue, as well as the memory of the Holocaust in western culture.
  
  • HIST 338 - American Foreign Policy


    Credits: (3)
    This course is organized around crucial figures and moments in the history of United States foreign policy from the late 19th Century into the 21st Century, when the U.S. presented itself and came to be perceived as a world power. The course explores the extent and the limits of that power and the interplay between foreign relations and internal political/cultural developments in the United States. Along the way, students entertain questions about American exceptionalism, religion and foreign policy, and the future of America’s role in the world. As students examine policy statements, presidential addresses, biographies of foreign policy elites, and cultural artifacts of U.S. power, they will assess the enduring struggle to balance power and principles. This course has been designed with history, political science, and international studies majors in mind but all enthusiastic students are welcome. The course capstone includes two document-based exams and a 7-10 page essay; however, students write continuously in this course. Students will also benefit from special presentations by active practitioners in the field of diplomacy and international relations/business. PSCI 338
  
  • HIST 350 - Historical Methods


    Credits: (3)
    This course introduces students to a host of historical approaches including Marxism, Annales, Feminism, and Postmodernism. Because the Catholic Intellectual Tradition has had a significant impact on both history and historiography, Catholic approaches to history will also be considered. These approaches to history will be considered in the context of the teaching professor’s primary teaching and research interests. Prerequisite(s): (HIST 202 )
  
  • HIST 356 - The Italian Renaissance


    Credits: (3)
    Between 1400 and 1600, the Italian peninsula produced such a dazzling array of artists, writers, and thinkers that modern scholars have often concluded that modern civilization was born, or rather, reborn, in Renaissance Italy. What explains Renaissance Italy’s brilliant cultural achievements, what was the society like that produced them, and what does the Italian Renaissance have to do with modern civilization? In this course, we will examine these questions as we explore the artwork, literature, and political thought of one of history’s most captivating eras.
  
  • HIST 359 - The Politics of Gender in European History


    Credits: (3)
    This course explores the history of politics and gender, considering how historically and culturally constructed notions of sex and gender shaped political relationships in early modern and modern Europe. The course considers the impact of gender on political speech and activity, discussing how notions of masculinity and femininity have undercut and promoted political legitimacy. Special attention will be paid to how women and ideas about women shaped the development of Western politics and political thought, including those aspects of the Western tradition we value today: freedom, popular sovereignty, political representation, equality, and universal education.
  
  • HIST 361 - The French Revolution


    Credits: (3)
    This course explores the French Revolution of 1789, considering its origins, dynamic, and consequences for France, Europe, and our Western heritage. The course considers a wide variety of primary sources from Old Regime Enlightenment treatises to scandalous revolutionary pamphlets attacking Marie Antoinette, while introducing students to the rich historiographical debates concerning the origins and outcomes of the Revolution.
  
  • HIST 371 - The Emergence of Modern America: U.S. History 1900-45


    Credits: (3)
    Explores American history from the Progressive Era to the end of the Second World War. In addition to an examination of the significant events of domestic and foreign policy in this period, this course pays special attention to questions of culture, gender, race, and ethnicity.
  
  • HIST 375 - U.S. History from 1945 to the Present


    Credits: (3)
    Examines American social, cultural, and political history from the end of World War Two to the present. Through lectures, primary and secondary source readings, class discussions, films and music we will explore the most significant themes of our most recent past. Additionally, students will engage in their own research projects during the semester. This course will especially focus on social and political movements, American foreign policy at home and abroad, changing notions of the role of government, and transformations in American popular culture.
  
  • HIST 381 - African American History


    Credits: (3)
    Examines African American history from 1500 to the present. Topics to be covered include the origins of slavery and racism, slave resistance, emancipation, Reconstruction, the New Negro movement, the origins and development of the Civil Rights movement, Black Power, and current issues within the African American community.
  
  • HIST 387 - Manhood in America


    Credits: (3)
    Manhood in America investigates competing models of manhood from the colonial period to the present. Few people realize that Americans have never had a cultural consensus on what it means to be “a man.” This course will investigate the origins of competing models of manhood by examining Native American, European, and African cultures. The course will also examine constructs such as Puritan fatherhood, the Code of Southern Honor, the male bachelor subculture, muscular Christianity, and the Organization Man. The roles of media, economic change, class status and religion in forming and perpetuating manhood models will be investigated.
  
  • HIST 398 - Independent Study


    Credits: (1 to 6)
    Independent research or study in history. Requires approval of the instructor, the department chair, dean, and associate provost.
  
  • HIST 410 - Recent Native American History


    Credits: (4)
    This course will examine the experience of Native American peoples from the late nineteenth century to the present. It will trace the development and consequences of key areas of federal Indian policy during this time, including: assimilation and the passage of the Dawes Severalty Act (1877), the so-called Indian New Deal, the Termination and Relocation programs of the 1950s, the rise of Indian activism in the 1960s and 1970s, and the current battle to retain tribal sovereignty and cultural continuity. The course focuses on the views and experiences of Native peoples, drawing on sources produced by Native American writers, activists, and speakers. It will also pay attention to the ways in which Native Americans and representations of their cultures have played an important role in the social and cultural history of the United States in this period.
  
  • HIST 438 - The Public Sphere in Early Modern England


    Credits: (4)
    Historians have long debated the rise and contours of the “public sphere” in early modern England, studying when the political process of England, which had historically been court-centered and elitist, shifted to include the middling classes and English public more widely. The course examines not only the political philosophy of popular politics, but the media of the public sphere, including cheap printed books, libelous manuscripts, and newspapers, as well as the spaces that allowed men (and sometimes women) to congregate and discuss politics, such as the pub and coffeehouses. The course also considers the activities of men and women in the public sphere, including protesting, rioting, and petitioning. Throughout the semester, students explore how religious conflict and political, social, and economic changes fueled the rise of the public sphere in England.
  
  • HIST 480 - History Internship


    Credits: (1 to 6)
    Work experience in a field related to history.
  
  • HIST 498 - Senior Seminar


    Credits: (3)
    Senior Seminar is the capstone course for all history majors. In this course, students complete the task of becoming a historian by writing a 13-15 page research paper on a topic of your choosing. Students will draw on their own interests and on the skills and knowledge from previous courses in the major to research, write, and present their final paper. Prerequisite(s): (HIST 202 Making History (3)  and HIST 350 Historical Methods (3) )
  
  • HS 101 - Introduction to Leadership I


    Credits: (1)
    A course on leadership and mentorship. Students in this course will concentrate on topics such as public speaking, group dynamics, facilitation techniques, problem solving, project management and interpersonal dynamics and reflection. Students will learn helping skills to be compassionate leaders and role models. They will develop their own leadership styles and will learn to create inclusive spaces on campus. Students will gain practical experience through serving in all summer orientation programs.(This course does not fulfill requirements for the Human Services, B.S.)
  
  • HS 102 - Introduction to Leadership II


    Credits: (1)
    A course on mentorship and individual student support. Students in this course will refine their mentorship skills and learn different styles and approaches for peer mentoring. This course will focus on the mentoring relationship and its application to college students. Students will gain practical experience through partnership with the symposium academic programs. (This course does not fulfill requirements for the Human Services, B.S.) Prerequisite(s): HS 101 Introduction to Leadership I (1)  
  
  • HS 200 - Introduction to Human Services


    Credits: (3)
    This survey of Human Services investigates how care is provided for the whole individual through a review of community resources and methodologies. The many roles of the human services professional are explored including communicator, counselor, manager, leader, advocate, and problem solver. The importance of ethics and self-care are emphasized. The role of faith and the principles of Catholic social teaching are also examined.
 

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