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  • 3.00 Credits

    Designed to give students the opportunity to think in new ways about present-day issues through close encounters with the problems, values, and questions of the past, humanities designated Intellectual Traditions courses are driven by direct engagement with diverse primary sources and cultural artifacts. Helping develop skills in critical thinking, reading, and writing, these seminars teach students to speak and write persuasively, read carefully, and be intellectually adventurous. Engaging with ideas that have shaped the human experience across diverse eras and cultures, students are encouraged to reconsider their preconceptions and contextualize the present within a historical framework.Topics vary semester to semester. Please see the syllabus for each section for more information about the topic. This course fulfills the Honors Intellectual Traditions Core requirement. Prerequisites: Member of the Honors College
    General Education Course
  • 3.00 Credits

    This student-centered, community-cultivating course will engage and critically assess music as a socially-reflective art. Music will be our vehicle for a journey into multiple dimensions of human behavior, with side-trips through rhetoric, political theory, sociology, narrative, ideology and identity. Mixing freely from Haydn and Hendrix, Prokofiev to punk, jazz to jam bands, and rhapsody to rap, students will correlate musical forms, processes and expressions with societies from which they spring - including their own. Cross-cutting themes will include: music as dialogue; music as ideology; music as a mirror of government music and social movements; and music's evolutionary role in human development.Class sessions will at times be conducted as examples of interactive musical and dialogical processes, whereby students "compose" their own community. Other sessions will explore the practice and performance of "deep listening." Readings will be selected from cultural studies, musicology, the sociology of music, music criticism and music theory. Listening will be selected from a wide range of musical genres of various cultures, from the Middle Ages through today - including music proposed by the students. Assignments will include short papers, oral presentations and taking turns conducting the discussion. The goals are for students: 1) to achieve a more articulated experience of music through the filters of other disciplines; and 2) to gain an enriched understanding of community through musical manifestations of participatory democracy. A touchstone for the course is the Navajo "songdog" myth that we "sing" our world into existence, coupled with Benjamin Barber's conception of citizens as "makers" who "create a common future"; students will develop, combine and apply their musical and political potential to "sing" their world into existence. Prerequisites: Member of the Honors College.
    General Education Course
  • 3.00 Credits

    Where does the mind stop and the rest of the world begin? This intriguing question is central to the new Honors course, The Artfully Extended Mind, which will explore how 'thinking outside the brain' can enrich our lives and illuminate our imaginations. Based on recent research in psychology and cognitive science, students will think with their bodies, their surroundings and their relationships. You will extend your minds and develop your thinking facility in a series of experiential hands-on arts workshops (drawing, sculpture, photography, music, songwriting, poetry, improvisational acting, dance, performance art, etc.). Orchestration of these artistic and cognitive experiences will develop your capacities to focus attention, resist distraction, develop verbal fluency and cognitive flexibility, enhance problem-solving and decision-making abilities, and increase long term memory for what is learned. And to fully and deeply engage your mind and heart, you will also practice mindfulness, be creative and have fun! Prerequisites: Member of The Honors College
  • 3.00 Credits

    Creative Writing: Ecology and Other situates the aspiring writer in the peoples and places of East Africa. Through inspirational readings, interpretive writing, flash fiction, braided essays, and other creative techniques, we will seek to ground ourselves in the many ecologies through which we move, and in which we reside, with hopes of telling stories that evoke deeper understanding of human and non-human ecologies. This course is offered as part of the Honors Ecology & Legacy Integrated Minor, and will speak to other minor courses and the locations of student field work.
  • 1.00 - 3.00 Credits

    Topics will vary from year to year. Prerequisites: Member of Honors College.
  • 3.00 Credits

    This course surveys the major global health problems facing the world today. After providing a theoretical and conceptual framework for understanding these challenges within a bio-psychosocial model, the course uses lectures and case studies to analyze key contributions to the global burden of disease: infectious and communicable diseases; reproductive, maternal, and child health; non-communicable diseases; and injury, violence, and disaster. The course emphasizes both understanding the complex interaction of upstream and downstream approaches to improve health outcomes and identifying successful strategies for reducing health disparities.
    General Education Course
  • 3.00 Credits

    Is a problem really a problem - or an invitation to imagine things in an entirely new light? What does it mean to be professionally creative? This course involves examining creative 'breakthroughs' by members of different communities (legal, medical, wilderness adventuring, etc.). Students will be presented with a series of challenges faced by members of these communities, have the opportunity to discuss them and formulate their own potential solutions, and then hear from the community leaders who solved these problems. Come sharpen your creative mind!
    General Education Course
  • 3.00 Credits

    Topics will vary from year to year. Prerequisites: Member of Honors College.
  • 3.00 Credits

    (Topics will vary from year to year) Prerequisites: Member of Honors College.
  • 3.00 Credits

    This course gives students the opportunity to learn about diverse types of social justice advocacy'such as grassroots organizing, movement journalism, civil disobedience, art protest, and more'as they are utilized in different arenas of social justice struggles'including labor, healthcare, disability, justice reform, immigration, and more. To accomplish this, we welcome into our classroom young social justice activists from across the country, who will share their experiences of activism, their successes and challenges, and the lessons they have learned, in order to engage us in vibrant discussion. Prerequisites: Member of Honors College