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  • 4.50 Credits

    A two-semester fiction workshop wherein student writers read and analyze published novels while composing one of their own. Each writer will commit and be expected to complete a book length draft of a novel by the end of spring semester. Student writers should not be enrolled concurrently in another writing class. Enrollment is restricted to Sophomore, Junior or Senior level Honors students. Students will be admitted by permission of the professor. Prerequisites: Member of Honors College.
  • 1.00 Credits

    Topic to be specified when course is offered.
  • 3.00 Credits

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

    The goal of the Being Human in STEM class is to create a space for dialogue between STEM students and STEM faculty to investigate together the theme of diversity and climate within STEM. The course combines academic inquiry and individual stories to understand how students' identities shape their experience in STEM. The course has two components that are intertwined throughout the semester: 1) Reading and discussion: during one of the two weekly class meetings, we ground our understanding through critical reading of primary scholarly research as well as media sources (e.g. podcasts, films); occasionally we'll welcome guests to enrich and inform our discussions. Example topics include implicit bias, stereotype threat, imposter syndrome, antiracism, intersectionality, as well as the role in STEM of gender, race, LGBTQIA+ identity, dis/ability, and many others. 2) Project development: the other weekly class meeting is devoted to the design, execution, and evaluation of interventions led by the students with the goal of improving the experience of STEM students at the U. At the end of the semester, students present their group projects to the campus community via a public event.This course is aimed at students across STEM fields and pre-medical students. Students who don't have major status but are interested in the course may be approved upon the instructor's consent.Find out more about the class on the website: https://csme.utah.edu/beinghumaninstem/The course is part of a national initiative. Learn more at: http://www.beinghumaninstem.com/
  • 3.00 Credits

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

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

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

    This upper division seminar focuses on the history of Christianity (outside of the United States) after 1960. During the past half century, a seismic shift has taken place global religion. Christianity has lost importance in Europe while becoming more prominent in the Southern Hemisphere. This course examines the secularizing trajectory of Western Europe and the concurrent rise of indigenous, "new," evangelical, and pentecostal churches in Latin America, Asian, and Africa. Mass media, international transportation, liberal capitalism, and shifting populations have enabled Christianity in much of the world. Since its inception missionary activities have made Christianity a "transnational" religion and describing its current condition is the focus of this seminar. Prerequisites: Member of Honors College.
  • 3.00 Credits

    If you are a bystander and witness a crime, should intervention to prevent that crime be a legal obligation? Or is moral responsibility enough? The course examines the bystander-victim relationship from multiple perspectives, focusing on the Holocaust and then exploring cases in contemporary society. Drawing on a wide range of historical material and interviews, the course examines the bystander during three distinct events: death marches, the German occupation of Holland, and the German occupation of Hungary. While the Third Reich created policy, its implementation was dependent on bystander non-intervention. Bringing the issue into current perspective, the course explores sexual assault cases at Vanderbilt and Stanford Universities, as well as other crimes where bystanders chose whether or not to act, and the resulting consequences. The course examines whether a society cannot rely on morals and compassion alone in determining our obligation to help another in danger and whether t we must make the obligation to intervene the law, and thus non-intervention a crime. Prerequisites: Member of Honors College.
    General Education Course
  • 3.00 Credits

    Students enrolled in this course will participate in a conference held by the Oxford Consortium on Human Rights. The course includes pre-conference preparation and study with a faculty mentor, in addition to travel to the conference and participation in consortium activities (including a group project that focuses on issues relevant to the University of Utah and surrounding communities). Upon returning from the conference, students will share their project and experience with the Honors community. Conference themes vary and are often location dependent.