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  • 3.00 Credits

    This course introduces students to the major in International Studies and the Global Citizenship minor. Students will explore what it means to be a citizen in a complex global world from the perspective of disciplines in the Humanities. They will study the ways in which questions about human rights, sustainability and economic and cultural globalization have been addressed by philosophers, historians, media theorists and students of diverse cultural traditions.
  • 1.00 - 3.00 Credits

    This course is designed for first year students admitted to the Humanities Scholars program. In this year-long seminar, students gain foundational knowledge of the humanities while developing essential skills to navigate the first year of college. Students learn alongside a community of peers with the support of faculty mentors, academic advisors, and career coaches who help students define their education, craft their professional persona, explore big questions facing the world today, and apply classroom learning to community projects. Prerequisites: Humanities Scholars Advisor Consent.
  • 2.00 Credits

    This course will explore big problems and big questions facing the world today. Students will create a personal learning roadmap specific to their individual area of interest. The process of innovation and problem solving will be explored with a panel of interdisciplinary experts. Roadmaps will be designed to enhance academic majors and student interests. This course is the introduction to the INNOVATION SCHOLARS PROGRAM. Students who successfully complete their individual roadmap will be recognized at graduation as an Innovation Scholar. First Year Experience LLC students are encouraged to take this course.
  • 1.00 - 12.00 Credits

    This course engages students in first-hand experiential learning through internships. Students may identify an internship independently, or they may work with the College of Humanities Internship Coordinator to select and apply for an internship before enrolling in this course. Students create goals with their supervisors, remaining accountable for the completion of these goals through evaluations and reflections. In addition to the valuable hands-on experience and academic credit received, some students may find that the internship facilitates professional networking that may lead to an employment opportunity.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Humanities in Motion is an intensive international experience exploring humanities on the world stage. The course includes pre- and post- travel assignments and is grounded in a 10-day international experience in which students explore global issues through historic and contemporary lenses. This course is the international capstone experience for the Humanities Scholars program. Location may change according to faculty.
  • 2.00 Credits

    This course is designed for majors in the College of Humanities who are ready for hands-on career exploration and implementation. Students will gain practical skills in personal branding, networking, resume and cover letter writing, interviewing and researching available jobs. Students in this course will polish job search documents, connect with professionals in their prospective field, create a professional online presence, and develop an individualized job search strategy.
  • 1.00 Credits

    This course is designed for Humanities majors who are ready for hands-on career preparation and implementation. Students will learn from a range of guest mentors what they can do with their Humanities degrees, while gaining practical skills in networking, resume and cover letter writing, interviewing and researching available jobs. Students in this course will polish job search documents, connect with professionals in their prospective field, create a professional online presence, and develop an individualized job search strategy. This course is designed in partnership with HUM 3960: Humanities Career Compass which focuses on career exploration.
  • 3.00 Credits

    The course examines literary representations of health and disease and narratives of medical practice and practitioners.
  • 1.00 - 3.00 Credits

    Variable subject matter. An examination of the humanistic dimensions of some topic or contemporary issue. Repeatable when topics vary.
  • 3.00 Credits

    This course is designed to help students understand and explain the world we inhabit. It helps them imagine viable solutions to the world's biggest challenges. It is the foundations course for the International Studies major, and it departs from two simple questions: How do individuals, states, and societies behave in the modern international system? How should they behave? To answer these questions, we will study the major historical developments that have structured the modern world, and critically examine some of the most influential theoretical models devised to understand that world. The course then links historical abstractions with human realities'structures and patterns with the particularities of lived experience. We analyze specific cases'each drawn from among the seven focus areas of the International Studies major'that dramatize the implications of the international system for individuals, states, and societies alike. Students learn to trace connections across regions, between scales, and through time. They develop a more thorough understanding of global issues, and they learn to think, speak, and write more clearly about those issues as they prepare to launch into the specialized electives that round out the major.