May 19, 2024  
2020-2021 Graduate Catalog 
    
2020-2021 Graduate Catalog [Not Current Academic Year. Consult with Your Academic Advisor for Your Catalog Year]

College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences Courses


Colleges  > College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences  > College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences Courses

College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences

Courses

  • ANTH 6332 - Migration/Borders/Citizenship

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Anthropology or permission of Instructor.

    It is impossible to examine the questions of migration without also paying critical attention to borders and the ways that borders are used to produce meaningful and consequential differences between places (so-called “nations”). By producing such spatial differences, borders also serve to produce social, political, and legal differences between distinct categories of people, such as “migrants”, “refugees”, “citizens, “tourists”, “business travelers”, “foreign students”, and so forth. As a result, the critical study of migration and citizenship are inseparable from one another, and neither can be properly understood without also examining borders.
  • COMD 6198 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of director.

    A course designed for graduate students who wish to pursue special studies for which a course is not organized.
  • COMM 6364 - Media & Politics in a Digital Age

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    This course explores the relationship between mass media, political institutions and entities, and the public agenda. Students will explore how elected officials, political candidates and strategists, journalists, media pundits, and citizens construct, transmit, and understand political messages, including how news, entertainment, new media, strategic communication, and advertising contribute to the shaping of political perceptions, emotions, and behaviors.
  • COMM 6377 - Understanding Publics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    This course is designed to enable students to study, report on, understand, and apply current research, theory, and principles of identifying, segmenting, and working with publics. It helps students understand principles of segmenting publics as applied to the practice of public relations and other disciplines in communication; understand current research and theory related to different contexts of public relations practices such as activist public relations and conflict resolution; and learn different research methods of effective segmentation of publics in order to apply the results of such segmentation to future public relations campaigns.
  • COMM 6390 - Applied Project

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 3
    Prerequisite: None.

    Course is an opportunity to apply knowledge and skills developed in graduate study to professional practice.
  • CPTC 6100 - Curricular Practical Training

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 1
  • ECON 6343 - Applied Methods II

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 6333  .

    Continuation of ECON 6333  Applied Methods I.
  • ECON 6356 - Econometrics I

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in economics.

    Introduction to basic econometric concepts and methods necessary for conducting empirical analysis. Practical applications using Excel and Stata. Topics include model specification, regression analysis and results interpretation.
  • ECON 6357 - Econometrics II

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 6356 .

    Continuation of ECON 6356  Econometrics I. Introduction to several extensions of multiple regression methods for analyzing data in economics and related disciplines. Topics may include regressions with panel data, instrumental variables regression, analysis of randomized experiments, limited dependent variable models, etc.
  • GEDS 6310 - Promoting Sustainable Oil and Gas Projects: Legal and Social Frameworks

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    An interdisciplinary approach (Social Sciences, Law) trains students to identify, analyze, and problem-solve re: social, political, environmental challenges associated with oil and gas projects in developing nations and new production sites. Topics may include: key stakeholders and varying priorities; issues of ethnicity/identity, religion, health, social and enviro justice; international soft law codes of conduct and human rights; formal and informal regulation of IOC operations by courts, arbitrators, and industry trade groups; the role of international law, U.S. law, host government laws, and petroleum contract obligations in interactions with host communities or nations; IOC pressures from/alliances with NGOs.
  • GEDS 6320 - Promoting Sustainable Oil and Gas Projects: Petroleum Agreements, Regulations, and Economics

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    In-depth introduction to/analysis of commercial, fiscal and regulatory frameworks necessary for sharing risks and returns between companies and governments, promoting sustainable projects and operations. Topics may include: national laws, regulations, Codes of Conduct and Standards (industry-created/international), types of agreements and contracts; Concession Agreements, Production Sharing Agreements, fiscal terms /fiscal stability; international treaties; arbitration; project economics, economic rent and government take; capital costs (impacts on government); corruption and impacts of regulations, transparency and disclosure, and the roles of NGOs, World Bank, EITI and home country governments (impacts on investors and governments); sovereign wealth and stabilization funds; impacts of all above on company and government strategies, results for broader economic development.
  • GEDS 6330 - Promoting Sustainable Oil & Gas Projects:Local Content,Communities, &Corporate Social Responsibility

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    Introduces/analyzes current best practices to ensure sustainable benefits for local employees, communities, businesses, broader society, economy. Topics may include: organizational behavior/human resource management models for improving local content (recruitment, retention, promotion within companies); barriers to local company formation/success in oil sector, how IOCs, NOCs, oilfield service companies, governments can assist in overcoming; methods for consulting with local societies/avoiding conflict; environmental impacts on host communities and local economies; case studies and lessons learned re: approaches to Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in the petroleum sector.
  • GEDS 6397 - Selected Topics in Global Energy, Development, Sustainability

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    Selected Topics focused on Global Energy, Development, and Sustainability.
    May be repeated with Director’s approval.

  • HIST 6332 - Historiography of the Medieval and Early Modern Islamic World

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.

    This course introduces students to the historiography of the medieval and early modern Islamic world. It offers an intensive study of scholarship and historiographical questions, research topics, and provides the students with a basic background in the field’s major themes and questions.
  • HIST 6334 - Research Seminar in Middle Eastern History (Medieval and Early Modern Islamic World)

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Permission of the instructor.

    This class introduces the students to the historiographical debates and historical research topics in the field. It primarily focuses on the period between 12th and 19th centuries. In addition to scholarly monographs and articles, class readings will include primary sources in translation.
  • ILAS 6397 - Selected Topics - Interdisciplinary

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • NUTR 6302 - Advanced Medical Nutrition Therapy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    Advanced practice in medical nutrition therapies and physical assessment skills.
  • NUTR 6303 - Nutrition Management and Leadership for the Clinical Professional

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    Development of effective management skills for the clinical nutrition leader.
  • NUTR 6304 - Advanced Nutrition Counseling and Education

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    Strategies for identifying at-risk populations and development and evaluational of educational programs.
  • NUTR 6305 - Research Methods

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    Research planning, design, implementation and analysis in nutrition.
  • NUTR 6307 - Community Nutrition Practice

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 3
    Prerequisite: None.

    Supervised practice practicum assessing the needs of the population and developing nutrition education in the community setting (300 total hours).
  • NUTR 6308 - Clinical Nutrition Practice I

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 3
    Prerequisite: None.

    Assessing the nutritional needs of patients in a healthcare setting (300 total hours).
  • NUTR 6309 - Clinical Nutrition Practice II

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 3
    Prerequisite: None.

    Advanced nutritional assessment and intervention skill development of complex patients in the acute care setting (300 hours).
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • NUTR 6311 - Capstone I

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: NUTR 6305 : Research methods; NUTR 6306 : Statistics; must be completed during the second to the last semester of study.

    Special projects in nutrition and dietetics, in the form of a literature review, grant proposal, education program or tool development and/or evaluation, or research project approved by course instructor.
  • POLS 6363 - Race and Ethnic Politics

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing.

    This course is a systematic examination of the literature on race, ethnicity, and American politics. We begin with the concept of race and how it has been operationalized. We examine the history, political behavior, and representation of African Americans, Asian Americans, and Latinos in the modern political area. We also examine coalition building, citizenship, the role of political parties, and elections mostly in the U.S. context.
  • POLS 8599 - Doctoral Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 5
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Doctoral Dissertation.

    Doctoral Dissertation.
    Y

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • SPAN 6310 - US Latinx Literature for Children and YA

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: BA in Spanish or Linguistics.

    To introduce US Latinx literature for children and young adults written in Spanish and/or English and learn about the state of the field, publishing, who decides what books are placed in the hands of young readers and what is at stake when decisions are made without being aware of cultural and language needs.
  • SPAN 6352 - Sociolinguistic Aspects of U.S. Spanish

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    The course offers students a first approach to the knowledge of basic linguistic concepts as applied to the study of the live varieties of the Spanish language spoken in the United States. The course consists of a discussion of several linguistic and social aspects of Spanish in the United States by means of lectures and fieldwork in the Spanish-speaking communities of Texas. Presentations of selected readings will be required.
  • SPAN 6353 - Spanish-English Contrastive Analysis

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    This course consists of the systematic study of parallel structures from Spanish and English to identify their differences and similarities. The goal is to apply findings in this area to facilitate the learning of Spanish in an environment in which students deal with two languages in their everyday life. A critical examination of different methodologies, theories, and principles related to the teaching of Spanish as a second language is also part of the larger discussion during the semester, which will allow students to get familiar with the current literature on Spanish Linguistics and second language acquisition. Contrastive analysis of live discourse from real situations is expected from students.
  • African American Studies Program

    Courses

  • AAS 6300 - Africana Study Theory & Method

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Cross-Listed As: AAS 6307 - Seminar On Mlk Jr. & Malcolm X  

    The course explores critical issues in research theory and methods in Africana Studies, including issues in research designs and tools of analysis.
  • AAS 6307 - Seminar On Mlk Jr. & Malcolm X

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    The course is a critical study and analysis of the major ideas and doctrines that formed the conceptual frameworks of these two men. It engages explorations of cultural pluralism, self-determination, Pan Africanism, satyagraha, nonviolence, civil disobedience, reform, and revolution.
  • AAS 6308 - Africana Religion & Biography

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    The course examines Africana religion in the United States, interrogating Christian, Islamic, Hebrew, and traditional African forms by means that include biographies and autobiographies of representative and influential figures.
  • Jack J. Valenti School of Communication

    Courses

  • COMM 6198 - Comprehensive Exams

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Approval of associate director for graduate studies.

    May be repeated for credit.

  • COMM 6199 - Thesis

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • COMM 6300 - Quantitative Research Methods

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: COMM 6300 - Research Methodology.
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    Techniques of gathering, analyzing, and reporting quantitative research data within the communication discipline.
  • COMM 6302 - Communication Theory

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    Theories and research findings regarding communication processes in interpersonal, organizational, and mass-mediated contexts.
  • COMM 6305 - Qualitative Research Methods

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: COMM 6305 - Applied Research Techniques in Communication.
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    Introduction to qualitative research inquiry, data collection, and interpretive analysis in communication research with emphasis on underlying epistemologies, design issues, and explanations of knowledge claims.
  • COMM 6306 - Legal,Regulatory & Eth Issues

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: COMM 6300 and COMM 6302 or consent of instructor.

    Examination of legal, regulatory, and ethical principles and controversies affecting print, film, and electronic media, and the new communication technologies.
  • COMM 6308 - Persuasion

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: COMM 6300 and COMM 6302 , or consent of instructor.

    Theories and research findings significant to the processes of social influence in interpersonal, organizational, and mass-mediated contexts.
  • COMM 6309 - Propaganda

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: COMM 6300 and COMM 6302 , or consent of instructor.

    Study of the history, theory, strategies, and social impact of propaganda.
  • COMM 6310 - Mass Comm Theory and Research

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: COMM 6300 and COMM 6302 or consent of instructor.

    Examination of mass communications’ theories and research.
  • COMM 6314 - Issues in Intern’l Mass Comm

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: COMM 6300 and COMM 6302 , or consent of instructor.

    A comparative analysis of political, social and economic issues that affect the operation of media industries in the industrialized world.
  • COMM 6315 - History of Mass Communication

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: COMM 6300 and COMM 6302 , or consent of instructor.

    The development, diffusion and evolution of mass communication emphasizing relationships between media technology, economics and aesthetics.
  • COMM 6317 - Media Effects

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: COMM 6300 andCOMM 6302 or consent of instructor.

    Examination of media exposure.
  • COMM 6318 - Media Corporations and Media Content

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Explores how media oligopolies portray, prioritize, or underplay aspects of social reality and content; examines corporations, class ownership, management culture, markets, work routines, agenda setting, framing, news values, bias and ideology.
  • COMM 6320 - Organizational Communication

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: COMM 6300 and COMM 6302 , or consent of instructor.

    Investigates theoretical and pragmatic issues in complex organizations relevant to communication such as serial transmission, networks and communication climate.
  • COMM 6325 - Intercultural Communication and Organizations

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    This course examines culture, ethnicity/race, stereotypes and prejudice, attitudes, attributions, differences in verbal and nonverbal behaviors, theories of cultural differences, diversity, managerial leadership, and intercultural management and practices in organization.
  • COMM 6326 - Leadership Communication

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing.

    This course examines leadership communication in organizational contexts. Topics include various theories and types of leadership, power, influence, diversity, ethics, leadership development, and related communication behaviors and activities.
  • COMM 6330 - Interpersonal Communication

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: COMM 6300 and COMM 6302 , or consent of instructor.

    Theory and research relating to communication within established interpersonal relationships; such as friends, spouses, and coworkers.
  • COMM 6335 - Health Comm. Theory & Research

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Theories and research shaping health communication inquiry.
  • COMM 6336 - Communication in Healthcare Contexts

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: COMM 6336 - Provider-Patient Interaction.
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    Communication processes, issues, and meanings in the organization of healthcare within social, political, economic, and cultural structures; emphasis on theories, perspectives, and practices of patients, providers, and other health citizens in team-based interactions.
  • COMM 6338 - Health Literacy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Theories and research concerning how individuals’ communication and decision making skills shape health care interaction.
  • COMM 6339 - Multicultural Health Communica

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Theories and research examining host and assimilating cultural influences on health care interaction and decision making.
  • COMM 6341 - Comm & Crisis Across Lifespan

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Theories and research concerning how maturational, situational, and moral crises influence health outcomes among health care providers and consumers.
  • COMM 6345 - Health Campaigns

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Systematic conceptual critique across successful, mixed, and unsuccessful public health campaigns focusing on lifestyle behaviors linked to health outcomes across diverse populations.
  • COMM 6350 - Social Media Impact and Implications

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: COMM 6350 - Communication Technology and Society.
    Prerequisite: COMM 6300 .

    Investigates enduring issues concerning digital culture and the rise of social media and explores the role social media plays in shaping human sociology and the mass communications landscape.
  • COMM 6360 - Crit Theory in Media & Culture

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: COMM 6300 and COMM 6302 , or consent of instructor.

    An introduction to critical cultural theory as it applies to the study of media and culture.
  • COMM 6361 - Case Studies in Media Culture

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: COMM 6300 and COMM 6302 , or consent of instructor.

    Application of various theoretical approaches to specific case studies of media and culture.
  • COMM 6362 - Twentieth Cent Popular Culture

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: COMM 6300 and COMM 6302 , or consent of instructor.

    Major theories explaining the impact of communication media on popular culture.
  • COMM 6363 - Media, Globalization & Social Change

    Credit Hours: 3.00
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3.0   Lab Contact Hours: 0.0
    A comparative analysis of political, social and economic issues that affect the operation of media industries.
  • COMM 6370 - Public Relations Management

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: COMM 6300 and COMM 6302 , or consent of instructor.

    Examination of staffing, planning, budgeting, and campaign management requirements in corporate, association, union, and nonprofit public relations.
  • COMM 6371 - Public Relations Theory

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: COMM 6300 and COMM 6302 , or consent of instructor.

    Comparative analysis of public relations theories and research.
  • COMM 6376 - Seminar in Crisis Communicatn

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Study of the theory, research, and best practices of organizational planning, training, and communication response to crises.
  • COMM 6398 - Comprehensive Examination

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: COMM 6398 - Special Problems.
    Prerequisite: Completion of degree coursework.

    Comprehensive Examination.
    May be repeated with permission of graduate director.

  • COMM 6399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • COMM 7397 - Selected Topics - Comm

    Credit Hours: 3.00
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3.0   Lab Contact Hours: 0.0
  • COMM 7399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • SPCM 6399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • SPCM 7399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders

    Courses

  • COMD 6230 - Autism Spectrum Disorders

    Credit Hours: 2.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 2   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Communication Sciences and Disorders or consent of the instructor.

    Study of the identifying characteristics, etiologies, prevalence, assessment, and treatment of individuals with autism spectrum disorders.
  • COMD 6240 - Augmentative and Alternative Communication

    Credit Hours: 2.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 2   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Communication Sciences and Disorders and consent of the instructor.

    Overview of augmentative and alternate communication (AAC) with specific focus on access methods, message representation, and practical application for individuals with a variety of communication disorders.
  • COMD 6261 - Research and Critical Thinking

    Credit Hours: 2.00
    Lecture Contact Hours: 2.0   Lab Contact Hours: 0.0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Communication Sciences and Disorders (COMD) or consent of the instructor.

    Critical evaluation and interpretation of research underlying theory, assessment, and treatment of communication disorders.
  • COMD 6298 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 2.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of director.

    A course designed for graduate students who wish to pursue special studies for which a course is not organized.
  • COMD 6321 - Swallowing Disorders

    Credit Hours: 3.00
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3.0   Lab Contact Hours: 0.0
    Prerequisite: COMD 2376 or equivalent and graduate standing in Communication Sciences and Disorders or by instructor approval.

    Study of normal swallowing physiology and biomechanics and the evaluation and treatment of swallowing disorders.
  • COMD 6326 - Motor Speech Disorders

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in Communication Sciences and Disorders.

    Assessment and management of motor speech disorders in adults, including apraxia of speech and degenerative neurological disorders; physiological systems contributing to reduced intelligibility; and differential diagnosis of the dysarthrias.
  • COMD 6328 - Acquired Cognitive Disorders

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in Communication Sciences and Disorders.

    Study of the etiologies, prevention, assessment and treatment of acquired cognitive disorders such as those due to traumatic brain injury, right hemisphere stroke, aging and dementia.
  • COMD 6334 - Aphasia & Related Com Disorder

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in Communication Sciences and Disorders.

    Symptomatology, diagnosis and treatment of acquired neurogenic communication disorders including aphasia, alexia, agraphia and agnosia.
  • COMD 6372 - Remediation of Childhood Language Disorders

    Credit Hours: 3.00
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3.0   Lab Contact Hours: 0.0
    Prerequisite: Graduate status in major or consent of instructor.

    Principles, methods, and procedures in the assessment and treatment of children with primary or secondary language disorders.
  • COMD 6387 - Voice Disorders

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: COMD 2376 and COMD 4385 or equivalents, or consent of instructor.

    Evaluation and management of vocal disorders including etiology, assessment, and treatment strategies.
  • COMD 6397 - Sel Topics in Comd

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    In-depth study of a specific area.
    May be repeated for credit with permission of program head.

  • COMD 6398 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of director.

    A course designed for graduate students who wish to pursue special studies for which a course is not organized.
  • COMD 6399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing.

    Master’s Thesis.
    N

    Note: May be repeated for credit.
    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • COMD 6489 - Clinical Procedures

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 1
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in COMD and consent from the instructor.

    Capstone course for COMD, practical application of clinical skills, guided clinical observation of certified speech language pathologists and/or audiologists.
  • COMD 7170 - Graduate Seminar in Speech-Language Pathology

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Communication Sciences and Disorders and consent of instructor.

    Seminar will cover issues that impact the practice of speech-language pathology. Sample topics include cultural competence, use of technology, and use of interpreters and translators.
    Course may be repeated for credit.

  • COMD 7192 - Advanced Practicum in Speech & Language Disorders

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 1
    Prerequisite: completion of 175 hours of graduate practicum & consent of instructor.

    Supervised practicum in the diagnosis and treatment of speech-language disorders in an off-campus setting. Clinical clock hours are not awarded for grades below a “B”.
    May be repeated (two terms required for completion of the program requirement).

  • COMD 7199 - Thesis

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • COMD 7221 - Fluency Disorders

    Credit Hours: 2.00
    Lecture Contact Hours: 2.0   Lab Contact Hours: 0.0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in ComD or consent of the instructor.

    Investigates the nature, assessment and treatment of fluency disorders in children and adults. Prevention and cultural considerations are addressed. An emphasis on evidence-based practice underlies the treatment portion.
  • COMD 7270 - Graduate Seminar in Speech-Language Pathology

    Credit Hours: 2.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 2   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Communication Sciences and Disorders (COMD) and consent of instructor.

    Seminar will cover issues that impact the practice of speech-language pathology. Sample topics include cultural competence, use of technology, and use of interpreters and translators.
    Course may be repeated for credit.

  • COMD 7281 - Seminar in Medical Speech-Language Pathology

    Credit Hours: 2.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 2   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    In-depth discussion and analysis of issues in medical speech-language pathology.
    Course may be repeated for credit when topics vary.

  • COMD 7282 - Cultural & Linguistic Diversity Issues in Speech-Language Pathology

    Credit Hours: 2.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 2   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

    Typical and disordered communication in people who use languages, dialects, and cultural communication practices other than Standard American English. Specific topics may vary.
    Course may be repeated for credit.

  • COMD 7283 - Seminar in Pediatric Speech Language Pathology

    Credit Hours: 2.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 2   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

    In-depth discussion and analysis of issues in pediatric speech-language pathology across a range of disorders and service delivery models. Specific topics will vary.
    Course may be repeated for credit.

  • COMD 7322 - Speech Sound Disorders

    Credit Hours: 3.00
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3.0   Lab Contact Hours: 0.0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in ComD or consent of instructor.

    Differential diagnosis and evidence-based intervention approaches for speech sound disorders in children.
  • COMD 7381 - Seminar in Medical Speech-Language Pathology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    In-depth discussion and analysis of issues in medical speech-language pathology.
    Course may be repeated for credit when topics vary.

  • COMD 7382 - Cultural & Linguistic Diversity Issues in Speech-Language Pathology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

    Typical and disordered communication in people who use languages, dialects, and cultural communication practices other than Standard American English. Specific topics may vary.
    Course may be repeated for credit.

  • COMD 7383 - Seminar in Pediatric Speech Language Pathology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor

    In-depth discussion and analysis of issues in pediatric speech-language pathology across a range of disorders and service delivery models. Specific topics will vary.
    Course may be repeated for credit

  • COMD 7391 - Clinic in Speech-Language Disorders

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 3
    Prerequisite: Consent of instructor.

    Supervised practicum in the diagnosis and treatment of speech-language disorders. Clinical clock hours are not awarded for grades below a “B”.
    May be repeated (three terms required for completion of the program requirement).

  • COMD 7392 - Adv Pract Sp & Lang Dis

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 6
    Prerequisite: completion of 175 hours of graduate practicum & consent of instructor.

    Supervised practicum in the diagnosis and treatment of speech-language disorders in an off-campus setting. Clinical clock hours are not awarded for grades below a “B”.
    May be repeated (two terms required for completion of the program requirement).

  • COMD 7399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing.

    Master’s Thesis.
    N

    Note: May be repeated for credit.
    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • COMD 7692 - Advanced Practicum in Speech & Language Disorders

    Credit Hours: 6.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 6
    Prerequisite: completion of 175 hours of graduate practicum & consent of instructor.

    Supervised practicum in the diagnosis and treatment of speech-language disorders in an off-campus setting. Clinical clock hours are not awarded for grades below a “B”.
    May be repeated (two terms required for completion of the program requirement).

  • COMD 8191 - COMD Research

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Admission to the PhD program in Communication Sciences and Disorders or instructor approval.

    Individualized research leading to the completion of an initial research project completed by the student with the guidance of the primary research mentor.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • COMD 8193 - COMD Proseminar

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Admission to the PhD program in Communication Sciences and Disorders or instructor approval.

    Seminar covering current issues and trends in research in the field including student projects and presentations.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • COMD 8199 - Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Candidacy.

    Doctoral dissertation.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • COMD 8291 - COMD Research

    Credit Hours: 2
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Admission to the PhD program in Communication Sciences and Disorders or instructor approval.

    Individualized research leading to the completion of an initial research project completed by the student with the guidance of the primary research mentor.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • COMD 8293 - COMD Proseminar

    Credit Hours: 2
    Lecture Contact Hours: 2   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Admission to the PhD program in Communication Sciences and Disorders or instructor approval.

    Seminar covering current issues and trends in research in the field including student projects and presentations.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • COMD 8299 - Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 2
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Candidacy.

    Doctoral dissertation.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • COMD 8391 - COMD Research

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Admission to the PhD program in Communication Sciences and Disorders or instructor approval.

    Individualized research leading to the completion of an initial research project completed by the student with the guidance of the primary research mentor.
    Y

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • COMD 8392 - COMD Advanced Research Methods

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Admission to PhD Program in Communication Sciences and Disorders or instructor’s permission.

    Sample review of research methods used in the field of communication sciences and disorders.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • COMD 8393 - COMD Proseminar

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Admission to the PhD program in Communication Sciences and Disorders or instructor approval.

    Seminar covering current issues and trends in research in the field including student projects and presentations.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • COMD 8397 - Selected Topics in COMD

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Admission to the PhD program in Communication Sciences and Disorders or instructor approval.

    This course will explore the clinical and experimental literatures as well as theoretical issues on various topics within the field of communication sciences and disorders.
    Y

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • COMD 8399 - Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Candidacy.

    Doctoral dissertation.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • COMD 8691 - COMD Research

    Credit Hours: 6
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Admission to the PhD program in Communication Sciences and Disorders or instructor approval.

    Individualized research leading to the completion of an initial research project completed by the student with the guidance of the primary research mentor.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • COMD 8699 - Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 6
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Candidacy.

    Doctoral dissertation.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • COMD 8991 - COMD Research

    Credit Hours: 9
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Admission to the PhD program in Communication Sciences and Disorders or instructor approval.

    Individualized research leading to the completion of an initial research project completed by the student with the guidance of the primary research mentor.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • COMD 8999 - Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 9
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Candidacy.

    Doctoral dissertation.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • Department of Comparative Cultural Studies

    Courses

  • ANTH 6198 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 1
  • ANTH 6199 - Thesis

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • ANTH 6298 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 2.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 2
  • ANTH 6300 - Foundations of Anthropological Theory

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing.

    Investigates Anthropological theory that underpins all Anthropology, plus Archaeology, Socioculture, and Biological Anthropology through readings and class presentations.
  • ANTH 6301 - Language and Culture

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Anthropology.

    Examination of language as a key to the world view of people; theoretical and methodological issues will also be discussed.
  • ANTH 6310 - Anthropological Research Design

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in anthropology or consent of instructor.

    Discussion of research, design, statement of problems, literature search and proper methods of implementing anthropological research.
  • ANTH 6311 - Issues and Debates in Social/Cultural Theory

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ANTH 6300 .

    Seminar in recent theory in Sociocultural Anthropology, covering post-structural, postmodern, and other new developments.
  • ANTH 6312 - Proseminar-Physical Ant

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ANTH 2301 or equivalent.

    Survey of current research trends in physical anthropology.
  • ANTH 6313 - Sem Archaeo Mthds/Thry

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ANTH 2303 or equivalent.

    Survey of recent trends in methods and theoretical orientations in American archaeology.
  • ANTH 6315 - Sem-Ethnographic Anlys

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ANTH 6310 and ANTH 6311 or equivalents.

    A critical evaluation of major ethnographic works in terms of methodology, logic of argument, empirical evidence, and justification of conclusions.
  • ANTH 6317 - Anthropology and Gender

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in anthropology or consent of instructor.

    Cross-cultural analysis of gender roles from theoretical and ethnographic perspectives.
  • ANTH 6318 - Sem in Historical Archaeology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in anthropology or consent of instructor.

    Survey of methods and theories in historic site archaeology.
  • ANTH 6319 - African Myth, Cosmlgy & Symbol

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Analysis of several societies from theoretical and ethnographic perspectives.
  • ANTH 6320 - Seminar in Citizenship and Political Culture

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate Standing in Anthropology.

    Interdisciplinary seminar comparatively examines the history and contemporary significance of citizenship in relation to the political economy of culture through a range of empirical case studies and theoretical formulations.
  • ANTH 6322 - Seminar in Medical Anth

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in anthropology or consent of instructor.

    Interrelationship and influence of biology, culture, and nature on disease patterns and the role of adaptation in disease processes.
  • ANTH 6325 - Computer-Based Data Analysis in Anthropology

    Credit Hours: 3.00
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3.0   Lab Contact Hours: 0.0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Anthropology or permission of the instructor.

    Study of computer-based data analysis for both quantitative and qualitative anthropological research.
  • ANTH 6330 - Applied Anthropology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Overview of the development of theory and methodology in applied anthropology.
  • ANTH 6337 - Anthropology of the Life Cycle and Aging

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in anthropology.

    In cross-cultural and historical perspective, this course explores the meaning of growing “older” in different cultures and societies.
  • ANTH 6340 - Anthropology and Literature

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: permission of the instructor.

    Applying cultural critiques to works of classic literature by reading them as ethnographic texts.
  • ANTH 6341 - Cultural Ecology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in anthropology.

    Exploration of the relationship of human cultural behavior to the natural environment, with both ethnographic and archaeological samples.
  • ANTH 6342 - Food and Culture

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in anthropology.

    The relationship of food to humans through its biological, social, economic, political, and symbolic roles.
  • ANTH 6343 - Anthropology of Wine

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in anthropology.

    Investigation of the biological, social, economic, political, and symbolic roles that wine has in human cultures since the first use of wine.
  • ANTH 6351 - Human Osteology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Anthropology.

    Detailed study of the human skeleton and its uses in anthropological research.
  • ANTH 6363 - Race, Racialization, and the Politics of Culture

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Anthropology or permission of instructor.

    This course will seek to situate constructions of “cultural” and “biological” difference in the context of social inequality and subordination. Specifically, it will examine the social processes by which distinctions and differences of “race’ are produced, reproduced, and transformed, and will do so in relation to the related concepts of “ethnicity,” “culture,” and “nation.” The dynamics of race and racism in the United States stressed, but other parts of the world will be compared.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ANTH 6372 - Mayan Archaeology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in anthropology.

    Evolution of prehistoric Mayan culture and the archaeological methods used to obtain and interpret the data.
  • ANTH 6373 - Aztec Archaeology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in anthropology.

    The antecedents and the evolution of the Aztecs and the archaeological methods used to obtain and interpret the data.
  • ANTH 6376 - Texas Archaeology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in anthropology.

    Survey of the aboriginal archaeology of Texas, ranging from European Contact to the earliest known groups.
  • ANTH 6377 - Archaeology of the African Diaspora

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in anthropology.

    The development of African American culture in North America and the Caribbean from the late 16th to through early 20th centuries.
  • ANTH 6380 - Field Methods

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in anthropology or consent of instructor.

    Overview of methods for cultural/applied studies.
  • ANTH 6382 - Archaeology Lab Methods

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Presentation of techniques of classification, taxonomy, functional analysis, processing, and curation of artifacts recovered from archaeological sites.
  • ANTH 6383 - Applied Archaeology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate Standing in Anthropology.

    Methods and legal regulations as they apply to salvage and excavations on public lands.
  • ANTH 6390 - Archaeological Field Work I

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Approval of field work director. May be taken concurrently with ARCH 6325 .

    Archaeological field work for M.A. thesis.
  • ANTH 6391 - Ethnographic Field Work I

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of field work director.

    Corequisite: May be taken concurrently with ANTH 7391 .

    Archaeological field work for M.A. thesis.
  • ANTH 6392 - Research Practicum I

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 3
    Formerly/Same as: ANTH 6392 - Practicum in Applied Anthropology.
    Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.

    Individual practicum on research problem.
    May be repeated for credit.

  • ANTH 6393 - Internship in Applied Anthropology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 3
    Formerly/Same as: ANTH 6393 - Practicum in Applied Anthropology.
    Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.

    Individual internship for applied anthropological project.
    May be repeated for credit.

  • ANTH 6395 - Selected Topics in Ant

    Credit Hours: 3.00
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3.0   Lab Contact Hours: 0.0
  • ANTH 6398 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 3
  • ANTH 6399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • ANTH 6692 - Research Practicum

    Credit Hours: 6.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 6
    Formerly/Same as: ANTH 6392 - Practicum in Applied Anthropology.
    Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.

    Individual practicum on research problem.
    May be repeated for credit.

  • ANTH 6693 - Internship in Applied Anthropology

    Credit Hours: 6.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 6
    Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.

    Individual internship for applied anthropological project.
    May be repeated for credit.

  • ANTH 7199 - Thesis

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ANTH 7390 - Archaeological Field Work II

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • ANTH 7391 - Ethnographic Field Work II

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • ANTH 7399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • Department of Economics

    Courses

  • ECON 6338 - Regression Causal Modeling and Social Science Data Mining

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing and approval of the program director.

    The course focuses on very basic statistical data mining tools. Topic areas include review of multiple regression analysis, models of association and clustering, statistical learning models, the explanation of individual behaviors, and simple forecasting models. This is an applied statistics course, not a course in computer science or database management.
  • ECON 6340 - Health Economics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 6465 and ECON 6485 or consent of instructor.

    Economic analysis of health care. Topics include the value of health, the demand of health care, health insurance markets, managed care and the Medicare and Medicaid programs.
  • ECON 6345 - Energy Economics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 6465 and ECON 6485 or consent of instructor.

    Energy economics with applications: Markets and market structures including the effects of regulations; sources; substitutes; externalities; data analysis and policy.
  • ECON 6351 - Economic Forecasting

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 6465 or consent of instructor.

    Forecasting and modeling techniques including univariate and multivariate time series, model selection, response function analysis and variance decompositions, various non-linear models, and forecast evaluation.
  • ECON 6352 - Quantitative Methods and Applications

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 6465 , 6475, and 6485or consent of instructor.

    Cost-benefit analysis, debt and equity financing, asset allocation, derivatives, among other topics. Microsoft Excel experience will be emphasized.
    Maybe repeated for credit.

  • ECON 6353 - Capital Market Economics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 6465 , 6475, and 6485 or consent of instructor.

    This course covers capital markets from an economic perspective. Discussions will focus on the economic functions and roles capital markets play in the global economy, the key players and their economic functions, and various components that make up the capital markets such as stocks, bonds, options, and futures. Students will learn both mathematical methods for pricing capital assets and Excel applications of these methods. The student will gain an understanding of capital markets in theory and practice.
  • ECON 6366 - Advanced Economic Theory

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    Classical microeconomic concepts and models including topics in industrial organization.
  • ECON 6368 - International Economics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    International trade and capital flows, with a focus on transition countries and emerging markets.
  • ECON 6372 - Issues in Microeconomics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor

    Contemporary issues in microeconomic theory, including various modeling techniques.
  • ECON 6375 - Macroeconomic Analysis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in economics or consent of instructor.

    Analysis of aggregated economic relationships; the determinants of employment, economic growth, and inflation; the effects of monetary and fiscal policy on the national economy.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • ECON 6385 - Microeconomic Analysis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in economics or consent of instructor.

    Analysis of price formation and allocation of resources; consumer (household) behavior; theory of the firm; applications of price theory to government regulation.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • ECON 6390 - Workshop Research Methods I

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    Economics research mthods covers how to devise a research agenda and mthodology, find research sources and tools, and how to carry out research.
  • ECON 6391 - Master’s Internship

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 3
    Prerequisite: ECON 6465 , 6485, and consent of instructor.

    Work with practicing economists in selected private industry, federal, state and local government offices.
  • ECON 6393 - Master’s Research Project

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 3
    Prerequisite: Consent of Program Director.

    Work under the guidance of faculty economists on selected research project(s).
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ECON 6394 - Tpcs-Eco of Socl Issue

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Note: Practicum
  • ECON 6395 - Wkshp Res Method II

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • ECON 6397 - Topics in Eco Research

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Selected Topics
  • ECON 6398 - Res & Readings-Eco

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair.

    Student may elect to receive either S/ U or letter grade. Individually directed readings or research in a particular field of economics.
  • ECON 6399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ECON 6465 - Econometrics

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 1
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    Statistical tools needed to understand and execute empirical economic research. Topics include linear regression, instrumental variables estimation, limited dependent variable models and panel data methods. Emphasis will be on applying econometrics to real-world problems.
  • ECON 6475 - Macroeconomic Analysis

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 1
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    Advanced treatment of the core topics in macroeconomics with applications. Topics include business cycles, inflation, unemployment, growth, alternative exchange rate regimes, and fiscal and monetary policy.
  • ECON 6485 - Microeconomic Analysis

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 1
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    Fundamentals of market and individual choice analysis emphasizing empirical analysis in a business setting. Analysis of domestic and international markets and individual choice, including the theoretical study of the relationships within and between individuals, organizations, and the international economy.
  • ECON 6691 - Master’s Internship

    Credit Hours: 6.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 6
    Prerequisite: ECON 6465 , 6485, and consent of instructor.

    Work with practicing economists in selected private industry, federal, state and local government offices.
  • ECON 6693 - Master’s Research Project

    Credit Hours: 6
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 6
    Prerequisite: Consent of Program Director.

    Work under the guidance of faculty economists on selected research project(s).
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ECON 6699 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 6.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Consent of program director.

    Faculty-guided applied research project.
    May be repeated for credit.

  • ECON 7190 - Research & Readings - Economic

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of department chair

    Student may elect to receive either S/U or letter grade. Individually directed readings or research in a particular field of economics.
    May be repeated for credit

  • ECON 7290 - Research & Readings - Economic

    Credit Hours: 2.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 2   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of department chair

    Student may elect to receive either S/U or letter grade. Individually directed readings or research in a particular field of economics.
    May be repeated for credit

  • ECON 7300 - Seminar Curr Econ Res

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing.

    Current topics in economic research presented in seminar format.
    May be repeated with consent of instructor.

  • ECON 7301 - Seminar in Microeconomic Research

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing.

    Current topics in microeconomic research presented in seminar format.
    May be repeated for credit.

  • ECON 7302 - Seminar in Macroeconomic Research

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing.

    Current topics in macroeconomic research presented in seminar format.
    May be repeated for credit.

  • ECON 7330 - Quantitative Economic Analysis

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Economics or consent of instructor

    Statistical basis for applied economic analysis, which includes discrete and continuous distributions, point estimation, test of hypothesis, methods of estimation and properties of estimators.
  • ECON 7331 - Econometrics I

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 6331 and MATH 2331 or consent of instructor.

    Regression analysis and the general linear model. Topics covered include ordinary least squares, heteroskedasticity, autoregression, distributed lags, and generalized least squares.
  • ECON 7335 - Applied Econometrics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7331 or consent of instructor

    Econometric techniques for applied microeconomic research. Topics include randomized experiments, matching techniques, fixed effects models, differences-in-differences, instrumental variables, and regression discontinuity designs.
  • ECON 7340 - Economic Growth and Development I

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7344 and ECON 7331 or consent of instructor.

    Long-run economic growth from pre-industrial agricultural economies to modern industrial capitalism. Topics include technology acquisition, accumulation of capital, demographic transition, institutional and geographic factors in development and income distribution.
  • ECON 7341 - Microeconomic Theory I

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Economics or consent of instructor

    Contemporary microeconomic theory of decision and allocation in a market economy. Topics include theories of the consumer, the firm, and competitive markets under complete and incomplete information.
  • ECON 7342 - Microeconomic Theory II

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Microeconomic Theory I.

    Continuation of Microeconomic Theory I. Continuation of Microeconomic Theory I. Topics include market structure, centralized and decentralized decisions, alternative allocation mechanisms, contracts, capital theory, general equilibrium, unemployment, and money.
  • ECON 7343 - Macroeconomic Theory I

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Economics or consent of instructor

    Analytic tools of contemporary macroeconomics, including static analysis of classical and Keynesian models and the aggregate behavior of consumers, investors, and asset holders.
  • ECON 7344 - Macroeconomic Theory II

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Macroeconomic Theory I.

    Continuation of Macroeconomic Theory I. Topics include dynamic analysis, long run growth, stochastic macroeconomics, and theories of expectations. Emphasis on recent literature in macroeconomic theory.
  • ECON 7349 - Game Theory and Economic Behav

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 6342 or consent of instructor.

    Modeling and analysis of strategic situations. Topics include cooperative game theory, simultaneous-move games and Nash equilibrium, sequential-move games and subgame perfect equilibrium, and applications.
  • ECON 7350 - Economic Growth & Develop II

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: ECON 7350 - Economic Growth and International Development
    Prerequisite: ECON 7340 or consent of instructor.

    Advanced macroeconomics course on long-run economic growth and international development. Study of the interaction between factor flows, trade, capital markets and the growth process. Topics include property right institutions, corporate governance and government regulation. The course is intended for second- and third-year Ph.D. students in the Economics department.
  • ECON 7351 - Develop Econ:Microecon Issues

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7342 or consent of instructor.

    Examines the micro foundations of economic development, including education, health, the family, land, credit, risk and institutions. Teaches econometric tools that have been used by researchers to identify causal relationships, including panel data, instrumental variables, randomized experiments and natural experiments.
  • ECON 7355 - International Finance and Macroeconomics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7344 and ECON 7331 or consent of instructor.

    International finance and open economy macroeconomics. Review of theoretical and empirical literature. Includes writing referee reports for peer reviewed journal articles, seminar presentations and development of critical analytical skills. The course is intended for second- and third-year Ph.D. students in the Economics department.
  • ECON 7365 - Labor Economics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7341 ; ECON 7331 recommended, or consent of instructor.

    Topics include: labor demand, labor supply, and human capital.
  • ECON 7366 - Health Economics

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7341 ; ECON 7331 recommended, or consent of instructor.

    Topics include the determinants of health, social and economic inequalities in health, medical malpractice and the market for health insurance.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • ECON 7372 - Economics of Education

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7341 ; ECON 7331 recommended, or consent of instructor.

    Topics include models of education, estimation of return to schooling, education production function and issues in school finance.
  • ECON 7376 - Industrial Organization

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7342 or consent of instructor.

    This course examines how industries are organized and how that affects their economic performance. Topics include the modern business firm and its vertical relations, market structure and the marketing strategies it can encourage including innovation, with attention to network industries and their problems of compatibility and standardization.
  • ECON 7377 - Public Finance

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7342 and ECON 7344 .

    Selected topics in the incidence and effects of government revenues, expenditures, and debt.
  • ECON 7378 - State and Urban Finance

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7341 or consent of instructor

    Analysis of government tax and expenditure at the state and local level, with consideration of underlying determinants of local public sector budgets.
  • ECON 7379 - Public Economics & Individual Behavior

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7341 or consent of instructor

    Impacts of government policies emphasizing the effects on individual behavior. Topics include education, Social Security, health insurance, unemployment insurance, disability insurance, and welfare.
  • ECON 7380 - Macro Modeling & Forecasting

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7331 and ECON 7344 .

    Univariate and multivariate time series, unit roots and structural change, heteroskedasticity, co-integration, panels, and out-of-sample forecasting and predictability.
  • ECON 7384 - Political Economy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7341 and 7342 or consent of instructor

    Modern political economy theory and empiric. Topics include voting, running for office, lobbying, and the implications of these behaviors for economic policies and institutions. Applications include democratization, campaign finance policy, and corruption
  • ECON 7385 - Monetary Policy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7342 and ECON 7344 .

    Stabilization policy, rational expectations, and the Phillips curve, the IS curve, Phillips curve, and Taylor rule model. Monetary policy evaluation with Taylor rules and real-time data, and monetary policy and the financial crisis.
  • ECON 7387 - Eco Anlysis-Urbn Areas

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Markets for housing and sites, determinants of land use patterns. Topics include demand, rent and density gradients, racial discrimination, land use regulation, transportation access.
  • ECON 7388 - International Monetary Economics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: ECON 7398 - International Monetary Economics.
    Prerequisite: ECON 7342 and ECON 7344 .

    The foreign exchange market, models of money, prices, and exchange rates, fixed and flexible exchange rates, out-of-sample nominal exchange rate predictability, and purchasing power parity.
  • ECON 7390 - Research & Readings - Economic

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 3
    Prerequisite: approval of department chair

    Student may elect to receive either S/U or letter grade. Individually directed readings or research in a particular field of economics.
    May be repeated for credit

  • ECON 7393 - Time Series Analysis

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7331 or consent of instructor.

    Focuses on the theory and application of univariate time series methods. Topics covered include both stationary and nonstationary time series, with an emphasis on inference in nonstationary processes, e.g. unit root tests.
  • ECON 7394 - Time Series Analysis II

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7393 or consent of instructor.

    Time series theory with applications. Topics include state space models, Kalman filter, models of Markov switching, state space models with Markov switching, trend/cycle decompositions, Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) methods, structural change, and median-unbiased estimation.
  • ECON 7395 - Selected Topics

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Y

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • ECON 8198 - Doctoral Research

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Note: 1-3 credit hours per semester, or more than 3 by concurrent enrollment.
  • ECON 8199 - Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ECON 8298 - Doctoral Research

    Credit Hours: 2.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Note: 1 to 3 credit hours per semester, or more than 3 by concurrent enrollment.
  • ECON 8331 - Econometrics II

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7331 .

    Estimation methods in single-equation and simultaneous equations models. Topics include missing observations, errors in variables, and limited dependent variables.
  • ECON 8333 - Econometrics III

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 8331 or consent of instructor

    Econometric theory with applications. Asymptotic distribution theory, identification of simultaneous equation systems, estimation of systems of equations, specification and diagnostic testing, and the estimation of fixed random effects panel data models.
  • ECON 8342 - Microecon Theory III

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7342  - Microeconomic Theory II.

    Concentration on recent journal literature in microeconomic theory.
  • ECON 8344 - Macroecon Theory III

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Macroeconomic Theory II.

    Concentration on recent journal literature in macroeconomic theory.
  • ECON 8346 - Dynamic Macroeconomics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7342 , 7344, and 7331 or consent of instructor

    Applied research methods with applications in macroeconomics. Topics include generalized method of moments, vector autoregression, and introduction to dynamic programming. Recent literature in applied macroeconomics will be reviewed
  • ECON 8361 - Workshop Research Methods III

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7342 , ECON 7344 and ECON 7331 or consent of instructor.

    Data sources, specification analysis, and other aspects of empirical research in economics.
  • ECON 8362 - Workshop Research Methods IV

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7342 , ECON 7344 and ECON 7331 or consent of instructor.

    Formulation, execution, and presentation of a research paper in economics.
  • ECON 8363 - Workshop in Research Methods V

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7341 , 7342, and 7331or consent of instructor.

    Formulation, execution, and presentation of a research paper in economics for advanced students.
  • ECON 8365 - Labor Economics II

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7365 , Continuation of ECON 7365 .

    Topics include wage differentials, persistence in inequality and social mobility, the driving forces behind inequality, and unemployment.
  • ECON 8396 - International Trade

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ECON 7342 .

    Causes and consequences of international trade, theories and comparative advantage, theory and measurement of tariffs, capital movements, and multinational corporations.
  • ECON 8398 - Doctoral Research

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Note: 1 to 3 credit hours per semester, or more than 3 by concurrent enrollment.
  • ECON 8399 - Doctoral Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • ECON 8699 - Doctoral Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 6
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • ECON 8999 - Doctoral Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 9
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • Department of English

    Courses

  • ENGL 6198 - Rd&Research in Lang&Lit

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Tutorial hours for pre-thesis research.
  • ENGL 6199 - Thesis

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ENGL 6300 - College Tchg-Lang & Lit in Eng

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Sequential seminars for graduate teaching assistants on techniques and problems in freshman and sophomore English.
  • ENGL 6310 - Advanced Academic Writing Workshop

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Two semesters of graduate coursework

    This course has one central purpose: to guide you in the production of a final, high quality research project of the student’s choosing. To that end, we will break down the research and writing process into its component parts, working toward the goal of producing a final, cohesive draft of the MA report by the end of the semester.  Reading and writing assignments in early weeks will help you articulate the central issues, questions, and problems of your MA report, allowing you to approach the entire project (to be drafted in later weeks) with a sense of awareness and control.  All writing assignments-in draft, provisional, and final form-will be “workshopped” with the entire group.
    May not be repeated.

  • ENGL 6311 - Bibliog & Research Mtds

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • ENGL 6312 - Hist of Lit Criticism

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    A historical study of critical theory, its philosophical foundations, and its application from Plato through the New Criticism.
  • ENGL 6313 - Modern Literary Theory

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    A survey of critical theory in the twentieth century, its philosophical foundations, and its application.
  • ENGL 6314 - Feminist Criticism

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Beginning with a background of general theories in feminism, the course focuses on feminist literary theory and criticism, with particular attention to such writers as de Beauvoir, French, Gilligan, Lakoff, Kristeva, Moi, Showalter, Christian, Alarcon, Gilbert, and Gubar.
  • ENGL 6315 - Crit Cultural Theory

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    An introduction to critical cultural studies, emphasizing the complementary influence of literary, communication, semiotic, rhetorical and social theories on one another.
  • ENGL 6316 - American Folklore

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Introduction to the theories and methods of folklore collection and study, with particular emphasis on American traditions.
  • ENGL 6319 - Modern Thought

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Consideration of the work of major nineteenth and twentieth century intellectual figures in literature, literary theory, esthetics, and philosophy.
  • ENGL 6320 - Poetic Forms

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study and practice of various poetic forms and techniques.
  • ENGL 6321 - Fictional Forms and Techniques

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study and practice of various narrative modes.
  • ENGL 6322 - Poetry Workshop

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Writing and discussion of poetry from a variety of stylistic approaches.
  • ENGL 6323 - Fiction Workshop

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Writing and discussion of fiction.
  • ENGL 6324 - Non-Fiction Prose Workshop

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Writing and discussion of selected categories in non-fiction prose.
  • ENGL 6330 - General Linguistics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Fundamental concepts of linguistic description: phonology, morphology, and syntax.
  • ENGL 6332 - History of Eng Language

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of the backgrounds of English and its progression from Old to Middle to Modern English, with particular attention to special problems.
  • ENGL 6333 - Descript & Cont Ling

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Descriptive phonetics, phonology, morphology and syntax with contrastive study of these systems in English and common first languages of English learners, such as Spanish and Vietnamese.
  • ENGL 6334 - Theories of Esl

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 6330 or equivalent.

    Corequisite: May be taken concurrently.

    Study of theories and research underlying current approaches to teaching English as a second language to secondary school and adult learners.
  • ENGL 6360 - Old English

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • ENGL 6361 - Old English

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • ENGL 6393 - Research Colloquium-M.A.

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in M.A. program in English.

    Seminar on writing and research methods.
  • ENGL 6397 - Sel Top-Linguistics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Will be identified by a specific title each time it is offered.
    May be repeated for credit when topics vary.

  • ENGL 6398 - Rd&Research in Lang&Lit

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Tutorial hours for pre-thesis research.
  • ENGL 6698 - Research

    Credit Hours: 6.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Tutorial hours for pre-thesis research.
  • ENGL 7315 - Cultural Criticism

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    A seminar applying various theoretical approaches in critical cultural studies to specific case studies, emphasizing the complementary influence of theories drawn from different disciplines in the humanities and social sciences on one another and on the analyses of the case studies.
  • ENGL 7322 - Advncd Poetry Workshop

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • ENGL 7323 - Advncd Fiction Workshop

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • ENGL 7324 - Writers On Literature

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Analysis of selected works from the creative viewpoint with a practicing writer in the represented genre. Course may not count toward required literature hours in any degree program.
    May be repeated for a maximum of six semester hours when topics vary.

  • ENGL 7325 - The British Empire

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in English, or approval of chair of graduate studies.

    Exposes students to interdisciplinary approaches to the study of the British Empire, including discourses of empire in theoretical, historical, and literary texts.
    Note: Seminar.
  • ENGL 7332 - Syntax

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 6330 or equivalent.

    Principles of formal analysis and description of natural language grammatical systems with special attention to English.
  • ENGL 7333 - Phonology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 6330 or equivalent.

    Principles of formal analysis and description of natural language sound systems with special attention to English.
  • ENGL 7334 - Studies in Lang Acq

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 6330 or equivalent.

    A survey of seminal theories and research on first and second language acquisition with special attention to the acquisition of English.
  • ENGL 7335 - Sociolinguistics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 6330 or equivalent.

    Examination of relationship between language and society with attention to social stratification, ethnicity, and situational contexts.
  • ENGL 7336 - Lin Bases Mtrl Develop

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 6334 .

    Study, evaluation, and development of materials for teaching English as a second language utilizing various linguistic models and current language acquisition theory.
  • ENGL 7338 - Language Assessment

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 6334 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Theory and practice of assessing English language proficiency and achievement in second or foreign language learners.
  • ENGL 7344 - Discourse Analysis

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 6330 or equivalent.

    Analysis of the relationship between structure and meaning in extended units of oral and written discourse.
  • ENGL 7362 - Presem: Middle Eng Lit

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of literary works selected to illustrate major trends and ideas of the period.
  • ENGL 7363 - Presem: Renaissance Lit

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of literary works selected to illustrate major trends and ideas of the period.
  • ENGL 7364 - Presem: Rest & 18Th-C

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of literary works selected to illustrate major trends and ideas of the period.
  • ENGL 7366 - Presem: Modern Brit Lit

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of literary works selected to illustrate major trends and ideas of the period.
  • ENGL 7367 - Presem: Am Lit-Civ W

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of literary works selected to illustrate major trends and ideas of the period.
  • ENGL 7368 - Presem:Am Lit Sin Civ W

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of literary works selected to illustrate major trends and ideas of the period.
  • ENGL 7369 - Introduction to Postcolonial Studies

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Foundations in the theory and literature of colonialism, focusing on colonial discourse and postcolonial theory and presenting literary texts focusing on postcolonial themes.
  • ENGL 7370 - History of Rhetoric

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    A study of rhetorical theory in the western world as applied to written language.
  • ENGL 7371 - Rhetoric & Composition

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    A study of theories of rhetoric and discourse as applied to various forms of written composition.
  • ENGL 7372 - History of Composition

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or approval of chair.

    Historical narratives of composition in U.S. with attention to archival research methods.
  • ENGL 7374 - Critical Pedagogy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or approval of chair.

    Theories of and research on critical pedagogy specific to rhetoric and composition; interrogates function of writing and writing instruction in university.
  • ENGL 7380 - History of Poetry and Poetics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing.

    Study of the history and techniques of lyric poetry from antiquity to the present.
  • ENGL 7381 - Narrative and Narrative Theory

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing.

    Study of the history and techniques of narrative from antiquity to the present.
  • ENGL 7390 - Introduction to Doctoral Studies in English

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: doctoral standing.

    Introduction to the profession of English studies.
  • ENGL 7396 - Topics in Language & Literatre

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • ENGL 7398 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor and approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    For the advanced student wishing to pursue individual study.
    May be repeated for a maximum of six semester hours credit.

  • ENGL 7399 - Essay

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Completion of 27 hours of course work toward the MA in English and approval of the director of graduate studies.

    May be repeated.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • ENGL 7699 - Thesis

    Credit Hours: 6
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Completion of 36 hours of course work toward the MA in English and approval of the director of graduate studies.

    May be repeated.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • ENGL 8199 - Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ENGL 8316 - Documenting Community Culture

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: ENGL 8316 - Folklore Theory and Fieldwork.
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    A term-long fieldwork and research project emphasizing the methods and principles of community ethnography and recording folklore.
  • ENGL 8318 - Research Seminar in Rhetoric and Composition

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or approval of chair.

    Investigation of approaches, assumptions, and methods in specific fields within the discipline of rhetoric and composition employed in production of research.
    Course can be repeated once for credit.

  • ENGL 8322 - Master Workshop: Poetry

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: 9 hours of poetry workshops.

    Shaping and refining the poetry manuscript.
  • ENGL 8323 - Master Workshop: Narrative

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: 9 hours of fiction workshops.

    Shaping and refining the fiction manuscript.
  • ENGL 8340 - Elizabethn&Jacobean Dra

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 7363 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Drama of the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, excluding Shakespearean drama.
  • ENGL 8341 - Shakes Coms and Hists

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 7363 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of selected plays of the genre.
  • ENGL 8342 - Shakespeare’s Tragedies

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 7363 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of selected plays of the genre.
  • ENGL 8344 - 16Th-C Nondramatic Lit

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 7363 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Detailed study of British prose and poetry of the period.
  • ENGL 8346 - 17Th-C Nondramatic Literature

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 7363 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Detailed study of British prose and poetry of the period, excluding the poetry of Milton.
  • ENGL 8347 - Milton

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 7365 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of both the prose and poetry of John Milton.
  • ENGL 8354 - The English Novel

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 7364 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Evolution of the English novel to 1832.
  • ENGL 8355 - English Romanticism

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 7365 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of early romantic poetry and prose.
  • ENGL 8356 - English Romanticism

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 7365 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of late romantic poetry and prose.
  • ENGL 8360 - The English Novel

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 7365 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Development of the English novel from 1832.
  • ENGL 8361 - Victorian Poetry

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 7365 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Tennyson, Browning, Arnold, the Pre-Raphaelites, and others.
  • ENGL 8362 - Victorian Prose

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 7365 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Carlyle, Macaulay, Newman, Mill, Ruskin, Arnold, and others.
  • ENGL 8364 - Women Writers

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    This course focuses on the poetry, prose, and drama written by such writers as the Brontes, Austen, Eliot, Woolf, Cather, Lessing, Drabble, and Morrison.
  • ENGL 8371 - Amer Novel of 19Th Cen

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 7367 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of such writers of the period as Cooper, Hawthorne, Melville, James.
  • ENGL 8372 - Amer Transcendentalism

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 7367 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of such writers of the movements as Emerson, Whitman, Thoreau.
  • ENGL 8373 - American Romanticism

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 7367 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of such writers of the movement as Poe, Hawthorne, Melville.
  • ENGL 8374 - American Realism & Naturalism

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 7368 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of such writers of the movement as Twain, Howells, Crane, James, Dreiser.
  • ENGL 8376 - 19Th C American Poetry

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 7367 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of such writers of the period as Bryant, Longfellow, Whitman, Dickinson.
  • ENGL 8378 - Modern Am Lit

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 7368 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of such writers of the period as Eliot, Stevens, Williams, Faulkner, Hemingway.
  • ENGL 8379 - Modern American Drama

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 7368 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Emphasis upon American drama of the twentieth century.
  • ENGL 8381 - Contemporary American Fiction

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 7368 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of such writers of the period as Bellow, Mailer, Pynchon, Gass.
  • ENGL 8382 - Contemp Am Poetry

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ENGL 7368 or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of such writers of the period as Bishop, Berryman, Warren, Wright.
  • ENGL 8383 - African Amer Poetry/Dra

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of the works of such writers as Paul Laurence Dunbar, Langston Hughes, Countee Cullen, Arna Bontemps, Gwendolyn Brooks, Lorraine Hansberry, Ed Bullins, Alice Childress, Ntozake Shange, and August Wilson.
  • ENGL 8384 - African American Fic

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of the works of such writers as Zora Neale Hurston, Richard Wright, Ralph Ellison, James Baldwin, Margaret Walker, Alice Walker, and Toni Morrison.
  • ENGL 8385 - Mexican-American Literature

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Mexican-American literature using various, genres, themes, or critical or theoretical approaches.
  • ENGL 8386 - Topics in Postcolonial Studies

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Study of any topic within the field of postcolonial studies including but not limited to surveys of postcolonial fiction, poetry, drama, film, or theory, colonial discourse analysis, globalization studies, third world intellectuals, specific traditions within the postcolonial world.
  • ENGL 8388 - Topics in Literary Translation

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in English, or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Critical approaches to the history, theory, and practice of translation.
    Course may be repeated for credit when topics vary.

  • ENGL 8389 - Advanced Projects in Translation

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in English or approval of director of graduate studies in English; and either Literary Translation or Topics in Translation Studies; and permission of the instructor.

    Advanced workshop on individual projects in literary translation.
    May be repeated once for credit.

  • ENGL 8390 - Literary Translation

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: ENGL 8390 - Studies in Literary Translation.
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English; reading knowledge of a foreign language.

    Study of the theory and practice of literary translation.
  • ENGL 8393 - Research Colloquium-Doctoral

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in Ph.D. program in English.

    Seminar on writing and research methods.
  • ENGL 8394 - Sel Topics-Compar Lit

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in English or approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    The theoretical bases and critical strategies for the comparative study of literary texts from different linguistic and national traditions. Texts may be selected according to genres, themes, poetic or narrative techniques, geographical or political areas, etc.
  • ENGL 8395 - Selected Topics in Rhetoric and Composition

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or approval of chair.

    Study of major topics within discipline of rhetoric and composition.
    May be repeated for credit if topic varies.

  • ENGL 8398 - Graduate English Resrch

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Conference course concerned with specific areas of research and professional development under the supervision of members of the graduate faculty.
  • ENGL 8399 - Doctoral Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • ENGL 8698 - Graduate Research

    Credit Hours: 6.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair of graduate studies in English.

    Conference course concerned with specific areas of research and professional development under the supervision of members of the graduate faculty.
  • ENGL 8699 - Doctoral Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 6
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • Department of Health and Human Performance

    Courses

  • ATP 6101 - Anatomical Basis of Athletic Injury Lab

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 1
    Formerly/Same as: PEP 6160 - Prevention and Care of Athletic Injuries Lab
    Prerequisite: Admission to the Masters of Athletic Training program.

    Corequisite: ATP 6301  - Anatomical Basis of Athletic Injury

    Laboratory to accompany ATP 6301 ; application of theories, skills, and practice.
  • ATP 6102 - Emergency Management & Prevention of Injury Lab

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 1
    Prerequisite: Admission to Master of Athletic Training program.

    Corequisite: ATP 6302  - Emergency Management & Prevention of Injury.

    Laboratory to accompany ATP 6302 ; application of theories, skills, and practice.
  • ATP 6112 - Therapeutic Intervention 1 Lab

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 3
    Prerequisite: Formal acceptance for progression into the Master’s Degree in Athletic Training.

    Investigate and analyze indications, contraindications and biophysics of agents that aid in the healing of athletic injuries and the reduction of pain utilizing appropriate therapeutic modalities, basic therapeutic exercises and rehabilitative.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ATP 6113 - Lower Extremity Evaluation Lab

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 1
    Formerly/Same as: PEP 6164 - Evaluation of Lower Extremity Lab.
    Prerequisite: Admission to the Masters of Athletic Training program.

    Corequisite: ATP 6313  - Lower Extremity Evaluation.

    Laboratory to accompany ATP 6313 ; application of theories, skills, and practice.
  • ATP 6123 - Upper Extremity Evaluation Lab

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 1
    Formerly/Same as: PEP 6161 - Evaluation of Upper Extremity Lab.
    Prerequisite: Admission to the Masters of Athletic Training program.

    Corequisite: ATP 6323  - Upper Extremity Evaluation.

    Laboratory to accompany ATP 6323 ; application of theories, skills, and practice.
  • ATP 6191 - Clinical Experience I

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 1
    Prerequisite: Admission to Master of Athletic Training program.

    Integration of educational competencies and clinical proficiencies with classroom instruction and supervised field based experience. Integration of educational competencies and clinical proficiencies with classroom instruction and supervised field-based experience.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ATP 6192 - Clinical Experience II

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 1
    Prerequisite: Admission to Master of Athletic Training program.

    Integration of educational competencies and clinical proficiencies with classroom instruction and supervised field based experience.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ATP 6293 - Clinical Experience III

    Credit Hours: 2
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 2
    Formerly/Same as: ATP 6193.
    Prerequisite: Admission to Master of Athletic Training program.

    Integration of educational competencies and clinical proficiencies with classroom instruction and supervised field based experience.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ATP 6301 - Anatomy

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Admission to Master of Athletic Training program.

    Athletic Training Students will study the gross and functional anatomical and physiological principles of athletic injury with practical application to motor performance.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ATP 6302 - Emergency Care

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Admission to Master of Athletic Training program.

    To provide the Athletic Training Student with the knowledge necessary to help sustain life, reduce pain, and minimize the consequences of sudden injury or illnesses.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ATP 6303 - Gen Med/Pharm 1 - Systems and Evaluation

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Formal acceptance for progression into the Master’s Degree in Athletic Training.

    Focuses in the identification and treatment of medical conditions of the nervous, urinary, endocrine, reproductive, respiratory, gastrointestinal, cardiovascular, integumentary systems. Emphasis placed on the role the Athletic Trainer has in the prevention, evaluation, diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation of associated conditions as directed by a supervising physician.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ATP 6311 - Research in Athletic Training

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Formal acceptance for progression into the Master’s Degree in Athletic Training.

    Athletic Training Students develop the skills necessary to critically review and use evidence in the field of Athletic Training. This course will introduce research topics and the data collection and application of statistical methods used in Athletic Training and related research.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ATP 6312 - Therapeutic Intervention 1

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Formal acceptance for progression into the Master’s Degree in Athletic Training.

    Investigate and analyze indications, contraindications and biophysics of agents that aid in the healing of athletic injuries and the reduction of pain utilizing appropriate therapeutic modalities, basic therapeutic exercises and rehabilitative techniques.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ATP 6313 - Lower Extremity Evaluation

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: PEP 6364 - Evaluation of Lower Extremity.
    Prerequisite: Admission to the Masters of Athletic Training program.

    Corequisite: ATP 6113  - Lower Extremity Evaluation Lab.

    A systematic examination of the fundamental principles and concepts of athletic training as it relates to the prevention, evaluation, diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation of lower extremity injuries.
  • ATP 6321 - Athletic Training Administration

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: PEP 7360 - Organization and Health Care Administration.
    Prerequisite: Admission to the Masters of Athletic Training program.

    Competencies needed to plan, coordinate and supervise administrative components of an athletic training organization including those pertaining to health care, financial, personnel and facilities management, and public relations.
  • ATP 6322 - Pharmacology in Athletic Training

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Admission to the Master of Athletic Training program.

    Knowledge, skills and values required of an Athletic Trainer (AT) on pharmacological applications, including indications, contraindications, precautions, interactions, documentation and governing regulations relevant to the treatment of injury and illness in athletic training.
  • ATP 6323 - Upper Extremity Evaluation

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: PEP 6361 - Evaluation of Upper Extremity.
     
    Prerequisite: Admission to the Masters of Athletic Training program.

    Corequisite: ATP 6123  - Upper Extremity Evaluation Lab.

    A systematic examination of the fundamental principles and concepts of athletic training as it relates to the prevention, evaluation, diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation of upper extremity injuries.
  • ATP 6324 - Healthcare Administration

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Formal acceptance for progression into the Master’s Degree in Athletic Training.

    A course designed to provide the athletic training student with competencies needed to plan, coordinate and supervise administrative components of a healthcare organization including financial, personnel, facilities management, and public relations.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ATP 7101 - Head, Neck & Spine Evaluation Lab

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 1
    Prerequisite: Admission to Master of Athletic Training program.

    Corequisite: ATP 7301  - Head, Neck & Spine Evaluation.

    Laboratory to accompany ATP 7301 ; application of theories, skills, and practice.
  • ATP 7112 - Therapeutic Intervention 2 Lab

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 3
    Prerequisite: Formal acceptance for progression into the Master’s Degree in Athletic Training.

    A continuation of the investigation and analyzing the indications, contraindications and biophysics of agents that aid in the healing of athletic injuries and the reduction of pain utilizing appropriate therapeutic modalities, basic therapeutic exercises and rehabilitative techniques.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ATP 7113 - Rehabilitation of Sports Injuries Lab

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 1
    Prerequisite: Admisssion to Master of Athletic Training program.

    Corequisite: ATP 7313  - Rehabilitation of Sports Injuries.

    Laboratory to accompany ATP 7313 ; application of theories, skills, and practice.
  • ATP 7194 - Clinical Experience IV

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 1
    Prerequisite: Admission to Master of Athletic Training program. ATP 6193.

    Integration of educational competencies and clinical proficiencies with classroom instruction and supervised field based experience.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ATP 7195 - Clinical Experience 5

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 1
    Prerequisite: Formal acceptance for progression into the Master’s Degree in Athletic Training. ATP 6193.

    Integration of educational competencies and clinical proficiencies with classroom instruction and supervised field based experience.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ATP 7196 - Clinical Experience VI

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 1
    Prerequisite: Formal acceptance for progression into the Master’s Degree in Athletic Training. ATP 6193.

    Integration of educational competencies and clinical proficiencies with classroom instruction and supervised field based experience.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ATP 7297 - Case Study Prep & Submission

    Credit Hours: 2
    Lecture Contact Hours: 2   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Formal acceptance for progression into the Master’s Degree in Athletic Training.

    Directed guidance toward drafting and submitting for publication or presentation one formal case study.
    Y

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ATP 7301 - Head, Neck & Spine Evaluation

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Admission to Master of Athletic Training program.

    Corequisite: ATP 7101  - Head, Neck & Spine Evaluation Lab.

    A systematic examination of the fundamental principles and concepts of athletic training as it related to the prevention, evaluation, diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation of the head, neck, and spine.
  • ATP 7302 - Gen Med/Pharm 2 - Pathophysiology

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Formal acceptance for progression into the Master’s Degree in Athletic Training.

    Focuses in the identification and treatment of medical conditions of the nervous, urinary, endocrine, reproductive, respiratory, gastrointestinal, cardiovascular, integumentary systems. Emphasis placed on the role the Athletic Trainer has in the prevention, evaluation, diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation of associated conditions as directed by a supervising physician.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ATP 7311 - Human Performance

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Formal acceptance for progression into the Master’s Degree in Athletic Training.

    Instruction in basic physiological adaptations to strength and speed development, exercise prescription and testing, and facility design and safety.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ATP 7312 - Therapeutic Intervention 2

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Formal acceptance for progression into the Master’s Degree in Athletic Training.

    A continuation of the investigation and analyzing the indications, contraindications and biophysics of agents that aid in the healing of athletic injuries and the reduction of pain utilizing appropriate therapeutic modalities, basic therapeutic exercises and rehabilitative techniques.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ATP 7313 - Rehabilitation of Sports Injuries

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Admission to Master of Athletic Training program.

    Corequisite: ATP 7113  - Rehabilitation of Sports Injuries Lab.

    Principles of rehabilitation of sports injuries, including range of motion, pain control, balance, proprioception, strengthening, and endurance. Therapeutic goals and objectives, exercise gradation and evaluating rehabilitation process will be stressed.
  • ATP 7321 - Behavioral Health in Athletic Training

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Admission to Master of Athletic Training program.

    Examines the knowledge, skills, that the athletic trainer must possess to recognize and intervene, and when appropriate, refer to a recognized professional; the socio-cultural, mental, emotional, and physical behaviors of athletes and others involved in physical activity.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ATP 7322 - Seminar in Athletic Training

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: PEP 7364 - Professional Development and Responsibility.
    Prerequisite: Admission to the Masters of Athletic Training program.

    A Capstone course designed for research discussion of critical questions and contemporary issues and problems in athletic training/sports medicine. Athletic Training students will prepare for the Board of Certification Exam.
  • NUTR 6301 - Clinical Aspects of Nutrition Support

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    In-depth review of nutritional assessment and nutrition support for initiation and management of enteral and parenteral nutrition.
  • NUTR 6306 - Statistics for the Healthcare Professional

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Previous undergraduate statistics course.

    Overview of statistical design and analysis including univariate and multivariate statistical methods for the healthcare or public health environment.
  • NUTR 6312 - Capstone II

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: NUTR 6311 ; must be completed during the last semester of study.

    Special projects in nutrition and dietetics, in the form of a literature review, grant proposal, education program or tool development and/or evaluation, or research project approved by course instructor. The student experience will culminate in the submission of the completed project in the form of an abstract, poster session, or other means of dissemination coordinated with the instructor.
  • NUTR 6314 - Gender and Culture Issues in Physical Activity and Fitness

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: PEP 6306.
    Prerequisite: None.

    This class is a multidisciplinary integration of epidemiological, psychological, and cultural approaches to the study of physical activity and fitness levels among diverse ethnic groups and minorities in the United States. The focus of this class will be on examining the impact of gender and cultural beliefs on the physical activity and fitness levels of Hispanic, African American, and White adult and children populations and the development of interventions to promote PA and fitness in these populations.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • NUTR 6316 - Advanced Diabetes Management and Education

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    A comprehensive overview of diabetes including diagnosis, management, and education for all life stages and populations.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • NUTR 7313 - Urban Fitness

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: PEP 7303.
    Prerequisite: None.

    The course is designed for graduate students to demonstrate the understanding, skills and process of the development, implementation and evaluation of obesity prevention, treatment and control intervention programs.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • NUTR 7315 - Advanced Nutrition for the Elderly

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    Advanced practice in nutritional care and in-depth focus on the physiological changes with the elderly population. In this course, students identify the basic physiological changes during aging and their impacts in health and disease. The focus of the course is on successful aging with special emphasis on physical activity and nutrition.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • PEP 6198 - Special Problems in Human Performance

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Permission of instructor or faculty advisor.

    Independent study of a subject in the area of human performance.
    Note: Independent Study
  • PEP 6304 - Biomechncs-Humn Perform

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: previous course work in kinesiology or biomechanics.

    The study of the forces and the effect these forces have on human motion (kinetics and kinematics), with emphasis on athletic skills and callisthenic exercises.
  • PEP 6305 - Measurmnt Hlt & Phys Educ

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Instruments and techniques of measurement utilized in physical and health education.
  • PEP 6309 - Policies & Governance of Sport Organizations

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: none.

    Examines the goals, structure, membership, policies, practices, and politics of sport organizations. Emphasis will be placed on the Olympic Movement and the American professional and amateur sports.
  • PEP 6321 - Sport in Cont Society

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Examination of factors influencing sport participation, issues related to the conduct of sports programs, and impact of sport experiences upon values and behavior of participants.
  • PEP 6322 - Sport Media & Public Relations

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    This course focuses on how the media is managed by entities within the sports industry to garner support, increase spectatorship, and gain public favor.
  • PEP 6331 - Strength Training Anatomy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Overview of basic human anatomy and the specific muscles used for different strength training exercises, as well as the antagonist, and synergistic muscles involved in these exercises.
  • PEP 6332 - Intro Str/Cond Program Design

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: PEP 6331 

    Introduction to development of strength gaining programs, weight gaining programs, weight loss programs, and basic sports performance enhancement principles.
  • PEP 6355 - Promotional Strategies

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Development of skills and strategies utilized in sport promotion.
  • PEP 6397 - Selected Topics in Human Perf

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair.

    Corequisite: Concurrent enrollment of six semester hours is permitted.

    Problems and discussion for advanced students. Emphasis on relationship of school and community agencies.
    May be repeated for credit when topics vary.

  • PEP 6398 - Special Problems in Human Performance

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • PEP 6399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Permission of instructor or faculty advisor.

    Master’s thesis.
    Y

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PEP 7193 - Internship & Practicum

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair.

    Part- or full-time experience in educational situations under faculty and field representative direction and supervision. Seminars.
  • PEP 7306 - Adm Princs of Sprts/Exer Prgms

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    The application of fundamental theories and administrative strategies pertaining to the organizational structure, personnel, management, and public relations in sport and exercise programs.
  • PEP 7307 - Implmtng Leg Strat Sprts/Fit

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    A critical analysis concerning the development and implementation of risk management strategies for sports, health, and fitness programs.
  • PEP 7308 - Sports Facility Administration

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Theoretical principles and practical application of strategies employed in the administration of sport, exercise, and fitness oriented facilities.
  • PEP 7309 - Sport Finance

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Fundamental strategies frequently used in financing sport, exercise, and fitness programs. Course may serve as an elective in either the master or doctoral program.
  • PEP 7326 - Intercollegiate Athletics and Higher Education

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Acceptance into Graduate school.

    This course is an examination of the role of intercollegiate athletics in higher education from historical, sociological, economic, and administrative perspectives. Through a variety of critical readings, this course intends to engage the following topics: Historical Overview of Intercollegiate Athletics and Its Governing Bodies, The Mission of Higher Education and Athletic Departments, Title IX legislation and Intercollegiate Athletics, The Organization Structure of Intercollegiate Athletic Departments, Academic Reform and Intercollegiate Athletics, Other Pertinent Topics Relevant to Intercollegiate Athletics.
  • PEP 7327 - Diversity Issues in Sport and Fitness Administration

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Admission into Graduate School.

    The purpose of this seminar is to provide the student with a broad exposure to research on diversity issues in sport studies literature. Student will undertake a broad review of different research theories and methodologies. Students will review the literature of diversity and sport organizations and critique this literature.
  • PEP 7393 - Internship & Practicum

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair.

    Part- or full-time experience in educational situations under faculty and field representative direction and supervision. Seminars.
  • PEP 7397 - Adv Selected Topic Human Perf

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of department chair.

    Corequisite: Concurrent enrollment up to six semester hours is permitted.

    For advanced students in master’s program and doctoral students.
    May be repeated for credit when topics vary.

  • PEP 7398 - Advanced Special Problems in Human Performance

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of department chair.

    For advanced students in master’s program and doctoral students.
  • PEP 7399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Permission of instructor or faculty advisor.

    Master’s thesis.
    Y

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PEP 8199 - Doctoral Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Permission of instructor or faculty advisor.

    Doctoral dissertation.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PEP 8303 - HHP Research Seminar

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: HRMA 8331 Integrated Systems Physiology I
    Prerequisite: None

    Introduction to the theoretical, analytical, and practical tools and materials required for PhD students to appreciate the questions, problems and issues addressed in the major research laboratories of the department.
  • PEP 8304 - HHP Journal Colloquium

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None

    Presentation and discussion of student’s ongoing research and relevant articles within individual discipline areas of HHP
    May be repeated with approval of advisor.

  • PEP 8306 - Scientific Inquiry in Hlt Prof

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Instructor Permission

    Principles of scientific inquiry as they apply to the conceptualization and implementation of a research framework in the health professional.
  • PEP 8314 - Doctoral Residency Seminar

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: PEP 8306 .

    Demonstrates applications of principles of scientific inquiry, experimental design, and presentation of research results.
  • PEP 8323 - Programming & Proposal Writing

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Instructor Permission or have completed Ph.D. candidacy paper.

    Theory and skills for developing proposals for securing funding from public and private sources in support of ‘health-related’ programs and research.
  • PEP 8334 - Applied Regression Methods-HLT

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Doctoral standing or instructor permission.

    Applied regression methods in design and analysis of health research; emphasis on practical strategies and techniques.
  • PEP 8350 - HHP Candidacy Project Research

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: PEP 7397 - Candidacy Project
    Prerequisite: Approval of faculty advisor and formation of candidacy project committee.

    Development of Ph.D. candidacy project.
  • PEP 8390 - Contemporary Issues in HHP

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Approval of faculty advisor

    Research seminar focused on contemporary issues in health and human performance. Each course will contain unique content, guest lecturers, and topical discussion.
  • PEP 8399 - Doctoral Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Permission of instructor or faculty advisor.

    Doctoral dissertation.
    Y

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PEP 8699 - Doctoral Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 6
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Permission of instructor or faculty advisor.

    Doctoral dissertation.
    Y

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PEP 8999 - Doctoral Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 9
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Permission of instructor or faculty advisor.

    Doctoral dissertation.
    Y

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • Department of Hispanic Studies

    Courses

  • SPAN 6198 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • SPAN 6199 - Thesis

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • SPAN 6298 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 2.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • SPAN 6305 - Teaching Spanish for Acquisition

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Required of all teaching assistants and highly recommended to all graduate students. An introduction to different methodologies for teaching Spanish as a second language.
  • SPAN 6308 - Introduction to Spanish Linguistics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    An introduction to the field of Spanish linguistics.
  • SPAN 6320 - Research in Spanish Second Language Acquisition

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    An introduction to the field of language acquisition theories and research with a focus on the acquisition of Spanish as a second language.
  • SPAN 6330 - Language Variation and Change

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate status.

    Linguistic and social phenomena that motivate variation and change in Spanish.
  • SPAN 6331 - Historical Grammar

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • SPAN 6333 - 19Th Century Span Lit

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • SPAN 6335 - Golden Age Drama

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Social meaning and artistic values of significant works of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
  • SPAN 6344 - US Hispanic Literature

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing.

    Survey of the major literary works of Mexican-American, Puerto Rican, Cuban-American, and other U.S. Hispanic writers, past and present.
  • SPAN 6345 - Las Mujeres Reescriben America

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Students will be considering how a variety of U.S. women writers of Latin American descent (U.S. Latinas) “write” America. They, too, are Americans but their experiences, marginalized as women, as Latinas, and sometimes by class or sexuality, marks them as outside of the dominant notion of what America is and who counts as American. The writings of these women creatively reimagine an America that reflects brown bodies and faces, painting a very different picture of the U.S.
  • SPAN 6354 - Spanish Phonetics and Phonetic Variation

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    Articulatory descriptions of sounds, phonetic transcription of Spanish, phonetic theory as it relates to language variation and change.
  • SPAN 6355 - Spanish Phonology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Sound system and prosodic features of modern Spanish; phonological theories and their application to Spanish.
  • SPAN 6356 - Spanish Syntax

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Spanish syntax as exemplifying language universals: grammatical relations, word order, transitivity, causative constructions, relative clauses.
  • SPAN 6358 - Spanish Sociolinguistics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Sociolinguistic principles and patterns as illustrated in Spanish.
  • SPAN 6366 - Span-Am Lit To 1830

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • SPAN 6368 - Span-Am Modernism

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: SPAN 3321 and SPAN 3322.

    Study of foreign influences. The distinctive characteristics of the movement; contributions of major authors.
  • SPAN 6370 - Research Methods

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing.

    Methods of bibliographical and field research, use of technology, techniques of documentation, analytical taxonomies, and the establishment of acceptable evidence in research.
  • SPAN 6375 - Mdrn Spa-Amer Narr 1950

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Evolution of writers’ central themes from the environmental to the existential.
  • SPAN 6379 - Spa-Am Nrrtv 1950/Prsnt

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing.

    The principal manifestations of thought and the interrelationship between certain themes and techniques in the development of the contemporary narrative in Spanish America.
  • SPAN 6382 - Golden Age Prose

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • SPAN 6385 - Cntmpry Spa-Amer Poetry

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • SPAN 6386 - Contemporary Span Fictn

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    Readings in twentieth century Spanish fiction, emphasizing the major trends in modern Spanish narrative.
  • SPAN 6389 - Methods of Teaching Spanish Heritage Learners

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: SPAN 6389 - Teaching Spanish to Native Speakers.
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    Heritage language education with an emphasis on teaching Spanish to the English/Spanish bilingual students of Hispanic heritage.
    Note: Seminar.
  • SPAN 6390 - Research in Heritage Language Education

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    An introduction to the field of heritage language research with a focus on Spanish as a heritage language in the United States.
    Note: Seminar.
  • SPAN 6392 - Reading Spanish for Non-Majors I

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or approval of chair.

    Reading knowledge of Spanish as a research tool. Accelerated study and analysis of grammar and linguistic structures of Spanish scholarly and scientific literature.
  • SPAN 6394 - Topics-Teaching Spanish

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: SPAN 4371 or equivalent or consent of instructor.

    Varying topics such as techniques of teaching grammar, conversation, composition, and writing.
    May be repeated once for credit with approval of chair.

  • SPAN 6395 - Topics-Lang&Linguistics

    Credit Hours: 3.00
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3.0   Lab Contact Hours: 0.0
  • SPAN 6397 - Topics in Span-Amer Lit

    Credit Hours: 3.00
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3.0   Lab Contact Hours: 0.0
  • SPAN 6398 - Spanish Phonetics & Phonology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • SPAN 6399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • SPAN 7198 - Reading & Research

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of graduate advisor in Spanish.

    Instructor-supervised independent study in subjects not normally or not often included in the regular course offerings.
  • SPAN 7298 - Reading & Research

    Credit Hours: 2.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of graduate advisor in Spanish.

    Instructor-supervised independent study in subjects not normally or not often included in the regular course offerings.
  • SPAN 7301 - Methods Hisp Lit & Lang

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Presentation of research issues with critical, methodological, and bibliographical resources. Includes a historical overview of field.
  • SPAN 7302 - Adv Research & Writing Seminar

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Use of bibliographic resources and various methods of research in preparing scholarly books and articles.
  • SPAN 7304 - Critical Theory

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    Analysis of main concepts shaping contemporary approaches to literature.
  • SPAN 7391 - Sel Topics Spanish Amer Lit

    Credit Hours: 3.00
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3.0   Lab Contact Hours: 0.0
  • SPAN 7393 - Sel Tops Meth Span Linguistics

    Credit Hours: 3.00
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3.0   Lab Contact Hours: 0.0
  • SPAN 7394 - Sel Topics Span Literature

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    One selected topic (such as El Cid, Cervantes, the Generation of the ‘98, the Theater of Garcia Lorca) is explored in depth.
    Course may be repeated for credit when the topic varies.

  • SPAN 7395 - Sel Topics in US Hispanic Lit

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    One selected topic (such as Bilingual Literature, Nuyorican Literature, Chicano Literature, Ethnic Autobiography, U.S. Hispanic Theatre) is explored in depth.
    May be repeated for credit when the topic varies.

  • SPAN 7396 - Selected Topics Hist Hispanic Ideas

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: none

    One selected topics (such as Spain and European Culture, European Thought in Latin America, the Development of Hispanic Nationalism in the U.S.) is explored in depth with emphasis on ideological currents.
    May be repeated for credit when topic varies

  • SPAN 7398 - Reading & Research

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of graduate advisor in Spanish.

    Instructor-supervised independent study in subjects not normally or not often included in the regular course offerings.
  • SPAN 7399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 3
  • SPAN 7698 - Reading & Research

    Credit Hours: 6.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of graduate advisor in Spanish.

    Instructor-supervised independent study in subjects not normally or not often included in the regular course offerings.
  • SPAN 8199 - Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • SPAN 8399 - Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • SPAN 8699 - Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 6
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • Department of History

    Courses

  • HIST 6198 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • HIST 6298 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 2.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • HIST 6310 - Col Latin Am Historiography

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Intensive study with readings and discussions of major works and schools of thought in colonial Latin American History.
  • HIST 6311 - Res Sem in Col Latin America

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Application of historical research and writing techniques to specified problems in colonial Latin American history.
  • HIST 6312 - Mod Latin Am Historiography

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Intensive study with readings and discussions of major works and schools of thought in modern Latin American history.
  • HIST 6313 - Res Sem in Mod Latin America

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Application of historical research and writing techniques to specified problems in modern Latin American history.
  • HIST 6314 - Mexican Historiography

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Intensive study with readings and discussions of major works and schools of thought in Mexican history.
  • HIST 6315 - Res Sem in Mexican History

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Application of historical research and writing techniques to specified problems in Mexican history.
  • HIST 6320 - Ancient History Methods and Historiography

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Permission of the instructor.

    An intensive study of the sources, methods, and changing interpretations of the history of the ancient world.
  • HIST 6321 - Eur Historiog To 1600

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    An intensive study of the sources, methods, and changing interpretations of European history. First semester: to 1600; second semester: from 1600.
  • HIST 6322 - Eur Historiog From 1600

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    An intensive study of the sources, methods, and changing interpretations of European history. First semester: to 1600; second semester: from 1600.
  • HIST 6340 - Research Seminar in European History

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Application of historical research and writing techniques to specified fields of European history.
    May be repeated with approval of chair.

  • HIST 6341 - The Medieval Church

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • HIST 6342 - Rdgs in the Early Middle Ages

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • HIST 6343 - Rdgs in High Middle Ages

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • HIST 6346 - Readings in Imperialism

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • HIST 6348 - Soc Modern France & Germany

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • HIST 6349 - Rdgs in Modern French History

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • HIST 6350 - Teaching Practicum

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • HIST 6351 - The Professional Historian

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor or director of graduate studies.

    Required of all doctoral students. Training for the various academic and non-academic roles of the professional historian.
  • HIST 6355 - Colonial US Historiography

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    An intensive study of the changing interpretations by leading historians of the nation’s development. First semester to 1815; second semester: 1815-1900; third semester: since 1900.
  • HIST 6356 - U.S Historiography to 1877

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Permission of the instructor.

    An intensive study of the sources, methods, and changing interpretations of the history of US History to 1877.
  • HIST 6357 - 19Th Cent US Historiography

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    An intensive study of the changing interpretations by leading historians of the nation’s development. First semester to 1815; second semester: 1815-1900; third semester: since 1900.
  • HIST 6358 - U.S Historiography from 1877

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Permission of the instructor.

    An intensive study of the sources, methods, and changing interpretations of the history of US History since 1877.
  • HIST 6359 - 20Th Cent US Historiography

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    An intensive study of the changing interpretations by leading historians of the nation’s development. First semester to 1815; second semester: 1815-1900; third semester: since 1900.
  • HIST 6363 - Intro Sem in U S His

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Basic principles and their application in the critical method of historical research and writing.
  • HIST 6368 - Readings in American Food History

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Consent of instructor.

    Supervised study of the major writings of American historians.
    May be repeated with approval of graduate program director.

  • HIST 6370 - Adv Research & Writ Sem

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    The analytical assessment of historical data/documents and student critiques of original research and writing techniques.
  • HIST 6371 - Rdgs in US Women’s His Sn 1800

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • HIST 6372 - Rdgs in US Social Policy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • HIST 6373 - Sem Latin American His

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Development and use of historical research and writing techniques.
    May be repeated with approval of chair.

  • HIST 6374 - Readings in Latina/Latino History

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    Introduces themes in Latina/o history and explores the lives that Laina peoples built in the U.S. while maintaining connections to Mexico, the Caribbean, and Central and South America in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
    Note: Seminar.
  • HIST 6380 - Public History Internship

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 3
    Prerequisite: Consent Director for Center for Public History.

    Supervised assigned work experience outside the Department of History in cooperation with supervisor of local public history programs.
  • HIST 6381 - Readings in Public Hist

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Intensive study of major works on the history of institutions and public policies in the United States, especially since 1880.
  • HIST 6382 - Research in Public History

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Consent of instructor.

    Application of public history research, writing, presentation skills, and methodologies to specific projects designed by the instructor.
    Note: Course may be repeated for credit with the approval of the Director of Public History.
  • HIST 6383 - Topics in Public Hist

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Application of methods of public history to public policy, business decision making, community studies, cultural resources management, and historical editing.
    May be repeated for credit when topics vary.

  • HIST 6384 - Oral History

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Oral history as a research tool: selecting subjects, interviewing, transcribing, editing, and interpreting interviews; legal and ethical aspects of oral history.
  • HIST 6387 - Hist Archives Mgmt

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    The selection, retention, acquisition, and management of historical records, including the records generated by contemporary organizations and corporations as well as by organizations and individuals in the past.
  • HIST 6390 - Comparative Slavery & Forced Labor

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing.

    Investigates slavery and forced labor across the globe and over a long expanse of time, from antiquity to sex slavery today, with some emphasis on African American slavery.
  • HIST 6391 - World Hist Theory & Teaching

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing

    Overview of the theory and practice of world history.
  • HIST 6392 - World History Readings

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing

    Overview of the major writings and themes in world history.
  • HIST 6393 - Rdgs Seminar in US History

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    May be repeated with approval of chair.

  • HIST 6394 - Res Seminar in US History

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Seminar to develop analytical skills and research necessary for writing thesis and dissertation.
    May be repeated with approval of chair.

  • HIST 6395 - Topics European History

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    May be repeated with approval of chair.

  • HIST 6396 - Topics in Latin-American Hist

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Intensive study with readings and discussions.
  • HIST 6397 - Selected Topics in History

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Consent of instructor.

    Intensive study with readings and discussions.
    Note: May be repeated for credit when topics vary.
  • HIST 6398 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • HIST 6399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • HIST 6651 - Public History Internship

    Credit Hours: 6.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 11
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Supervised assigned work experience outside the Department of History in cooperation with supervisor of local public history programs.
  • HIST 7399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • HIST 8199 - Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • HIST 8377 - Reading for Comprehensive Exams

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Completion of PhD coursework.

    Independent study with the chair or a member of the comprehensive examination committee resulting in preparation for and successful completion of the exams.
    Y

    Note: Course may be repeated for credit.
    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • HIST 8388 - Dissertation Proposal

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Completion of PhD coursework.

    Independent study with the chair or a member of the dissertation committee resulting in completion of a dissertation proposal.
    Y

    Note: Course may be repeated once for credit.
    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • HIST 8399 - Doctoral Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • HIST 8677 - Reading for Comprehensive Exams

    Credit Hours: 6
    Lecture Contact Hours: 6   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Completion of PhD coursework.

    Independent study with the chair or a member of the comprehensive examination committee resulting in preparation for and successful completion of the exams.
    Y

    Note: Course may be repeated for credit.
    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • HIST 8688 - Dissertation Proposal

    Credit Hours: 6
    Lecture Contact Hours: 6   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Completion of PhD coursework.

    Independent study with the chair or a member of the dissertation committee resulting in completion of a dissertation proposal.
    Y

    Note: Course may be repeated for credit.
    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • HIST 8699 - Doctoral Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 6
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • HIST 8999 - Doctoral Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 9
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • Department of Modern and Classical Languages

    Courses

  • CHNS 6301 - Speech & Rhetorical Studies

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or Post Baccalaureate status.

    Covers topics such as the history of verbal expression and the structure of an argument; contrastive and dialectical logics within Chinese rhetorical tradition; and function and purpose of language use.
  • CHNS 6302 - Chinese Language Teaching Practicum

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 3
    Prerequisite: Completion of B.A. or equivalent. Proficiency in Chinese language.

    The course provides a campus or field-based educational work experience under direct supervision of faculty or field personnel, supporting Chinese students in 1) applying their teacher education knowledge to real classroom teaching, 2) reflecting on challenges and events occurring in their classrooms and schools, and 3) engaging in cooperative solving of the inevitable problems that arise in the beginning teacher experience. Includes analysis of teaching and learning in educational settings; legal and ethical aspects of teaching; and curriculum structure, organization, and management in schools.
  • CHNS 6350 - Studies in Chinese Cinema

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or P.B.

    Chinese 6350 explores Chinese film from the early to the contemporary era. Focus is given to China’s “fifth” and “sixth” generation filmmakers, with some emphasis on early films (1930s and 1940s), revolutionary films, and selected films from Taiwan.
  • CHNS 6352 - Chinese Culture and Society Through Modern Literature

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or Post Baccalaureate status.

    Analyzes important literary works from the 1919 May 4th Movement to the 1970s within historical and cultural contexts; examines the influence of tradition on Chinese literature in the early 20th century.
  • CHNS 6355 - Readings in Chinese Literature in English Translation

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Completion of B.A. or equivalent. No foreign language prerequisite.

    The course will focus on the most famous works of Chinese literature in English translation and their social, historical, political and religious contexts in the Chinese culture. The course will discuss major genres and representative styles, key concepts of the Chinese thought and belief system, issues of the transmission, reception and appropriation of literary works, and the formation of the Chinese canon and literary tradition.
  • CHNS 6364 - Issues in Chinese Language & Culture

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Major issues of the Chinese language and linguistics. It is also intended to enhance student’s appreciation of the Chinese culture through discussions of language and linguistic analyses. It is taught in English.
  • CHNS 6366 - History of the Chinese Language

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or P.B.

    This graduate-level course introduces to students the phonetic, semantic, and syntactic changes in the history of Chinese, as is evidenced in the extant vernacular texts from the last 2,000 years.
  • CHNS 6367 - Sociolinguistic Fieldwork Methods

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or P.B.

    Introduction to sociolinguistic fieldwork methods is designed for graduate students who are interested in conducting fieldwork on the Chinese language. The course involves a combination of reading, discussion, and actual fieldwork.
  • CHNS 6371 - Teaching Chinese as a 2nd Language

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Discussions and interactive activities about principles of teaching a foreign language. Hands-on opportunities to design a Chinese language course, a lesson plan, and instructional implementation in an interactive classroom. Taught in English. The same course title may be co-offered at the 4000 level but students enrolled in this course are required for more substantial readings and to submit a lengthier research paper.
  • CHNS 6372 - Studies of Chinese Language Acquisition

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    This course focuses on Chinese language acquisition by English-speaking students in formal instructional settings. Readings include studies that investigate processes of acquiring Chinese as a second or a foreign language. Taught in English. The same course title may be co-offered at the 4000 level but students enrolled in this course are required for more substantial readings and to submit a lengthier research paper.
  • CHNS 6373 - Chinese Second Language Curriculum Design and Instruction

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Completion of B.A. or equivalent. Proficiency in Chinese Language.

    The course teaches students how to demonstrate knowledge on foreign language instruction in general and Chinese language teaching specifically, and how to understand theoretical issues in curriculum design and development. It draws upon a constructivist position on learning, teaching theories such as Backward Design, research on second language acquisition, teacher education research, and the Standards for Foreign Language Learning in the 21st Century from the American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages.
  • CHNS 6382 - Tales of East Asian Cities

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    In this course we will examine the literary and visual representations of various cities in East Asia: Shanghai, Beijing, Hong Kong, Taipei, Tokyo and Seoul. Through close analyses of the fiction, films, and photographs that illuminate East Asian urbanism, we will extensively discuss the cultural representations of East Asian metropolises. Taught in English.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • CHNS 6383 - Chinese Popular Culture

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    This course examines contemporary Chinese popular culture as a response to the profound changes to Chinese society that have occurred since the end of the Cultural Revolution in 1976. Through discussing film, literature, music, performance, fashion, art and internet culture, this course explores the radically changing role of socialist politics, government censorship, the rise of consumerism, and Chinas global cultural significance in the contemporary world. All lectures, discussions and assignments will be in English. No prior knowledge of Chinese Culture or language necessary.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • CHNS 6384 - Global Chinese Literature

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    This course hopes to guide graduate students to examine the changing literary and cultural trends in modern China by guiding them to do thesis research. By reading representative literature of various genres (short stories, novels, poetry, etc.) and films throughout the 20th and 21st century, we will trace the social-political and cultural transformation of the Chinese society. The course focuses on various important themes and debates in modern Chinese literature and films such as nationalism, gender, race and class. Students can choose to do research on specific writer or specific period of literature.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • CHNS 6397 - Selected Topics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Topics on Chinese culture, literature, or linguistics and major current issues. Taught in English. The same course title may be co-offered at the 4000 level but students enrolled in this course are required for more substantial readings and to submit a lengthier research paper.
    May be repeated when topics vary.

  • CHNS 6398 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Independent study. Topics on Chinese language, literature and culture. Taught in Chinese. The same course title may be co-offered at the 4000 level but students enrolled in this course are required for more substantial readings and to submit a lengthier research paper.
    May be repeated when topics vary.

  • CLAS 6305 - Fifth-Century Athens: Readings in Intellectual, Literary, and Political History

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or PB status

    Overview of intellectual trends and political history of fifth-century BCE Athens, including development of democracy, birth of tragedy, Persian Wars, Athenian Empire, court system, Peloponnesian Wars, and death of Socrates. Taught in English.
  • CLAS 6350 - Law and Society in Ancient Rome

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or Post B.A. status.

    A survey of key Roman legal ideas and texts from the archaic period to the late Republic and early Empire. Special attention paid to the law’s relation to Rome’s religion and changing social and political structures. Through Cicero the course explores the situation of the practicing advocate in complicated times. Ends with a look at later Roman jurisprudence.
  • CLAS 6366 - Greek Art and Archaeology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or PB status

    Survey of ancient Greek art and archaeology connected to the Trojan War from the Bronze Age to the early Hellenistic Period with emphasis on its relationship to traditional myths and Classical literature.
  • CLAS 6374 - Women in the Ancient World

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or post B.A. status.

    Women’s lives from the Graeco-Roman world. Analysis and comparisons of literary texts and archaeological evidence in their cultural and historical context.
  • CLAS 6381 - Latin Classics in Translation

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or Post-baccalaureate

    Works of Latin literature read in conjunction with current scholarship and modern theorists. Taught in English.
  • CLAS 6382 - Classical Antiquity in Cinema

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate Standing or Post Baccalaureate status.

    Examination of the way modern cinema adapts themes from Classical literature and uses them to explore contemporary issues.
  • FREN 6313 - Advanced Composition and Stylistics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Rhetorical figures of the French language, the different registers of discourse, idioms and comparative stylistics.
  • FREN 6315 - Advanced Translation

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Translation of literary and non-literary texts.
  • FREN 6316 - Contemporary France

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    French Institutions, political and social issues, and France in the Francophone World.
  • FREN 6318 - French Cinema

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or P.B.

    The historical, cultural, thematic, and aesthetic evolution of French cinema from the silent era to modern times.
  • FREN 6321 - Francophone Cinema

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or P.B.

    Study of films from French-speaking North & Sub-Saharan Africa within their historical, cultural, thematic, and aesthetic context.
  • FREN 6331 - 20th Century French Theatre

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing.

    Leading playwrights from to the turn of the 20th century to the theatre of the absurd.
  • FREN 6334 - Jung and French Literature

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing.

    Application of Jungian theory to various works of French literature.
  • FREN 6340 - French Women Writers

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing.

    French women writers from the Renaissance to present.
  • FREN 6341 - Food in French Culture

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing.

    Perspectives on food and gastronomy in French history, culture, and society.
  • FREN 6350 - Sex and the Other in French Literature

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing.

    Gender, sexuality, and identity in French and francophone literature.
  • FREN 6392 - French For Non Majors

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None

    French 6392 is intended to teach graduate students in majors other than French to read French texts. The emphasis will be on comprehension and not on aspects such as pronunciation.
  • FREN 6393 - French for Non-Majors

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Reading for non-majors II is a course for graduate students of majors other than French

    It reviews and expands upon the components necessary to read French texts.
  • FREN 6397 - Topics-Fre Lit Lang Cul

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • FREN 6398 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • FREN 6399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • FREN 7399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • GERM 6198 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • GERM 6333 - The Age of Enlightenment

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: GERM 6330
    Prerequisite: graduate standing.

    The study of major works of literature and criticism written between 1700 and 1781; that is, from Gottsched to Kant.
  • GERM 6343 - The Romantic Movement

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing.

    The origin and development of German romanticism (1798-1835). Examination of major literary, critical, and philosophical texts.
  • GERM 6354 - 19th Century Drama

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing

    Introduction to critical literature dealing with the drama of the period; analysis and discussion of representative works of major dramatic authors.
  • GERM 6355 - 19th Century Prose and Poetry

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing.

    Poetry, the novelle, and the novel of the nineteenth century with emphasis upon the literature of Junges Deutschland, the Biedermeier era, and realism.
  • GERM 6360 - Weimar Germany

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or P.B.

    Analysis of representational works within the historical context of Weimar Germany. Emphasis on literature, drama, film, visual arts, and cultural theory. Taught in German.
  • GERM 6361 - History and Memory in German Cinema

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or P.B.

    Representations of History and Memory in German Cinema. Analysis of individual films and genres (documentary, melodrama, drama, comedy) with consideration of theoretical and conceptual frameworks such as identity formation (individual and national), memory studies, narration studies, and the representation of historical trauma.
    Note: Taught in English.
  • GERM 6362 - The Holocaust in Literature and Visual Arts

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or P.B.

    Theoretical and critical readings on representing the Holocaust and analysis of Holocaust representations in literary and autobiographical writings, cinema, and the visual arts.
  • GERM 6363 - Post-Reunification German Culture

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or P.B.

    Trends in contemporary German culture with emphasis on literature, theater, film, and the visual arts. Taught in German.
  • GERM 6366 - Twentieth Century Drama

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing.

    Analysis and discussion of representative works; emphasis on the experimentation in form, the variety of dramatic expression, and the impact of dramatic intent upon form.
  • GERM 6370 - Vienna 1900 - The Birth of the Modern

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate of PB standing.

    Avant-grade turn-of-the century movements in Viennese literature, theater, music, art, architecture, philosophy, and psychoanalysis examined within the cultural, social, and political context of pre-1918 Central Europe.
  • GERM 6392 - Reading German/Non-Majors I

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    May not apply toward foreign language requirement for BA degree. Reading knowledge of German as research tool. Accelerated study and analysis of grammar and linguistic structures of German scholarly and scientific literature.
  • GERM 6393 - Reading German/Non-Majors II

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: GERM 6392 .

    May not apply toward foreign language requirement for BA degree. Continuation of GERM 6392 with emphasis on translation problems and specialized vocabulary. Readings in specific research areas.
  • GERM 6395 - Selected Topics in German Language and Literature

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • GERM 6396 - Sel Topics-German Lit

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    May be repeated with approval of chair.

  • GERM 6398 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • GERM 6399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • GERM 7399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • GREK 6300 - Advanced Study in Ancient Greek

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or Post Baccalaureate status

    Selected readings in ancient Greek poetry and prose together with modern works of scholarship.
    This course may be repeated for credit

  • GREK 6302 - Homeric Greek

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or PB status.

    Advanced work in Ancient Greek, consisting of readings from the Homeric poems together with contemporary scholarship.
  • GREK 6303 - Selected Readings from Greek Tragedy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or PB status.

    Advanced work in Ancient Greek, consisting of readings from the tragedies of Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides, together with contemporary scholarship.
  • ITAL 6302 - Advanced Italian Conversation and Composition

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    Advanced discussion and composition in Italian on culture, society and literature. Taught in Italian.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ITAL 6305 - Teaching Italian as a Foreign Language

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Advanced course in advanced grammar and teaching methodology. Satisfies College of Education requirements for Italian teachers certification. Taught in Italian.
  • ITAL 6306 - Advanced Italian Cinema

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Italian Cinema in the context of Italian literature, culture, art, and society, requiring a good level of language understanding. Taught in Italian.
  • ITAL 6308 - Italian Heritage

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    The Italian American Experience in Literature, Cinema, and Music. Taught in English
  • ITAL 6309 - Advanced Studies in Women Writers and Filmmakers

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    Advanced analysis of works of women writers and filmmakers of modern and post modern Italy in conjunction with relevant scholarship. Taught in Italian.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • ITAL 6365 - Dante’s Legacy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Analysis of Dante’s major works and their impact on modern literature and visual arts. Relevant critical approaches to Dante from European and American perspectives. Taught in English.
  • ITAL 6393 - Reading Italian for Non-Majors II

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: ITAL 6392 or equivalent.

    May not apply toward foreign language requirement for BA degree. Continuation of ITAL 6392 with emphasis on translation problems and specialized vocabulary. Readings in specific research areas.
  • ITAL 6397 - Selected Topics in Italian Literature

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or PB status. Target language proficiency at level of B.A. major or minor.

    Topics in Italian Literature from the Middle Age to the present. Taught in Italian.
    May be repeated for credit when topics vary.

  • ITAL 6398 - Special Problems Ital Culture

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 3
    Special Problems in Italian Culture, Art, and History. Taught in Italian.
  • LATN 6300 - Advanced Study in Latin

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or Post Baccalaureate status

    Selected readings in Classical Latin poetry and prose together with modern works of scholarship.
    This course may be repeated for credit

  • WCL 6198 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate status or consent of instructor.

    Independent graduate-level study focused on special research projects.
  • WCL 6301 - Methods in Linguistic Anthropology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or PB status.

    Explores the multiple methodologies for researching language as a mode of communication and interaction within the field of linguistic anthropology.
  • WCL 6305 - Fifth-Century Athens: Readings in Intellectual, Literary, and Political History

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Overview of intellectual trends and political history of fifth-century BCE Athens. Topics include the development of Democracy, birth of tragedy, Persian Wars, Athenian Empire, court system, Peloponnesian Wars, and death of Socrates. Taught in English.
  • WCL 6330 - Translation Studies

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Investigates major concepts in translation theory, history of translation, and contemporary, interdisciplinary translation studies scholarship within their historical and cultural contexts. Case studies of texts from different traditions of thought, world regions, and periods and/or individual translation projects.
  • WCL 6351 - Frames of Modernity

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate or Postbaccalaureate status.

    Advanced view of major theoretical trends in Western Culture from the French Revolution to World War II. Non-Western cultural areas are also addressed through presentations by specialists.
  • WCL 6352 - Postmodernity & Globalization

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate or Postbaccalaureate status.

    Advanced view of the major theoretical trend in contemporary World Cultures from the end of WWII to the present time.
  • WCL 6353 - Frames of Modernity III: Classics and Modernity

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    An exploration of the use of ancient Greek and Roman concepts by modern and postmodern thinkers, artists, and authors. Taught in English.
  • WCL 6354 - Studies in Global Cinema

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Advanced approach to artistic and cultural aspects of world cinema. Analysis of directors, trends, and critical literature in world cinema. Taught in English.
  • WCL 6355 - Utopias and Dystopias

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Utopian and dystopian literatures and cinema from different traditions of thought and world regions. Taught in English.
  • WCL 6356 - Studies in World Film and Film Theory

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or P.B.

    Analysis of films and genres (documentary, drama, comedy) produced in different parts of the world in the light of the theoretical literature that those films have originated in terms of aesthetics, identity, stylistic appropriation, colonialism/postcolonialism, cultural difference, and hermeneutics.
  • WCL 6357 - Studies in National and Transnational Cinema

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or P.B.

    How cinematic schools, trends, and genres being developed in a national and/or culturally homogeneous context become transnational and affect the production and reception of films elsewhere, thereby showing how film can move back and forth between local and global.
  • WCL 6358 - Studies in Asian Cinema

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or P.B.

    Analysis of Asian national and transnational cinematic schools, genres and trends, from Mid-Asia to East-Asia, also in their impact on Western cinema.
  • WCL 6359 - World Film, Gender, and Sexuality

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or P.B.

    How issues of gender and sexuality have been addressed in Western and non-Western cinema and how they have been theoretically framed according to the different hermeneutics of gender theory, LGBTQ studies, psychoanalysis, embodiment, and postcolonial studies.
  • WCL 6362 - Latin American & Latino Literatures

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Works of Latino Literature in English and Latin American Literature in translation in relation to other U.S. and worldwide literary works as well as different theoretical frames.
  • WCL 6363 - Drama of North-Central Europe

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    A historical and critical analysis of European theater from the eighteenth to the twentieth centuries. Readings include dramas and theoretical essays as a means for understanding and representing cultural norms.
  • WCL 6364 - Holocaust Representations

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Comparative analysis of representations and conceptualizations of the Holocaust in literature, autobiography, film, architecture, and art. Taught in English.
  • WCL 6365 - World Documentary Film

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or post-baccalaureate status.

    Explores the history, theory, and evolution of documentary film in a global perspective, and through the examination of significant filmmakers from all parts of the world.
  • WCL 6366 - Latin American & Latino Film Studies

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Latin American and Latino films and film industries: telenovelas and TV documentaries. Issues regarding immigration, urban/rural, ethnic, gender and class, border and transnational, poverty, violence, and aesthetics. Taught in English.
  • WCL 6370 - Comparative Epic

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Examination of epic poetry from ancient Greece and Rome with a comparative approach drawing on other cultures, which may include the ancient Near East, the Hebrew Bible, medieval Europe, and/or modern oral epic traditions. Taught in English.
  • WCL 6373 - Introduction to Second Language Acquisition

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Completion of B.A. or equivalent.

    Second Language Acquisition theories via examining critical issues such as learning processes, comprehensible input, and learning through interactions, authentic materials, and task-based instruction. The course introduces research-based language instruction and helps students understand the theoretical background of interactive teaching approaches.
  • WCL 6379 - Critical Theory & Globalization

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Intense study of critical theory in light of globalization, migration shifts, and late capitalism.
  • WCL 6380 - Jewish Expulsion From Spain

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing.

    Study of events leading to the expulsion of Jews from Spain in 1492 and its consequences.
  • WCL 6385 - Sem in Latin American-Latino Cultural Studies

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Theoretical backgrounds, key themes and debates over Latin American/ Latino cultural processes. Modernity/postmodernity, coloniality/postcoloniality, globalization, urban, border, transnational, ethnic, gender and subalternist perspectives. In English.
  • WCL 6395 - Sexuality in Latino Culture

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Sexual relationships in Latino culture and literature: gender theory, art, politics, everyday life. Theoretical and transnational perspectives.
  • WCL 6397 - Selected Topics in WCL

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    Advanced topics in cultural and literary theory, criticism, and history; major trends in postmodernity and globalization.
    May be repeated for credit when topics vary.

  • WCL 6398 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate status or consent of instructor.

    Independent graduate-level study focused on special research projects.
  • WCL 6399 - Master’s Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in WCL.

    Master’s Thesis.
    Y

    Note: May be repeated for credit.
    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • Department of Philosophy

    Courses

  • PHIL 6198 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • PHIL 6199 - Thesis

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • PHIL 6298 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 2.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • PHIL 6304 - History of 17th Century Philosophy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Three semester hours in Philosophy or consent of instructor

    Philosophy of the seventeenth century; Descartes, Spinoza, Leibniz, and Locke.
  • PHIL 6305 - History of 18th Century Philosophy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Three semester hours in philosophy or consent of instructor.

    Philosophy of the eighteenth century: Hume, Berkeley, and Kant.
  • PHIL 6321 - Modal Logic

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: PHIL 2321 or its equivalent.

    Formalized theories and their properties: consistency, completeness, and decidability.
  • PHIL 6322 - Logic and Philosophy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None

    A graduate-level introduction to modern formal logic and some of its philosophical applications.
  • PHIL 6332 - Philosophy of Language

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Three semester hours in philosophy or consent of instructor.

    Theories of meaning, truth, and reference; the relationship of language to reality. Works by key figures such as Frege, Russell, Wittgenstein, Quine, Davidson, Fodor, etc.
  • PHIL 6333 - Metaphysics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Three semester hours in philosophy or consent of instructor.

    Theories of being.
  • PHIL 6334 - Philosophy of Mind

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Six semester hours in philosophy or consent of instructor.

    The mind body problem, perception, personal identity, consciousness, and freedom.
  • PHIL 6335 - Theory of Knowledge

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Three semester hours in philosophy or consent of instructor.

    Theories of knowledge.
  • PHIL 6343 - Introduction to Cognitive Science

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: 3 semester hours in philosophy or consent of instructor.

    Presents the basic topics and concepts of Cognitive Science, including their development over the last fifty years.
  • PHIL 6344 - Philosophy of Science

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Three semester hours in philosophy or consent of instructor.

    The demarcation of science from non-science, scientific method, the nature of explanation, realism vs. anti-realism, induction and abduction.
  • PHIL 6351 - Contemporary Moral Issues

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Three semester hours in philosophy or consent of instructor.

    Philosophical analysis of contemporary issues such as abortion, affirmative action, the treatment of animals, capital punishment, euthanasia, and famine relief.
  • PHIL 6354 - Medical Ethics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Three semester hours in philosophy or consent of instructor.

    Moral problems in the practice of medicine and in the design of health care systems.
  • PHIL 6356 - Feminist Philosophy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Three semester hours in Philosophy or consent of instructor.

    An investigation of the major issues and approaches of feminist philosophy.
  • PHIL 6358 - Classics in the History of Ethics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Three semester hours in philosophy or consent of instructor.

    Analysis of central works in the history of philosophical ethics, by selected authors such as Plato, Aristotle, Hobbes, Butler, Hume, Kant, Mill, and Sidgwick.
  • PHIL 6375 - Law, Society, and Morality

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Three semester hours in philosophy.

    An introduction to philosophy of law. Topics include the nature function, and moral evaluation of sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
  • PHIL 6376 - Philosophy and the Scientific Revolution

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Three semester hours in philosophy or consent of instructor.

    Philosophical issues at the heart of the scientific revolution of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
  • PHIL 6382 - History of Medieval Philosophy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Three semester hours in philosophy or consent of instructor.

    This course covers the writings of influential Christian, Jewish and Islamic medieval philosophers on issues like the problem of evil, free will, God’s existence, morality and the basis of knowledge.
  • PHIL 6383 - History of Ancient Philosophy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Three semester hours in philosophy or consent of instructor.

    Ancient Greek philosophy from the Pre-Socratics through the Hellenistic period.
  • PHIL 6386 - History of Nineteenth Century Philosophy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Three semester hours in philosophy or consent of instructor.

    Important figures such as Mill, Kierkegaard, Hegel, Marx, Schopenhauer, Nietzsche.
  • PHIL 6387 - History of American Philosophy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Three semester hours in philosophy or consent of instructor.

    American philosophy from Emerson and Thoreau on through pragmatism to the contemporary period.
  • PHIL 6395 - Seminar Philos Problems

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Seminar Philos Problems
    May be repeated for credit with approval of chair.

  • PHIL 6396 - Seminar in Hist of Phil

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: 15 semester hours in philosophy or approval of chair.

    Intensive treatment of a selected movement, system, or topic.
    May be repeated for credit with approval of chair.

  • PHIL 6397 - Selected Topics in Philosophy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or permission of chair.

    Selected topics in philosophy, including ethics, logic, metaphysics, and history of philosophy.
    Can be repeated for credit with a different topic.

  • PHIL 6398 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • PHIL 6399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PHIL 7199 - Thesis

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • PHIL 7399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • Department of Political Science

    Courses

  • POLS 6001 - Math Methods for Political Scientists

    Credit Hours: 0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Mathematical tools frequently used in political science: set theory, differential calculus and integration, optimization, linear algebra and probability theory. Prerequisite for advanced statistics and formal theory courses.
    Y

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • POLS 6198 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • POLS 6298 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 2.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • POLS 6302 - Research Design for Political Scientists

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    This seminar introduces students to the principles of research design in mainstream political science. We begin with some questions in the philosophy of science as they apply to the social sciences. Then we review the purpose of theories, as well as different approaches to generating and evaluating them. Next, we discuss the purpose and form of hypotheses, focusing on how to derive hypotheses from theories; how to develop and implement hypothesis tests; how to treat competing explanations for observed phenomena of interest; how to measure theoretical constructs; and what to do (and not to do) with data. Finally, we explore how different research designs (including the construction of counterfactuals, comparative case studies, quasi-experiments, and experiments) may be used to help researchers make valid causal inferences. The course will introduce students to elementary methods of data analysis, but no knowledge of advanced statistics or econometrics is presupposed.
  • POLS 6308 - Political Economy

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Examines the intersections between economics and politics.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6309 - Survey of Amer Pol Behavior

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in political science or consent of instructor.

    Selected major segments of the research literature on American political behavior.
  • POLS 6311 - Comp Pol Analysis

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • POLS 6312 - Survey of American Institutions and Policy

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Theoretical and empirical issues in American institutions and policy.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6313 - Seminar in International Relations

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Examination of international political systems. Emphasizes changing patterns of international accommodation, competition, and conflict. Examines theories of international politics.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6314 - Policy Analysis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    How public policies are decided. Tools for policy decision making. Political, social, and legal determinants of public policy.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6315 - Health Care Policy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Politics and economics of health and medical care with emphasis on the delivery of services, their quality, distribution, and financing.
  • POLS 6316 - Social Policy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Study of distributive public policies such as civil rights, income maintenance, and social services at comparative, federal, and state levels.
  • POLS 6317 - Seminar in Criminal Justice Policy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: (3-0)   
    Examination of problems and issues in the design, implementation, and evaluation of policies intended to prevent and contain criminal behavior.
  • POLS 6318 - Immigration Policy

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing.

    On October 12, 2006, the U.S. Census Bureau predicted that five days later at about 7:46 a.m. (EDT) the U.S. population would reach the historic milestone of 300 million. On that daytime, Emanuel Plata, one of “America’s 300 millionth baby,” was born in Queens. The son of two immigrants from Puebla, Mexico, Emanuel epitomizes the new demographic reality of the nation: a new melting pot that since the 1970s has been seasoned with immigration flows from Latin America and Asia. After the 1965 amendments to the Immigration and Nationality Act, which abolished the quota system of the 1920s, immigration policy put people of all nations on an “equal footing” by eliminating nationality as an admission criterion. In the following decades, the foreign-born population increased considerably after declining since 1910. The Hart-Celler Act, as it was also known at the time, as well as subsequent immigration laws, opened the United States’ doors to new waves of immigration from non-traditional European regions. -What immigration policy best serves the U.S. national interest today? -What it will take Congress to discuss and vote a “comprehensive” immigration reform? and what should/could/likely include? Throughout this seminar students will develop their own answers to these questions. The course is interdisciplinary by nature, we will draw on political science, economics, sociology, law and public policy literature in order to understand the complexity of immigration.
  • POLS 6322 - Seminar in Comparative Elections

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Examination of problems and issues in the design and function of elections and electoral systems, the behavior of voters, and the role of political parties.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6323 - Seminar in Comparative Political Parties

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    A comparison of different frameworks and data for understanding the impact and development of political parties, including normative critiques of party democracy.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6328 - Seminar in the Politics of Modernization

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Examines political systems of modernizing and developing nations.
  • POLS 6331 - Seminar in Democratization

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Explores and evaluates a variety of theoretical approaches to understanding institutional and other developments in newly-democratizing countries.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • POLS 6332 - Formal Models in International Relations

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    This course is designed to familiarize students with the recent formal literature in international relations, and to aid them in developing and analyzing their own models. Although we will discuss the model building enterprise, much of the course will revolve around discussion and analysis of works that take a formal approach to international relations. Students will both identify the trends and direction of the current literature and pursue their own topics of interest. During the course, we will conduct brainstorming sessions, in which students can discuss ways to formalize their substantive topics or to extend some of the models that we discuss during class. The course will culminate with research presentations by students, in which they demonstrate an ability to apply the formal modeling enterprise to a substantively interesting topic.
  • POLS 6340 - Seminar in Ancient and Medieval Political Thought

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    A selective examination of Greek, Roman, and feudal thinking on recurrent problems in political theory.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6341 - Seminar in Modern Political Thought

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    A selective examination of thinking, from Machiavelli to the present, concerning recurrent problems in political theory.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6342 - Liberalism and Its Critics

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Contemporary arguments for and against the liberal tradition: including libertarian, responsible government, communitarian, conservative, and feminist perspectives.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • POLS 6343 - Seminar in Democratic Thought

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    A critical examination of the theoretical foundations for democracy, and its major texts and competing theories. Emphasizes normative and analytical approaches.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6344 - Dissertation Prospectus

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Students prepare a plan for dissertation research and complete a working dissertation prospectus.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • POLS 6345 - History of Political Theory

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    A survey of the history of political theory from Plato through John Rawls.
    N

    Note: May be repeated.
    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • POLS 6346 - Social Criticism and Revolution in Political Thought

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    A survey of the origins of social criticism and theories of revolution from the 19th century to the present.
    N

    Note: May be repeated.
    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • POLS 6348 - Contemporary Political Theory

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Examination of contemporary political theory including post-modernism and the concomitant concerns of the character of modern political theory.
    N

    Note: Course may be repeated.
    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6349 - Seminar in American Political Thought

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    The colonial experience, the Revolution, the writing of the Constitution, and experience in living under the Constitution-how each has contributed to American political theory.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6350 - Seminar in Media and Politics

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Examines interactive effect of institutional forces and political actors on mediated political communication and information processing.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • POLS 6354 - Seminar in Law and Society

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    How the values and behavior of society influence the substance and enforcement of the law and also how the law affects the mores and attitudes of society.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6355 - Seminar in Judicial Process

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Study of judicial recruitment, socialization, and decision-making process. Also, impact and enforcement of judicial decisions.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6356 - Seminar in Constitutional Law

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Study of major Supreme Court decisions interpreting the U.S. Constitution.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6357 - Comparative Judicial Systems

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Surveys the variation of legal systems and courts across the world from a comparative perspective; investigates how constitutions, courts, and other legal actors vary and how these variations affect judicial decisions and law more generally.
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • POLS 6359 - Bibliographic Essay

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • POLS 6360 - Seminar in State Politics

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Roles of the legislature and governor; state political parties and elections; state finances and taxation; comparative public policies of the state.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6364 - Seminar in Legislative Process

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Organization, process, structure, and policy-making functions of Congress.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6365 - Seminar in Public Opinion

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Examines influences on public opinion; impact of mass media; role of public opinion in democracy.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6366 - Seminar in Political Parties

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    History and organization of political parties in the United States; functions of parties for the political system; electoral base of American political parties.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6367 - Seminar in Electoral Behavior

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Examines determinants of voting decisions; role of elections in democracy.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6368 - Psychological Approaches to Politics

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Surveys the major psychological approaches to study of politics, such as clinical/functional theories and information processing theories, in current political science research.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6369 - Seminar on the Presidency

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Changing concepts of the presidency. The president as chief executive. The president and Congress. The president and public opinion.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6384 - Survey Research Methods

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: POLS 6480 or consent of instructor.

    Practical issues of sampling, questionnaire design, interviewing techniques, and supervision are combined with the analysis of survey results and the presentation of data to academic, governmental, and commercial audiences.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6385 - Time Series Methods

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: POLS 6481 or consent of instructor.

    Autoregressive and distributed lag models, stochastic regression, univariate and multivariate ARIMA modeling, impact assessment, forecasting.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6386 - Measurement Theory for Political Science

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: POLS 6481 or consent of instructor.

    Unobtrusive measurement, scaling models, reliability and validity, factor analysis, analysis of covariance structures.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6387 - Political Inquiry

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Applies relevance issues of the philosophy of science to the study of politics. Political science as a science.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6388 - Causal Inference Methods and Applications

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: POLS 6482 or consent of instructor.

    Applies statistical techniques to the analysis of causes and counterfactuals to the formulation and testing of theoretical arguments.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6389 - Game Theory

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: POLS 6001, Graduate Standing in Political Science, or consent of nstructor.

    Public choice models of political decision making, spatial models of elections, theory of public goods, game theory.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6394 - Seminar: Selected Topics in Political Theory and Methodology

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Selected Courses in Political Methodology.
    Y

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • POLS 6395 - Seminar: Selected Topics in American Politics and Public Policy

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Selected Topics in American politics and policy.
    Y

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • POLS 6396 - Seminar: Selected Topics in Comparative Politics and International Relations

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Selected Topics in Comparative Politics or International Relations.
    Y

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • POLS 6397 - Seminar: Selected Topics in Public Administration and Law

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    Selected Topics in Public Law.
    Y

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • POLS 6398 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • POLS 6399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6480 - Quantitative Methods I

    Credit Hours: 4
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 1
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Political Science or consent of instructor.

    First semester of a two-semester sequence on research methods commonly used in political science. Emphasis on issues of descriptive and inferential statistics and bivariate regression.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6481 - Quantitative Methods II

    Credit Hours: 4
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 1
    Prerequisite: POLS 6480 or consent of instructor.

    Second course in required methods sequence for political science graduate students. Focus on the general linear model. Topics include multivariate regression, violations of model assumptions, alternative estimators, computer applications.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 6482 - Quantitative Methods III: Maximum Likelihood Estimation

    Credit Hours: 4
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 1
    Prerequisite: POLS 6481 or consent of instructor.

    Maximum likelihood estimation, generalized linear models, discrete-choice models, event count models, models for event history data, and models for non-random samples.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 7399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • POLS 8199 - Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • POLS 8399 - Doctoral Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 8699 - Doctoral Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 6
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • POLS 8999 - Doctoral Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 9
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • Department of Psychology

    Courses

  • PSYC 6198 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 1.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair.

    Individual student projects carried out in conjunction with a faculty member.
  • PSYC 6298 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 2.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair.

    Individual student projects carried out in conjunction with a faculty member.
  • PSYC 6300 - Stat for Psy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    The origins of inferential statistics. Emphasis is placed on understanding the uses of statistical concepts in psychological research.
  • PSYC 6301 - Psychological Theory His/Sys

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    Principal themes in history of science, history and systems (paradigms) of psychology, philosophy of science and epistemology.
  • PSYC 6302 - Expermental Dsgn

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    Review of basic principles of design and design models. Concentration on multivariate factorial designs, both parametric and nonparametric, including analysis of variance, covariance, Latin and Greco-Latin squares, and trend analysis.
  • PSYC 6303 - Foundation-Clinical Interven I

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    History and scope of clinical interventions; major theoretical models.
  • PSYC 6304 - Fndtns-Dev Psy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or approval of program director.

    An advanced introduction to basic concepts, current issues, and applications of developmental psychology.
  • PSYC 6306 - Fndatns-Cogntve Psy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or approval of program director.

    An advanced introduction to basic concepts current issues, and applications of cognitive psychology. Areas represented are information processing, language, judgment, memory, and thinking.
  • PSYC 6308 - Foundations of Neuropsychology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    An introduction to the nomenclature, theory and concepts of normal and abnormal brain development, brain functioning, and neuroanatomy.
  • PSYC 6316 - Interventions-Clinical Psyc II

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: PSYC 6303 and consent of instructor.

    Problem-specific techniques and therapeutic strategies based on functional analytic and cognitive-behavioral perspectives.
  • PSYC 6317 - Psychopathology I

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing and consent of instructor.

    Major theoretical formulations associated with functional disorders.
  • PSYC 6332 - Cognitive Disorders & Lifespan Neuropsychology: Assessment/Applications I

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: PSYC 6308 and consent of instructor.

    The study of cognitive and behavioral concomitants of structures and systems of the central nervous system. This section emphasizes principles, models, and approaches to assessment and treatment.
  • PSYC 6334 - Foundations of Health Psychology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor

    An introduction to classic and current theory, research, and methodology in Health Psychology.
  • PSYC 6336 - Directed Research in Social Psychology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing and instructor approval.

    Individual student research conducted under the supervision of a faculty member.
  • PSYC 6337 - Grant Writing

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    Skills, strategies, and procedures for securing research funding with emphasis on National Institute of Health (NIH). Learn to write grants and demonstrate knowledge of the grant writing and reviewing process.
  • PSYC 6338 - Fndtns of Social Psyc

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    An advanced introduction to the basic concepts, current issues, and applications of social psychology.
  • PSYC 6339 - Human Motivation

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or permission of instructor.

    Explores recent social psychological research and theory on human motivation as it relates to a wide range of outcomes including mental and physical health.
  • PSYC 6343 - Psychopharmacology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in psychology and consent of instructor.

    Electrical activity of the brain and synaptic transmitter systems. Manipulation by endogenous and exogenous chemicals and drugs, and their operation in various brain pathologies.
  • PSYC 6344 - Functional Neuroanatomy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    Anatomy and function of major structures and circuits of the mammalian central nervous system in health and disease. Gross structure and function of the spinal cord and spinal nerves, brainstem and cranial nerves, cerebellum and cerebrum are emphasized.
  • PSYC 6351 - Research Methods-I/O

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Designed to provide experience in the process of research in industrial/organizational psychology. Students evaluate research in terms of conceptualization, hypothesis generation, design, the use of statistics, and conclusions. Students design and evaluate proposals.
  • PSYC 6352 - Directed Research in Industrial/Organizational Psychology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing and instructor approval.

    Individual student research conducted under the supervision of a faculty member.
  • PSYC 6356 - Clinical Assessment I

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing and consent of instructor.

    Test standards, the history of assessment, basic measurement theory, dependability of data, models of prediction, decision theory, Cognitive Assessment.
  • PSYC 6357 - Clinical Assessment II

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: PSYC 6356 and consent of instructor. Enrollment limited.

    Required for clinical psychology concentration. Rationale, administration, scoring, and interpretation of basic, personality and behavioral assessment instruments.
  • PSYC 6358 - Directed Research in Neuropsychology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing and instructor approval.

    Individual student research conducted under the supervision of a faculty member.
  • PSYC 6359 - Directed Research in Clinical Psychology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing and instructor approval.

    Individual student research conducted under the supervision of a faculty member.
  • PSYC 6365 - Directed Research in Developmental, Cognitive, & Behavioral Neuroscience

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing and instructor approval.

    Individual student research conducted under the supervision of a faculty member.
  • PSYC 6370 - Fndtns-Indstrl Org Psyc

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Survey of the major content areas of I-0 psychology as well as the relevant journals, the roles played by I-0 psychologists, and the major ethical issues.
  • PSYC 6371 - Seminar Personnel Psy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Theory and application of principles of individual differences and psychological measurement to the study of behavior in organizational settings. Applied emphasis is on employee selection and development.
  • PSYC 6379 - Occupational Health Psychology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing in psychology or consent of instructor.

    Review of the major theories and empirical research showing the effects of the work environment on employees’ health and well being. Primary emphasis on development and maintenance of healthy people within healthy organizations focusing on prevention of illness, disease, health problems and injuries in the work environment. Topics include occupational safety and health hazards, organization of work factors and their relation to employee safety and health, safety climate and training, the etiology of job stress and burnouts, work-place, health promotion programs and the role of employee assistance programs, the interface of work and non-work factors in maintaining occupational health, and epidemiological and other research and measurement issues.
  • PSYC 6380 - Pers Relationships:Theory Res

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • PSYC 6381 - Socl Psychlgcl Mtholgy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Various methodological orientations pertaining to experimental and quasi-experimental research in the social sciences.
  • PSYC 6389 - Hist & Theory Soc Psyc

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in psychology or consent of instructor.

    Survey of major historical and theoretical antecedents of modern social psychology.
  • PSYC 6392 - Intervention Practicum

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 3
    Prerequisite: None.

    Supervised field work in clinical psychology. Enrollment limited.
    Y

    Note: May be repeated for credit.
    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PSYC 6393 - Clinical Research Practicum

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PSYC 6394 - Sel Topics-Social Psychology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    In-depth coverage of special topics in social psychology.
    May be repeated when topics vary.

  • PSYC 6397 - Sel Top in Psychology

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Y

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • PSYC 6398 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair.

    Individual student projects carried out in conjunction with a faculty member.
  • PSYC 6399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PSYC 6498 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair.

    Individual student projects carried out in conjunction with a faculty member.
  • PSYC 6598 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 5.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of chair.

    Individual student projects carried out in conjunction with a faculty member.
  • PSYC 7305 - Structural Equations

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: PSYC 6300 and PSYC 6302 or consent of instructor.

    Estimation, testing, and assessment of fit using LISREL are examined for path analytic, confirmatory factor, and latent variable models.
  • PSYC 7306 - Advanced Statistics: Multilevel Modeling

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: PSYC 6300 and PSYC 6302 or consent of instructor.

    The course will introduce analysis of dependent data (e.g., students within classrooms) from a multilevel, latent variable modeling perspective. Software to be used include SAS Proc Mixed, Mplus, and HLM.
  • PSYC 7307 - Applied Psychological Measurement

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: PSYC 6300  , 6302 and one other graduate level quantitative methods course.

    The course focuses on psychometric theory and application for scale development and evaluation. Topics include classical test theory, scale development, and item response theory methods for psychological measurement.
  • PSYC 7329 - Seminar in Clinical Psy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    May be repeated.

  • PSYC 7338 - Cognitive Disorders & Lifespan Neuropsychology: Assessment/Applications II

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: PSYC 6332 and consent of instructor.

    The study of cognitive and behavioral concomitants of structures and systems of the central nervous system. This section emphasizes neurocognitive modules (e.g., memory, visual-perception, attention) and their clinical applications.
  • PSYC 7339 - Cognitive Disorders & Lifespan Neuropsychology: Assessment/Applications III

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: PSYC 7338 and consent of instructor.

    The study of cognitive and behavioral concomitants of structures and systems of the central nervous system. This section emphasizes particular disorders, syndromes, and techniques and their clinical application.
  • PSYC 7342 - Bio Bases of Behav

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in psychology or consent of instructor.

    The biological, neurological and physiological aspects of behavior as they are relevant to psychology.
  • PSYC 7345 - Psych Methods

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing in psychology and PSYC 6300 and PSYC 6302 , or consent of instructor.

    Techniques used to generate research ideas and the use of experimental and quasi-experimental designs to test these ideas.
  • PSYC 7360 - Seminar in Training

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Training needs-analysis, development of training programs, evaluation of training outcomes.
  • PSYC 7362 - Interviewing

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    Review and analysis of research literature: emphasis on relationship of issues in selection to issues in training and identification of research needs.
  • PSYC 7363 - Organizational Psychology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    Review and analysis of research methodologies and theories related to social processes in organizations.
  • PSYC 7364 - Legal Issues

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

    Analysis of legal issues including those raised by the American Psychological Association and Society of Industrial/Organizational Psychology Testing Guidelines.
  • PSYC 7390 - Clin Neuropsychology Practicum

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 3
    Prerequisite: Consent of program director.

    Practicum in clinical neuropsychology.
    Y

    Note: May be repeated.
    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PSYC 7392 - Psychology Practicum

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PSYC 7393 - Field Practicum in Psychology

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PSYC 7394 - Sel Topics-Clinical Psychology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Topics relevant to central processing of information, e.g., localization and hemispheric functioning, predictability and control of stressors, state dependent learning, brain models of memory, motivational, and cognitive processing.
    May be repeated for a maximum of nine semester hours.

  • PSYC 7395 - Topics On Clinical Rsch

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    In-depth review of the principles of counseling youth, with particular emphasis on empirically supported treatments (ESTs).
  • PSYC 7396 - Sel Top in Quant Mthds

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: PSYC 6300 or consent of instructor.

    Examples of topics are factor analysis, test theory, Bayesian methods, and computer simulation.
    May be repeated for credit when topics vary.

  • PSYC 7397 - Selected Topics in Psychology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Consent of instructor.

    May be repeated when topics vary.

    Note: May be repeated when topics vary.
  • PSYC 7398 - Statistics in Psychology Practicum

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 3
    Prerequisite: Permission of the instructor.

    This applied data analysis practicum will provide students with practical experience in the application of the statistical methods to research problems in which they are currently engaged, including but not limited to, thesis and dissertation projects.
    Y

    Note: Can be repeated for credit.
    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • PSYC 7399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PSYC 8121 - Clinical Psychology Internship

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PSYC 8190 - Clinical Neuropsyc Internship

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Consent of program director.

    Internship in clinical neuropsychology.
    Y

    Note: May be repeated (three terms required for completion of the program requirement).
    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PSYC 8199 - Doctoral Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PSYC 8299 - Doctoral Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 2
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • PSYC 8321 - Clinical Psyc Internship

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PSYC 8330 - Cognitive Neuroscience

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing and instructor approval.

    Examination of the neurological basis of cognition. Material is drawn from research in psychology, clinical neurology, and the neurosciences. Topics covered include memory, language, perception and attention.
  • PSYC 8390 - Clinical Neuropsyc Internship

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PSYC 8392 - Advanced Clinical Practicum

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PSYC 8393 - Sel Top-Indstrl/Org Psy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Consent of instructor.

    Sel Top-InDissertationrl/Org Psy
    May be repeated for a maximum of nine Seminarester hours with approval of chair.

  • PSYC 8395 - Tops in Neuropsyc

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

    Tops in Neuropsyc
    May be repeated when topics vary.

  • PSYC 8397 - Selected Topics in Psychology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: PSYC 6308 and consent of instructor.

    The clinical and experimental literature on various memory disorders having structural or functional etiologies and their rehabilitation.
  • PSYC 8399 - Doctoral Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PSYC 8690 - Clinical Neuropsyc Internship

    Credit Hours: 6
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PSYC 8699 - Doctoral Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 6
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PSYC 8999 - Doctoral Dissertation

    Credit Hours: 9
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • Public Administration Program

    Courses

  • PUBL 6310 - Administrative Theory

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None

    Strategies and techniques for managing public organizations from the perspectives of various administrative theories and organizational models; case studies used to apply theory.
  • PUBL 6311 - Public Administration and Policy Implementation

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None

    Effects of economic incentives on voters, government officials, economy and markets; analysis of situations where private markets fail to be efficient; applications to government policies at federal and local levels; analysis of tax system and interaction among federal, state and local governments.
  • PUBL 6312 - Public Finance

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None

    Effects of economic incentives on voters, government officials, economy and markets; analysis of situations where private markets fail to be efficient; applications to government policies at federal and local levels; analysis of tax system and interaction among federal, state and local governments.
  • PUBL 6313 - Fundamentals of Policy Analysis

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None

    How public policies are decided; tools for policy decision making; political, social, and legal determinants of public policy.
  • PUBL 6321 - Seminar in Urban Politics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None

    How local government copes with social and economic problems in overlapping, metropolitan government environments, the complexity of urbanization, and other government agencies.
  • PUBL 6325 - Capstone Problem Project

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None.

    Intensive study of significant policy issue student’s choice. Students formulates and analyzes real issue of public policy and make independent and specific recommendations about the issues.
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • PUBL 6342 - Budgeting For Public Agencies

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Introduces students to politics, basic concepts, theories, and practices involved in public budgeting process.
  • PUBL 6343 - GIS for Urban Applications

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Introduces students to the applications of geographic information systems (GIS) for urban decision makers in the fields of urban geography, urban planning, public health, environmental assessment, hazard and emergency management.
  • PUBL 6346 - Seminar in Emergency Management

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: None

    Policies and programs of public and private sector including natural and technological disasters and terrorism.
  • PUBL 6347 - Seminar in Health Care Policy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0


    Formerly/Same as: PUBL 6347 - Seminar in Regulatory Process.

    PUBL 6395 - Selected Topics: Public Administration and Policy Analysis Topic: Healthcare Policy Analysis
    Cross-Listed As: POLS 6315

    Prerequisite: None.

    Politics and economics of health and medical care with emphasis on the delivery of services, their quality, and distribution and financing.
    Note: Seminar.

  • PUBL 6349 - Seminar in Non-Profit Management

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: PUBL 6395 Selected Topics: Public Administration and Policy Analysis Topic: Nonprofit Organizational Management
    Prerequisite: None

    Facilitate an understanding of non-governmental service/advocacy organizations, or “nonprofit organizations”, and the management and leadership skills required to effectively organize, maintain, and grow them.
  • PUBL 6350 - Public Management

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: none.

    Lecture and seminar on developing knowledge and skills to effectively manage in public organizations.
  • PUBL 6398 - Special Probs Publ Adm/Policy

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Independent study in public administration or public policy.
    May be repeated for credit.

  • PUBL 6410 - Quantitative Methods I

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 1
    Prerequisite: None

    First semester of a two-semester sequence on research methods commonly used in political science and public administration. Emphasis on issues of research design, descriptive and inferential statistics, and bivariate regression.
  • PUBL 6415 - Decision Science for Public Affairs

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 1
    Introduces management science approach to problem solving in order to support management, planning, and decision making, and evaluation in the public and non-profit sector, including decision analysis, simulation, and forecasting.
  • Department of Sociology

    Courses

  • SOC 6199 - Thesis

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • SOC 6300 - Sem-Sociological Theory

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: SOC 3300 or equivalent.

    Required of all M.A. candidates. Focus is upon theory construction and the analysis of central concepts of sociology, their historical development, and current application from a diversity of sociological paradigms.
  • SOC 6302 - Research and Writing in the Social Sciences

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate status in sociology or consent of instructor.

    Focusing on current issues and controversies in the social sciences in both theoretical and applied areas.
    Note: Required of all M.A. candidates.
  • SOC 6304 - Social Statistics

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: sociology graduate status or consent of instructor.

    Required of all M.A. candidates. Statistical procedures in social sciences; descriptive and inferential statistics. Introduction to multiple regression.
  • SOC 6306 - Sem in Quant Methods

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: consent of instructor or SOC 6304 or its equivalent.

    Required of all M.A. candidates. Methods of gathering sociological data, with emphasis on sample surveys: operationalization of theoretical variables (reliability and validity), research design, measurement; evaluation and policy research.
  • SOC 6311 - Qualitative Soc Methods

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate status in sociology or consent of instructor.

    (Required of all M.A. candidates.) Experience in participant-observation, interviewing, urban ethnography, and other field-research skills, with emphasis on computer applications.
  • SOC 6312 - Sem Work & Occupations

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate status in sociology or consent of instructor.

    Labor force trends, analysis of occupational structure and occupational groups, occupational socialization, careers, subjective responses to work, work and family.
  • SOC 6321 - Sem in Sociology of Culture

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate status in sociology or consent of instructor.

    Analysis of culture as the source of social meanings; the relationship between culture and key social institutions, including the family, the economy, and medicine.
  • SOC 6325 - Seminar in Race and Ethnic Relations

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Approval of graduate advisor, graduate or Postbaccalaureate status.

    An examination of the social and cultural processes that produce, reinforce, or alter racial and ethnic categories and systems of stratification.
  • SOC 6330 - Sem Social Psychology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of graduate advisor, graduate or Postbaccalaureate status.

    Emphasis on the imposition of social structure upon the individual and the group. Diverse theoretical orientations are adopted and applied to research data.
  • SOC 6341 - Sem in Formal Organizations

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate status in sociology or consent of instructor.

    Focuses on concepts and methods in the study of formal organizations including authority structures, communication systems, worker commitment, interorganizational linkages, impact of technology, and multiorganizational settings in the delivery of services.
  • SOC 6350 - Sociology of the Body

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Graduate standing or approval of the graduate advisor.

    Examination of key theoretical perspectives, including social constructivist interpretations, on the social body; assessment of the empirical literature, including research on body work, embodied resistance, and medicalization.
  • SOC 6351 - Seminar in Social Stratification and Mobility

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of graduate advisor, graduate or Postbaccalaureate status.

    In-depth analysis of stratification theories and issues. Topics include characteristics of social classes; social mobility, policies, and class; and classes in comparative perspective.
  • SOC 6352 - Seminar in Population

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of graduate advisor, graduate or Postbaccalaureate status.

    Analysis of basic processes affecting population characteristics. Topics include fertility, migration, mobility, and population characteristics of developed and underdeveloped countries.
  • SOC 6360 - Soc of Urban Education

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing.

    Issues confronting urban public schools, including desegregation, student achievement, teacher morale, and drop-out and turnover behaviors.
  • SOC 6363 - Seminar in Sociology of Deviance

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate standing or approval of graduate advisor.

    Review and critique of current theoretical explanations and significant empirical research on deviance.
  • SOC 6371 - Seminar in the Family

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of graduate advisor, graduate or Postbaccalaureate status.

    Current theory and research in marriage and family; cross-cultural perspective on family variation and change; contemporary issues in marriage and family relations.
  • SOC 6375 - Seminar in Sociology of Law

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: Approval of graduate advisor, graduate or Postbaccalaureate status.

    Examination of social factors affecting the law, legal institutions, and legal actors. Applies socioloegal theories toward understanding how the law is created, legal functions, and how individuals understand the law.
  • SOC 6380 - Seminar in Medical Sociology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate status in sociology, psychology, anthropology, or social work, or consent of instructor.

    Social factors in the etiology, development, and response to illness and disease; emphasis on health and illness behavior and the nature of health care providers.
  • SOC 6390 - Seminar in Sociology of Gender

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate status in sociology and approval of graduate advisor.

    Examination of the social and cultural structures and process that create, maintain and change gender strantification systems.
  • SOC 6391 - Seminar in Sexuality & Society

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Approval of graduate advisor, graduate or Postbaccalaureate status. Examination of social factors affecting human sexuality, including behaviors, identities, desires, and related inequalities.
  • SOC 6397 - Selected Topics in Sociology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: graduate status in sociology or the approval of graduate advisor.

    Topics to be announced each Seminarester.
    May be repeated for credit as topics change.

  • SOC 6398 - Special Problems

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • SOC 6399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • SOC 7199 - Thesis

    Credit Hours: 1
    Lecture Contact Hours: 1   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee N Fee Type N
  • SOC 7395 - Internship in Sociology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of graduate advisor, graduate standing in sociology. 12 graduate hours (including SOC 6300 and SOC 6305).

    Combines formal sociological training, theoretical and empirical, with action-oriented programs and agencies in the community; requires practical and research experience in a field placement.
  • SOC 7396 - Internship in Sociology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Prerequisite: approval of graduate advisor, graduate standing in sociology. 12 graduate hours (including SOC 6300 and SOC 6305).

    Combines formal sociological training, theoretical and empirical, with action-oriented programs and agencies in the community; requires practical and research experience in a field placement.
  • SOC 7399 - Masters Thesis

    Credit Hours: 3
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    N

    Additional Fee Y Fee Type Y
  • Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Program

    Courses

  • WGSS 6301 - Feminist Theory & Methodology

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 3   Lab Contact Hours: 0
  • WGSS 6394 - Sel Topics in Women’s Studies

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: WOST 6394 Sel Topics in Women’s Studies
  • WGSS 6398 - Special Probs in Women’s Study

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Lecture Contact Hours: 0   Lab Contact Hours: 0
    Formerly/Same as: WOST 6398 Special Problems