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2016-2017 Greensburg Campus Catalog
University of Pittsburgh Greensburg
   
2016-2017 Greensburg Campus Catalog 
    
 
  May 14, 2024
 
2016-2017 Greensburg Campus Catalog [Archived Catalog]

Course Information


Special Courses

Pitt-Greensburg offers a variety of special courses that students may use to enhance their educational experience. The special courses include independent studies, internships, excellence courses, study abroad courses, and capstone courses. Most of the special courses are optional, but for some majors (e.g. criminal justice) an internship is required, and the capstone course is required of all majors.

An independent study allows a student to explore a topic for which no course is available at Pitt-Greensburg or extend the exploration of a topic begun in a regular course. To arrange for an independent study, a student must find a faculty sponsor and work with the sponsor to develop a course plan. Independent study courses are available in every department. See an advisor for more details.

Internships allow students to earn credits toward graduation while gaining on-the-job experience in their majors. An internship is required in some majors (e.g. criminal justice and the journalism track in English writing), but it is available as an elective in most majors. Students are expected to find their own internship opportunities, but faculty advisors and the Office of Career Services may be aware of employers looking for interns and can provide suggestions about seeking an internship. Some departments ask students to complete an internship application. See a faculty advisor for more information.

Pitt-Greensburg students have an opportunity to study abroad in a country/region of their choice. Academic credits are earned while abroad and will transfer directly back into the student’s academic degree requirements. See the study abroad coordinator for more information.

As part of the new Pitt-Greensburg curriculum that took effect in fall 1999, every Pitt-Greensburg student must complete a senior seminar or a senior project as a capstone to the work in the major program. The faculty views the capstone course as a significant enhancement to the UPG degree program because it provides students with the opportunity to bring together the themes and skills of the major. Capstone work typically involves research and both written and oral reports.

Departmental Course Listings

Please note, when searching courses by Catalog Number, an asterisk (*) can be used to return mass results. For instance a Catalog Number search of ” 1* ” can be entered, returning all 1000-level courses.

 

English Literature

  
  •  

    ENGLIT 1647 - LITERATURE FOR ADOLESCENTS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will read classics as well as modern works written specifically for an adolescent audience. We will also read and discuss sociological and psychological constructions of adolescents and books on pedagogy.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGCMP 0020; LVL: Sophomore
  
  •  

    ENGLIT 1649 - TOPICS IN CHLDREN’S LITERATURE


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Selected issues in the production and reception of writings designed for children. Attention given to the relationship between literary representations and social, psychological and historical considerations.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGCMP 0020; LVL: Sophomore
  
  •  

    ENGLIT 1661 - SCIENCE FICTION


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course introduces students to the major ideas, themes, and writers in the development of science fiction as a genre. Discussions will help students to understand and use critical methods for the analysis of science fiction. The topics covered include problems describing and defining the genre, contrasting ideologies in soviet and American science fiction, the roles of women as characters, readers and writers of science fiction, etc.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    ENGLIT 1701 - TOPICS IN WOMEN’S STUDIES


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Investigates issues raised by the woman’s movement in literature written by and about women. It ties these issues to critical and cultural concerns both at the time the text was written and to the present day.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    ENGLIT 1725 - ASIAN NORTH AMERICAN FILM LIT


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course introduces the selected works by Asian North American writers of Chinese, Japanese, Indian, and Korean descent. Literary analysis will focus on the theme, form, style, language, and structure of works from a variety of genres, including essays, poetry, short stories, novels, drama, and film. A critical reading and comparing these selected texts intend to help students recognize Asian North American literary writings as part of the rich diversity of American cultural and literary traditions.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    ENGLIT 1750 - THEMES: MEDIA THEORY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will examine the influence of the alphabet, the printing press, television, and other media upon the arts, and society.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    ENGLIT 1770 - SPECIAL TOPICS


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 1
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Directed Studies
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    ENGLIT 1901 - INDEPENDENT STUDY


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 6
    This option permits students to design their own course with the approval of a department faculty member.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Independent Study
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    ENGLIT 1905 - INTERNSHIP


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course enables students to combine academic training and practical work experience related to the major.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Internship
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    ENGLIT 1910 - SENIOR SEMINAR


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Intensive study of a single topic or figure that assumes previous work in related literary historical and critical areas. Each seminar moves toward a final paper that integrates earlier literary study with the specific critical perspective developed in this course.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    ENGLIT 1950 - ENGLISH LITERATURE CAPSTONE


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Capstone course for senior English literature majors.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Directed Studies
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Senior

English Writing

  
  •  

    ENGWRT 0400 - INTRO TO CREATIVE WRITING


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course offers the opportunity to experiment with forms of poetry and fiction and to read and discuss from a writer’s point of view contemporary writing in these genres.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGCMP 0020 or 0200 or 0006 or permission of instructor
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 0410 - INTRODUCTION TO CREATV WRITING


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This is the first course that Writing students take to get acquainted with the genres of fiction, poetry, and nonfiction in order to continue in more advanced courses. Students read classic and contemporary writers and poets to learn such basic components as scene, setting, dialogue, image, line, and meter. Students will work together and with the professor in several rough-draft sessions as the students compose essays, short stories, and poems. Students are also encouraged to submit to and join the staff of Pendulum, the student literary magazine.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGCMP 0020 or permission of instructor
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 0411 - INTRO TO CREATIVE NONFICTION


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will introduce undergraduates to creative nonfiction, a genre that often borrows from fiction writer’s techniques while sticking to the facts. Genre includes personal essay, new journalism, memoir and quality feature writing.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGCMP 0020
  
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    ENGWRT 0520 - INTRO TO FICTION WRITING


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This first course in the fiction sequence introduces students to aspects of prose fiction—plot, point of view, characterization, conflict, etc. Students may write exercises on these aspects of fiction, write one or more short stories and revise frequently. Students will also read representative stories and explore their use of particular fictional techniques.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGCMP 0020
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 0530 - INTRODUCTION TO POETRY WRITING


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Through writing exercises, analysis of modern and contemporary poetry and frequent revision of their own poetry, students learn the basic elements of poetry writing.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGCMP 0020
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 0550 - FUNDAMENTALS OF NEWS REPORTING


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    The internet has led newspapers, corporations and non-profit agencies to create websites that dispense news and information 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and these agencies need people who can write efficiently in that style. This makes clear, concise, accurate writing - the basis of all news reporting - more important than ever. In fundamentals of news reporting, students will learn to identify news, write effective summaries of the information, structure stories well, conduct research, and identify sources of reliable facts and informed opinions. Students will write about their surrounding communities: the University, Oakland, the city of Pittsburgh. The course will also include lectures and discussions about media law and ethics.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGCMP 0020 or permission of instructor
  
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    ENGWRT 0650 - READINGS IN JOURNALISM


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course is intended to introduce journalism students to news, feature, and column/op-ed writing as practiced by the best papers - and the best writers - nationally. The course will focus on the methods for obtaining the information needed to create solid news stories, and strategies ranging from extensive, in-depth interviewing, background reading, and the journalistic legwork” and “digging” that produces incisive, accurate accounts and the very best “investigative reporting”.”
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1010 - INTERMEDIATE FICTION


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Students work on writing short stories and read a wide range of stories. Students can expect to revise their work regularly. Class sessions will address problems in fiction writing — from plot to characterization, from point-of-view to style.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Workshop
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 0410
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1012 - DIGITAL STORYTELLING 1


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will introduce students to the history and transformative power of digital technologies and to how these technologies influence the ways we create and share stories today. We will explore the ways technology helps us tell stories through new and emerging narrative forms, including blogs, podcasts, photo/sensory essays, and other combinations of audio and video forms. We will study methods digital storytellers use to connect with audiences in unique and intimate ways, and students will create their own stories with specific audiences in mind. Students will practice storytelling using a variety of digital mediums and will construct their own digital storytelling portfolios to showcase their work.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ:  ENGWRT 0410  or instructor’s permission
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1022 - DIGITAL STORYTELLING 2


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    ENGWRT 1022  is the advanced-level, follow-up course to ENGWRT 1012 . In this course, students will refine and advance the skills they acquired in ds 1 and use those skills to produce an in-depth personal digital narrative or immersion project.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 1012 
  
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    ENGWRT 1060 - WRTNG FOR CHLDRN & YNG ADLTS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This writing seminar will encourage students to develop pieces for potential publication. Close attention to technique, individual students’ styles, and market demands will drive discussions of what is good writing for children and young adults. Guest authors may encourage further exploration of the range and possibilities in this writing genre.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 0410 or 0050 or 0520 or 0521 or ENGLIT 1640 or 1649
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1089 - THE CREATIVE PROCESS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course interweaves the theoretical and psychological perspectives of the creative process with the experiences, work and words of both painters and poets. Master articulations of psychological theories and artistic experiential models inform the lectures, workshop and guest appearances.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 0410; PSY 0010
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1094 - READINGS IN CNTMPRY FICTION


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course acquaints students with a variety of contemporary writers. This study helps students raise questions about their own developing esthetics as they are reflected in form and take into account their dual roles as creative writers and critics. It also helps students access their relationship to reviewing and criticism, including its benefits to a creative writer developing a career, and to discover techniques of reviewing and criticism which aid and do not transgress upon their esthetics and its expression.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 0520
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1095 - TOPICS IN FICTION


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course concerns itself with matters of interest in fiction writing; form and technique, contemporary production, and the relation of the fiction writer to his/her society.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 0410
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1170 - SHORT STORY WORKSHOP


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This workshop will involve rigorous discussion of the stories written by students as well as stories by some contemporary practitioners of genre fiction, such as science fiction and fantasy. Emphasis will be on the poetics, not the mechanics, of writing literary fiction. Each student will write and revise four stories over the semester.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 0410 and ENGWRT 0520
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1175 - FICT SEM: FAMLYS & SMALL TOWNS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course examines the various and diverse ways that writers define the idea of “family.”  Equally varied are the small towns in which these stories take place: We may be in Flannery O’Connor’s rural Georgia, or in Jhumpa Lahiri’s suburban New England.  Students will write and revise short stories that concern family matters and take place in small towns.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 0410  
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1210 - POETRY WORKSHOP


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    For this advanced poetry writing course, the central text will be the student’s own writing. Students will read recently published poetry, regularly write their own poetry and frequently rewrite it.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 0410
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1250 - FORMAL POETRY WRITING


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course reviews free verse and then introduces the student to various verse forms of poetry. Examples from many time periods will be studied; however, special focus will be placed on modern and contemporary poets writing in meter. Students will write in free verse and then in various rhymed and unrhymed forms (e.g., the haiku, sonnet, sestina, and villanelle). Emphasis will be on the experimentation with and potential of verse form, not on its perfection.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 0410
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1290 - READINGS IN CNTMPRY POETRY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course focuses on American poets who have come to prominence since 1963. We will read widely in the poetry of this period to understand its unique contribution to the development of poetic form and its relationship to the culture that produced it.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 0410
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1293 - TOPICS IN POETRY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course concerns itself with matters of interest in poetry writing; form and technique, contemporary production, and the relation of the poet to his/her society.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1305 - INTRO TO EDITING & PAGE DESIGN


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will introduce students to the basics of newspaper page design and copy editing. Using page layout programs such as quark Xpress, students will learn how to design and layout a newspaper. The copy-editing component of the course will cover the following topics, among others; a review of basic grammar skills, writing to be read: what makes good writing, the hows and whys of fact-checking, the basic elements of news and feature stories.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 0550 
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1310 - NEWSPAPER 1


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Students in this course learn how to profile individuals, report trends, take polls and write about a community. The course provides hands-on practice in feature writing and a workshop approach to critiquing students’ and professionals’ work.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 0550
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1320 - NEWSPAPER 2


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course offers students an opportunity to further develop reporting skills and to learn the ‘art’ of feature writing. The course begins as an extension of ENGWRT 0550 and 1310 with deadline assignments. Students will learn to write news-feature stories and profiles of individuals and communities in the news. Regular reading of local and national newspapers will be required. Much of the course will be a workshop in which students analyze and criticize their work and the work of professionals. Students will be encouraged to publish their work.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 1310
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1331 - MAGAZINE 1


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Students will learn how to write for the magazine market. The focus is on writing for specific audiences. Students will learn how demographics and editorial vision affect content. They’ll practice developing a variety of writer-voices and learn how to write for target markets. They’ll find subjects they’re passionate about and find target magazine markets that match. Students will generate story ideas, conduct research and reportage, write and re-write and ultimately publish their work either in an on-campus publication or beyond.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 0550
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1380 - NEWS PRACTICUM: THE INSIDER


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course is for writers, editors, photojournalists, graphic designers, business managers, and editorial cartoonists at The Pitt-Greensburg Insider, or for those who aspire to be on staff. We critique the daily editions of The Insider online and in print. You will learn how to pitch, report, write, and edit stories with the goal of publishing them. You will collaborate with your colleagues to strengthen your journalism skills and learn what goes into making excellent journalism. This includes thinking critically about interviewing, researching, writing, placement of stories, and visual journalism, as well as ethics and legal issues. Practicing journalists will visit the class. This three-credit course provides the initial credit for first-time Insider staff members. The course is repeatable (as ENGWRT 1381) for 2 credits to allow you to continue to work on The Insider throughout your time at Pitt-Greensburg.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGCMP 0020
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1381 - NEWS PRACTICUM: THE INSIDER


    Minimum Credits: 2
    Maximum Credits: 2
    Students who would like to continue to work on The Insider may continue to receive academic credit by signing up for this repeatable course after completing ENGWRT 1380.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 1380
  
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    ENGWRT 1390 - READINGS IN CNTMPRY NON-FICTN


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course familiarizes students with a number of different forms of and approaches to contemporary non-fiction writing.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 0410
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1391 - WRITING THE REVIEW


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course explores various types and styles of reviews. Students read a variety of critics as well as write original reviews of film, television, theatre, music, books, etc.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1403 - TOPC NON-FCTN:ELECTRNC MEDIA


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course concerns itself with the varieties of writing for the electronic media, and with related matters of interest; form and technique, contemporary production, ethical and legal matters, and the general relation of the writer in this field to his/her society.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: At least one ENGWRT course
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1410 - TOPICS IN NON-FICTION: MEMOIR


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    A creative writing class is one of the few places where your life still matters,” Richard Hugo, a great writer and teacher, once said. That idea is at the center of this course. Students will read a series of memoirs, both classic and contemporary, and examine the ways writers construct the truths of their lives on the page. In conjunction with the assigned readings which will include work by writers ranging from Ernest Hemingway to David Sedaris, Simone DeBeauvoir to Joan Didion students will draw from their own life experiences and write a series of essay-length memoirs about the things that matter to them most. Class includes a workshop component that allows students to share their writing each week. Topics have included Food Writing, Memoir Writing, Travel Writing, Nature Writing, and other subjects.”
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 0410
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1415 - TOPICS IN NONFICTION WRITING


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Topics in nonfiction course is an intensive readings- and workshop-oriented course highlighting the various subgenres of creative nonfiction. Topics vary from term to term and include such areas as memoir writing, nature writing, travel writing, narrative/immersion journalism and more.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREREQ: ENGCMP 0020  ; ENGWRT 0410  and (ENGWRT 0411  or ENGWRT 0550 )
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1420 - BLOGGING: JOUNRLSMS NEXT WAVE


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will require students to study contemporary blogs ’ both good and bad — and trace the history of non-traditional reportage, particularly during wartime. We’ll examine the impact bloggers have on other forms of journalism, the quality of blog reportage, how technology is affecting the quality and quantity of traditional reportage, and the problematic and/or empowering position of the “i” in reportage. We’ll also examine information overload in the 21st century and work on developing the critical skills necessary to distinguish what is and isn’t news, what is and isn’t valuable, what is and isn’t fair and/or accurate in cyberspace and beyond.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 0410 , (ENGWRT 0411  or ENGWRT 0550 )
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1430 - LITERARY AND ONLINE PUBLISHING


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will introduce students to the art and craft of literary and online publishing. Students will research independent literary magazines and small presses, both online and in print. They will learn the basics of literary publishing from both an editorial and an authorial perspective. They will use what they learn to produce an online site featuring the work of Pitt-Greensburg writing program graduates, as well as individual print chapbook-length collections from the English writing program capstone.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 0410  or ENGWRT 0411  or ENGWRT 0520  or ENGWRT 0530  or ENGWRT 0550 
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1598 - ADVANCED PUBLIC RELATIONS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Advanced public relations focuses on issues and problems in contemporary public relations policy, procedure and practice. Given sample public relations objectives, students will complete numerous concentrated writing assignments in tended to increase competence in creating and executing appropriate public relations message strategies.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 1395
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1650 - PLAYWRITING 1


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    A beginning course in writing for the stage. Starting with short scenes, students will work towards understanding the craft and art of constructing theatre stories to be performed by actors. The final project will be a one-act play. Throughout there will be emphasis on the stage effectiveness of the writing and opportunity for informal performance of student scripts.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1710 - SENIOR SEMINAR IN FICTION


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    In this seminar students are expected to criticize student work intelligently and constructively. It is designed for students familiar with the craft of writing who wish to refine their writing skill and make their stories more subtle, original and meaningful. Analysis of student writing will be supplemented by the reading of professionally written stories.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Workshop
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1730 - SENIOR SEMINAR IN POETRY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    A fairly broad knowledge of 20th century poetry in English is assumed. Most class hours will be devoted to workshop critiques; a portion of class time will be spent discussing the work of younger contemporary poets.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Workshop
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1877 - ADVERTISING AND PROMOTION


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Designed to give students an understanding of the creative and strategic marketing processes involved in advertising and promotion campaigns for a variety of media and purposes.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: At least one ENGWRT course
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1880 - ADVANCED ADVERTISING


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Advanced advertising focuses on issues and problems in contemporary advertising policy, procedure and practice. Given sample marketing objectives, students will complete numerous concentrated writing assignments intended to increase competence in creating and executing appropriate advertising message strategies.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: ENGWRT 1877
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1900 - INTERNSHIP: WRITING


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course offers students an opportunity to work as interns for local media, including newspapers, magazines and television stations. The internships are complemented by close supervision and seminars dealing with some of the ethical, legal, and practical issues facing the working professional.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Internship
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1901 - INDEPENDENT STUDY


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 6
    This option permits students to design their own course with the approval of a department faculty member. Students must submit a proposal to the faculty member. Note: the proposed study must not duplicate the content of regularly offered courses.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Independent Study
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1910 - INTERNSHIP: PUBLIC RELATIONS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course offers students an opportunity to work as interns for local public relations firms or corporate public relations departments. The internships are complemented by close supervision and seminars dealing with some of the ethical, legal and practical issues facing the working professional.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Internship
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    ENGWRT 1955 - ENGLISH WRITING CAPSTONE


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Capstone course for English Writing majors. In this course, which should be taken during a student’s final semester, writing majors receive a complete immersion into the writing life. Students prepare a publishable chapbook-length manuscript in their chosen genres. Students share a reading list and do close readings of the texts. Students participate in readings, both on campus and off, and are featured during the week-long Writers Festival and the monthly Written/Spoken reading series. The course is workshop-driven, with students sharing new and revised work each week.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: LVL: Senior

French

  
  •  

    FR 0001 - ELEMENTARY FRENCH 1


    Minimum Credits: 5
    Maximum Credits: 5
    This course will introduce the student to the oral-aural and reading-writing skills in the language. From the outset, students learn to use the spoken language and begin to work on good pronunciation, while at the same time developing the listening comprehension, reading, and writing skills.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    FR 0002 - ELEMENTARY FRENCH 2


    Minimum Credits: 5
    Maximum Credits: 5
    This course introduces the students to the oral-aural and reading-writing skills in the language. From the outset, students learn to use the spoken language and begin to work on good pronunciation, while at the same time developing the listening comprehension, reading, and writing skills. This course is a logical continuation of elementary French 0001.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: FR 0001 or 0111
  
  •  

    FR 0003 - INTERMEDIATE FRENCH 1


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course is a logical continuation of the first-year sequence. Emphasis continues to be placed on the oral aural skills, but the reading and writing skills become increasingly stressed.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: FR 0002 or 0112
  
  •  

    FR 0004 - INTERMEDIATE FRENCH 2


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course is a continuation of French 0003. Reading skill is emphasized even more than in FR 0003 but continues to be accompanied by oral-aural and written work.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: FR 0003 or 0211
  
  •  

    FR 0020 - FRANCE IN THE 21ST CENTURY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course is designed to lead students to a better understanding of France today. We shall pay particular attention to the perceptions the French have of themselves, and to the major aspects of contemporary French life and society.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    FR 0021 - APPRCHES TO FRENCH LITERATURE


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    The goal of this course is to illustrate ways of looking at literary texts. We shall examine plays, short prose works and poems focusing on textural elements such as narrative technique, characterization, societal factors and language.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    FR 0041 - ELEMENTARY FRENCH 1


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    First of three courses designed to develop skills in speaking, listening, reading and writing in French. A systematic presentation of grammar will accompany language instruction. Understanding of French culture is emphasized as part of language skill.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    FR 0042 - ELEMENTARY FRENCH 2


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Second of three courses designed to develop skills in speaking, listening, reading and writing in French. A systematic presentation of grammar will accompany language instruction. Understanding of French culture is emphasized as part of language skill.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    FR 0043 - ELEMENTARY FRENCH 3


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Third of three courses designed to develop skills in speaking, listening, reading and writing in French. A systematic presentation of grammar will accompany language instruction. Understanding of French culture is emphasized as part of language skill.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: FR 0042  with grade of C or better
  
  •  

    FR 0053 - WRITTEN FRENCH FOR CAREERS


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course is designed for students interested in careers relating to Western Europe in a variety of capacities within government, education and business. Its aim is to improve student understanding of the essential elements of written French and to foster effective written professional communication skills in French.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    FR 0080 - MODERN FRENCH NOVEL


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    The French novel is to a great extent a genre in which psychological analysis has been brought to a high level of sophistication. This shall be studied through close analyses of approximately six works in English translation.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    FR 0081 - FRENCH THEATRE


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will explore comedy and tragedy of the classical period in relation to more recent developments in the 19th and 20th centuries in France. Close readings of selected plays by major authors will be stressed.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    FR 0082 - FRENCH CIVILIZATION


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course aims to provide students with an overview of contemporary French civilization within its European context and to offer a panorama of French society in the 90’s. Focus is on life in France, its historical, cultural and artistic heritage, and its institutions which impact on such key aspects as politics, economy, education, etc. Taught entirely in English.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    FR 0083 - SURVEY OF FRENCH CINEMA


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course offers an introduction to the study of the cinemas in the French context. It surveys the history of French cinema from the 30’s to the present and reviews such important cinematic trends as poetic realism, the nouvelle vague and the heritage film. Screenings of selected classic French films will be followed by discussions on questions related to film technique, film analysis, style and genre. The course will be taught in English.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    FR 0087 - FRENCH FILM & LITERATURE


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course will examine film’s convergence with and divergence from literary arts. From this discussion will emerge an understanding of film’s debt to literary models, as well as its own unique and innovative contributions to narrative, poetic and dramatic forms. This course will be taught entirely in English.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    FR 1081 - SPEC TOPICS IN LIT (ENGLISH)


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course taught in English will treat some aspect of French literature.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    FR 1750 - SPECIAL TOPICS


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 1
    The study of special topics in French.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Directed Studies
    Grade Component: Satisfactory/No Credit
  
  •  

    FR 1902 - DIRECTED STUDY


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course enables the student who has completed, or nearly completed, the French major to do research under the direction of a faculty member, on a topics of mutual interest.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Directed Studies
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis

Freshman Seminar

  
  •  

    FS 0002 - FRESHMAN SEMINAR


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 1
    This course will acquaint freshmen with the many policies and procedures of college life.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    FS 0008 - TRANSFER SEMINAR


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 1
    This course will acquaint transfer students with the many policies and procedures of college life.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    FS 0009 - ESL SEMINAR


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This seminar course is for international students
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    FS 0014 - VILLAGE FIRST -YEAR SEMINAR


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This seminar is for freshmen who are residing in the academic villages.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    FS 0021 - FRESHMAN SEMINAR/HUMANITIES


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This seminar is for freshmen who are interested in pursing a degree in the humanities.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Seminar
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    FS 0022 - FRESHMAN SEMINAR/ACCOUNTING


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This seminar is for freshmen who are interested in pursing a degree in accounting.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    FS 0023 - FRESH SEM/BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This seminar is for freshmen who are interested in pursuing a degree in the behavioral sciences.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    FS 0026 - SCIENCE SEMINAR 1


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 1
    Intended for students enrolled in both biology and chemistry, this section of first-year seminar is part of a two-semester science learning community experience. The goals for the fall seminar are to aid students in their academic and social transitions to college, to provide students with academic skills needed for the study of science and to foster a better appreciation for career opportunities in science and the scientific approach to problems.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    FS 0027 - SCIENCE SEMINAR 2


    Minimum Credits: 2
    Maximum Credits: 2
    This course is the second part of a two-semester science learning community experience designed for first-year biology and chemistry students. The second semester course will continue the themes of the first semester emphasizing continued development of good study habits, further exploration of career options and mastery of skills in scientific thinking.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: FS 0026 
  
  •  

    FS 1950 - DIRECTED STUDY


    Minimum Credits: 1
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Course content to be decided between the professor and the student.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Directed Studies
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis

Geography

  
  •  

    GEOG 0101 - WORLD REGIONAL GEOGRAPHY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    A systematic treatment of the physical, historical, cultural and economic processes that have shaped global landscapes. Contemporary regional problems and prospects will be emphasized.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    GEOG 0810 - EARTH AND PEOPLE


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Introduces the student to the nature and scope of the field of geography and demonstrates the methodology which geographers use to examine people and land relationships. A number of world regions will be analyzed in this class.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SU3 Elective Basis

Geology

  
  •  

    GEOL 0860 - ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course takes an integrated earth systems approach to understanding our planet and its resources. We will investigate geologic processes and hazards (e.g., earthquakes, volcanoes, landslides, and weather hazards), geologic resources (water, soil, minerals, energy) and the local and global ramifications of human interaction with the earth (e.g., air, soil and water pollution, ozone depletion, and climate change). This course also serves as an introductory course for three majors in the department of geology and planetary science.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    GEOL 1040 - FIELD STUDIES IN ECOLOGY


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 6
    Basic ecological (biomes, ecosystems, community ecology, population ecology, and adaptations) and environmental science (human population growth, resource use, and pollution) concepts, will be taught in outdoor locations. Sites will vary, and may include the Colorado Rocky Mountains and the Amazonian rainforest. All-day field trips to significant sites will be supplemented by evening lectures and talks by local experts.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Practicum
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis

German

  
  •  

    GER 0001 - ELEMENTARY GERMAN 1


    Minimum Credits: 5
    Maximum Credits: 5
    This is an elementary language acquisition course and aims to teach students how to carry out various functions likely to be necessary in dealing with others in the target language. The course aims to develop all four language skills—speaking, listening, reading, and writing, and deals with culture as an integral part of each skill. The language acquisition exercises are supplemented by an integrated and systematic presentation of grammar.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    GER 0002 - ELEMENTARY GERMAN 2


    Minimum Credits: 5
    Maximum Credits: 5
    This course completes the introduction of the basic structures of German begun in German 0001. It emphasizes all four language skills—speaking, listening, reading, and writing and deals with culture as an integral part of each skill. The language acquisition exercises are supplemented by an integrated and systematic presentation of grammar.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GER 0001or 0111
  
  •  

    GER 0003 - INTERMEDIATE GERMAN 1


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Conducted entirely in German, this course provides structured practice in understanding, speaking, reading (unedited texts), and writing. The language-acquisition exercises are supplemented by an integrated and systematic review of grammar, emphasizing those structures that are needed for practical communication in authentic German.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GER 0002 or 0112
  
  •  

    GER 0004 - INTERMEDIATE GERMAN 2


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Conducted entirely in German, this course enables students to describe in past, present, and future time, and to initiate and sustain a conversation. They discuss contemporary texts and topics, participate in small group activities, and strengthen their writing skills through journal writing.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GER 0003 or 0211
  
  •  

    GER 0011 - CONVERSATION 1


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    This course is intended to assist novice level students to strengthen their communicative proficiency. Students learn to handle their needs adequately for travel in Germany or a German-speaking country. In order to encourage oral communication, there is extensive use of audio-visual teaching aids.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    GER 0012 - CONVERSATION 2


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Like its companion course, German 0011, this course emphasizes oral proficiency. The course enables students to converse in formal and informal situations, resolve problems, deal with unfamiliar topics, provide explanations, describe in detail, offer supported opinions, and hypothesize. Areas of context are practical, social, professional, and abstract topics, particular interests, and special fields of competence.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    GER 0021 - GERMAN READING 1


    Minimum Credits: 4
    Maximum Credits: 4
    The objective of this course is to develop a basic reading knowledge of German. It is a beginning course which introduces all the structures of German grammar. German 0021 is designed for students who wish to acquire basic reading skills in the shortest possible time.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    GER 0022 - GERMAN READING 2


    Minimum Credits: 4
    Maximum Credits: 4
    This course is designed to help students obtain an intermediate reading knowledge of German. Students read unedited texts from general fields and from their own areas of specialization. The course includes a systematic review of grammar.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    GER 0041 - ELEMENTARY GERMAN 1


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    First of three courses designed to develop skills in speaking, listening, reading and writing in German. A systematic presentation of grammar will accompany language instruction. Understanding of German culture is emphasized as part of language skill.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    GER 0042 - ELEMENTARY GERMAN 2


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Second of three courses designed to develop skills in speaking, listening, reading and writing in German. A systematic presentation of grammar will accompany language instruction. Understanding of German culture is emphasized as part of language skill.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    GER 0043 - ELEMENTARY GERMAN 3


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    Third of three courses designed to develop skills in speaking, listening, reading and writing in German. A systematic presentation of grammar will accompany language instruction. Understanding of German culture is emphasized as part of language skill.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
    Course Requirements: PREQ: GER 0042  with grade of C or better
  
  •  

    GER 1901 - INDEPENDENT STUDY


    Minimum Credits: 0.5
    Maximum Credits: 15
    A course designed for students who wish to work independently on individually designed projects.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Independent Study
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
  
  •  

    GER 1902 - DIRECTED STUDY


    Minimum Credits: 0.5
    Maximum Credits: 15
    A course for students who wish to work on individually designed projects under the supervision of a faculty member.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Directed Studies
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis

History

  
  •  

    HIST 0100 - WESTERN CIVILIZATION 1


    Minimum Credits: 3
    Maximum Credits: 3
    The study of others leads back to ourselves. We learn about men and women from the past in order to compare their experience to our own, hoping that the comparison will make us more aware of the opportunities and limitations of present-day life. As an introduction to history, this course tries to suggest the excitement and uncertainties of studying the past. We begin at the time of the crusades, and continue through Renaissance and Reformation to the eve of Industrial Revolution.
    Academic Career: UGRD
    Course Component: Lecture
    Grade Component: LG/SNC Elective Basis
 

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