UOCC Preliminary Fall 2003 Curriculum Report. Request additional copies from lindaw@oregon.
After 11/21/03, report errors in writing to lindaw@oregon and gfreeman@oregon. [Updated 11-21-03]
PRELIMINARY
FALL 2003 CURRICULUM REPORT
PLEASE
BRING THIS REPORT OF THE UO COMMITTEE ON COURSES
TO THE
UNIVERSITY SENATE MEETING ON DECEMBER 3, 2003
OVERVIEW
The body of this report consists of two major
sections: Proposed Course Changes for Fall 2004 (unless stated otherwise) and
Other Curricular Matters. Policies and definitions governing group
and multicultural status are listed in the main body of this report. Policies and definitions governing group and
multicultural general-education requirements are under Other Curricular
Matters.
Grading,
repeatability, sequence. Unless
indicated otherwise, courses may be taken either pass/no pass or for letter
grades. P/N only or Graded only
indicates that all students must take the course as specified in the bold
print. Separate grading options for
majors are bracketed in this report and appear in UO class-schedule notes; they
are not printed in UO catalogs. R after course credits means that the
course number may be repeated for credit.
“Sequence: after the description means the courses must be taken in
numerical order. Changes in grading
option, course description, pre- and co-requisites, conditions of
repeatability, and instruction type are not necessarily included here.
LOOKING
AHEAD
The Committee on Courses offers the following reminders:
ü The
Committee on Courses will no longer accept the old manual course proposal forms
as of Winter 2003. The electronic forms
are available on the CAS web site,
http://casweb.uoregon.edu/scripts/index.asp.
Arrangements for access may be made with Peter Campbell in the CAS office, knroc@cas or 6-3336. Future proposals submitted on
old forms will be returned, without review, to academic departments, schools,
or colleges.
ü If there
is any question that a proposed new or changed course might duplicate coverage
in an existing course from another department or school, the proposing
department must gain written confirmation that the other department has been
consulted and does not object to the new or changed course.
ü According
to University Senate legislation, courses submitted for group-satisfying status
must be submitted to the Inter-College General Education Committee. That committee reviews all group-satisfying
proposals at the end of the University Committee on Courses review period.
ü Proposals
for undergraduate group-satisfying and multicultural courses must include
written justification, regardless of whether they are new or existing courses.
ü Courses
may not be both group-satisfying and repeatable for credit.
ü Proposals
for new courses should be accompanied by full syllabi.
ü For
400-/500-level courses, both proposal forms and syllabi must state explicitly
the substantive and measurable differences in type and amount of work for the
two levels.
ü Changes
in University Senate-approved UOCC reports take effect the following fall term
unless requested by a department and stated otherwise in the report.
ü At its
May 1998 meeting, the University Senate agreed that the University Committee on
Courses should include in its reports courses that should be dropped because
(1) they have not been taught for three years, and (2) the department provided
no reasonable explanation of why they have not been taught or whether they will
be in the future.
December
3, 2003: University Senate
considers Fall 2003 preliminary report of the University Committee on Courses.
July
2004: Publication
of 2004-2005 University of Oregon Catalog.
(The changes in this report will first appear in
the 2004-2005 catalog.)
MOTION
The
University of Oregon Committee on Courses moves that Proposed Course Changes
for Fall 2004 (unless otherwise stated) and Other Curricular Matters be
approved. If approved, changes are effective
Fall 2004 unless stated otherwise.
Changes in this report will first appear in the 2004-2005 catalog.
Members,
University of Oregon Committee on Courses
Voting: Paul Engelking, Chair Ex Officio: Jack
Bennett
David
Boush Herb
Chereck
John
Nicols Toby Deemer
Virpi
Zuck Frances
Milligan
Student: Alicia Lindquist Staff: Gayle Freeman
Cory
Portnuff Linda White
College
of Arts and Sciences
ANTHROPOLOGY (ANTH)
OLD COURSE DROPPED
ANTH 363 Nutritional Anthropology (4) Previously satisfied Science Group
requirement.
NEW COURSE
(Subject previously taught as ANTH 363)
ANTH 460/560 Nutritional Anthropology (4) Human nutrition and adaptation. Evolution of
human diet; diet-related disease patterns in different populations; biological,
social, economic, political, and historical factors in human nutrition. Prereq:
ANTH 270.
CAS DEAN’S OFFICE (CAS)
EXISTING COURSE CHANGES
CAS 110 Humanities Freshman Honors Colloquium (1R)
(Changed title, prerequisite)
CAS 110 Humanities College Scholars Colloquium (1R) Pre/coreq: acceptance into the Society of
College Scholars program.
CAS 120 Science Freshman Honors Colloquium (1R)
(Changed title, prerequisite)
CAS 120 Science College Scholars Colloquium (1R) Pre/coreq: acceptance into the Society of
College Scholars program.
CAS 130 Social Science Freshman Honors Colloquium (1R)
(Changed title, prerequisite)
CAS 130 Social Science College Scholars Colloquium (1R) Pre/coreq: acceptance into the Society of
College Scholars program.
COMPUTER AND INFORMATION SCIENCE (CIS, OMSE)
EXISTING
COURSE CHANGE
CIS 471/571
Introduction to Artificial Intelligence (4)
(Changed
grading option)
CIS 471/571
Introduction to Artificial Intelligence (4) Optional grading.
REINSTATED COURSES
OMSE 535 Software Implementation and Testing (3) Reinstated effective Winter 2004.
OMSE 555 Software Development Practicum I (3) Reinstated effective Fall 2003.
OMSE 556 Software Development Practicum II (3) Reinstated effective Winter 2004.
ENGLISH
(ENG)
NEW COURSES
(Subject previously taught as ENG 399)
ENG 313 Teen and Children’s Literature (4) Graded only for majors. Books for
young readers, their social implications and historical context, from the 19th
century to the present. Prereq: Sophomore standing;
co-req: ENG 404
ENG 609 Terminal Project (1-16R) Effective Fall 2003.
ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES (ENVS)
NEW COURSES
ENVS 350 Ecological Footprint of Energy Generation (4) Graded only. Detailed
study of the ecological consequences of all forms of energy generation including
fossil fuels and alternative energy sources. Prereq:
ENVS 201, 202, 203.
(Subject previously taught as ENVS 399)
ENVS 355 Environmental Data Analysis and Modeling (4) Graded only. Statisical Methods of
Data Modeling and Analysis with specific application to environmental data
sets. Prereq: ENVS 202, MATH 252 or equivalent.
GEOGRAPHY
(GEOG)
CHANGED
COURSES
GEOG 461/561 Environmental Alteration (4)
(Changed prerequisites)
GEOG 461/561 Environmental Alteration (4) Prereq: GEOG 341 or 342 or 343 or ENVS 201
or instructor’s consent
GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES (GEOL)
OLD COURSE DROPPED
GEOL 454/554 Geological and Environmental Fluid Mechanics
(4)
CHANGED
COURSES
GEOL 311 Earth Materials (5)
(Changed prerequisites)
GEOL 311 Earth Materials (5) Prereq: GEOL 101, 102 or GEOL 201, 202;
coreq: CH 211 or 224. Effective Fall 2003
GEOL 318 Introduction to Field Methods (3)
(Changed prerequisites)
GEOL 318 Introduction to Field Methods (3) Prereq: GEOL 101-103 or GEOL 201-203.
Effective Fall 2003
GEOL 334 Sedimentology and Stratigraphy (4)
(Changed prerequisites)
GEOL 334 Sedimentology and Stratigraphy (4) Prereq: GEOL 101-103 or GEOL 201-203; GEOL
311. Effective Fall 2003
GEOL 350 Structural Geology (3)
(Changed prerequisites)
GEOL 350 Structural Geology (3) Prereq: GEOL 101, 102 or GEOL 201, 202; GEOL
311 or instructor’s consent. Effective Fall 2003
GEOL 431/531 Paleontology I: Paleozoic Marine Fossils (4)
Changed prerequisites)
GEOL 431/531 Paleontology I: Paleozoic Marine Fossils (4) Prereq: GEOL 103 or 203, or instructor’s
consent. Effective Fall 2003
GEOL 432/532 Paleontology II: Mesozoic and Cenozoic Marine
Fossils (4)
(Changed prerequisites)
GEOL 432/532 Paleontology II: Mesozoic and Cenozoic Marine
Fossils (4) Prereq: GEOL 103
or 203, or instructor’s consent. Effective Fall 2003
GERMANIC LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES (SCAN)
NEW COURSE
SCAN 259 Vikings through the Icelandic Sagas (4) Introduction to the social, political, and
cultural expressions of Viking society through the Sagas, the unique prose
narratives of medieval Iceland. Effective Spring 2004. Approved to satisfy
Arts and Letters Group and International Cultures Multicultural requirements.
HISTORY
(HIST)
EXISTING COURSE CHANGE
HIST 329 The Mediterranean World (4)
(Changed title, repeatability)
HIST 329 The Mediterranean World: [Topic] (4R) R twice when topic changes for a maximum
of 12 credits.
INTERNATIONAL STUDIES (INTL)
NEW COURSES
(Subject previously taught as INTL 407/507)
INTL 433/533 Childhood and Cross-cultural Perspective (4) Graded only. Explores the experience
of childhood around the world and examines how this experience is shaped by
beliefs about who and what children are and by local conditions and
contingencies. Approved to satisfy Identity, Pluralism, and Tolerance
Multicultural requirement.
(Subject previously taught as INTL 407/507)
INTL 444/544 Development and Social Change in Southeast
Asia (4) Graded only. Introduction
to the region and to the complex social issues facing the peoples of Southeast
Asia. Approved to satisfy International Cultures Multicultural requirement.
(Subject previously taught as INTL 407/507)
INTL 447/547 Comparative Tribalisms (4) Graded only. Situates contemporary
polemics in Africa and the U.S. regarding ethnic, racial and religious
violence, culture wars, and nationalism in a comparative analytic framework. Approved
to satisfy Identity, Pluralism, and Tolerance Multicultural requirement.
PHILOSOPHY
(PHIL)
NEW COURSE
PHIL 110 Human Nature (4) Consideration of various physiological, cultural, psychological,
and personal forces that characterize human being, taking into account issues
of class, gender, race, and sexual orientation. Approved to satisfy Arts and
Letters Group and Identity, Pluralism, and Tolerance Multicultural requirements.
POLITICAL SCIENCE (PS)
REINSTATED COURSE
PS 468/568 Congress (4) Reinstated effective
Winter 2004.
ROMANCE LANGUAGES (SPAN)
NEW COURSES
(Subject previously taught as SPAN 408)
SPAN 425/525 Literary Translation (4) Variable topics on literary translation.
Topics include Con/Textos; first issues, & cultural
translation/transculturation in practice. Prereq: SPAN 420/520 recommended.
(Subject previously taught as SPAN 407/507)
SPAN 451/551 Sor Juana and Her Context (4) The debate on women and the woman
intellectual; aesthetic definitions and the social meaning of Renaissance and
Baroque. Taught in Spanish. Prereq: SPAN 318.
RUSSIAN AND EAST EUROPEAN STUDIES CENTER (REESC)
REINSTATED COURSE
RUSS 240 Russian Culture (4)
Reinstated effective Winter 2004.
SOCIOLOGY (SOC)
NEW COURSE
SOC 467/567 Economic Sociology (4) [Graded only for majors] This course
applies the sociological perspective to basic economic phenomena such as
markets, exchange, prices, money and rationality.
REINSTATED COURSE
SOC 644 Race and Ethnicity Issues [Topic] (5R) Reinstated effective Fall 2003.
THEATER ARTS (TA)
EXISTING COURSE CHANGE
TA 664 Special Problems in History of Theater (3R)
(Changed credits)
TA 664 Special Problems in History of Theater (4R) Effective Spring 2004.
Professional
Schools and Colleges
SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE AND
ALLIED ARTS
ARCHITECTURE (ARCH)
NEW COURSE
(Subject previously taught as ARCH 410/510)
ARCH 470/570 Building Construction (4) Provide an understanding of the basic materials
and methods of architecure with emphasis on the design, construction and
performance of primary structure. Prereq: undergraduates ARCH 281, graduates
ARCH 681.
ART
(ARTC)
EXISTING COURSE CHANGE
ARTC 255 Beginning
Ceramics (4-5R)
(Changed title, credits, description, repeatability)
ARTC 255 Ceramics: [Topic] (4)
Specific skills focus each term. Focused subject matter will include
processes related to design development, forming and fabrication, firing
methods, glazing. R three times for maximum of 16 credits
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE (LA)
EXISTING COURSE CHANGE
LA 620 Research Methods (2R)
(Changed repeatability)
LA 620 Research Methods I (2) No
longer repeatable.
NEW COURSE
LA 621 Research Methods II (2) Theories, methodologies, and techniques
applicable to topics and problems in Landscape Architecture. Prereq: LA 620.
PLANNING, PUBLIC POLICY AND MANAGEMENT (PPPM)
PPPM 524 Managing Public Money (4) Reinstated effective Spring 2004.
LUNDQUIST COLLEGE OF BUSINESS
DECISION SCIENCES (DSC)
NEW COURSES
DSC 340 Business Information Systems (4) Graded only. Explores standard
protocols for describing and modeling business information and processes;
techniques for designing management information systems; criteria for analyzing
firms’ implementations of information technology.
DSC 340H Business Information Systems (4) Graded only. Explores standard
protocols for describing and modeling business information and processes;
techniques for designing management information systems; criteria for analyzing
firms' implementation of information technology.
DSC 433/533 Information Analysis for Managerial Decisions
(4) Graded only. Leveraging
information to manage risk and improve decisions; data-driven approaches for
discovering business trends and strategic opportunities, including techniques
for data-mining and analyzing empirical data. Prereq: DSC 330, 340/340H.
(Subject previously taught as 410)
DSC 444/544 Business Database Management Systems (4) Graded only. Techniques for
structuring and storing business data; primary focus on relational database
theory, with applied skills for business users, including data warehouses,
reporting, and normalization. Prereq: DSC 340/340H.
DSC 466/566 Project and Operations Management Models (4) Graded only. Frameworks and solutions
for managing complex projects and operations; implementing optimal strategies
for producing profitable new products and services in the competitive global
business environment. Prereq: DSC 340/340H.
DSC 477/577 Supply Chain Operations and Information (4) Graded only. Strategic and tactical
issues pertaining to the distribution and delivery of products and services.
Methodologies and systems for designing, tracking, and managing complex global
operations. Prereq: DSC 340/340H.
DSC 488/588 E-Business (4) Graded only. Fundamental principles
of electronic business; effect of e-business on business strategies, processes,
customers, and suppliers; assessing the impact of e-business technologies on
firm performance. Prereq: DSC 340/340H.
MANAGEMENT
(MGMT)
OLD COURSES DROPPED
MGMT 416 Leadership in Organizations (4)
MGMT 418 Managing Change (4)
MGMT 612 Managing In Competitive Environments (3)
EXISTING COURSE CHANGES
MGMT 335 Introduction to Entrepreneurship (4)
(Changed title)
MGMT 335 Launching New Ventures (4)
MGMT 417
Negotiation and Conflict Resolution (4)
(Changed title)
MGMT 417 Negotiation Strategies (4)
MGMT 420 Managing in a Global Economy (4)
(Changed description)
MGMT 420 Managing in a Global Economy (4) Economic, political and
cultural challenges facing international managers. Topics include developing
competitive global strategies and organizations, international negotiations,
building strategic alliances, cross-cultural teams, and international staffing.
Pre/coreq: MGMT 321 or equivalent.
MARKETING (MKTG)
OLD COURSES DROPPED
MKTG 450 Sports Marketing (4)
MKTG 451 Sports Marketing Communication (4)
MKTG 452 Sports Sponsorship (4)
MKTG 453 Law and Sports Marketing (4)
MKTG 650 Marketing Sports Properties (3)
MKTG 652 Sports Sponsorship Alliances (3)
MKTG 655 Economic Aspects of Sports Marketing (3)
EXISTING COURSE CHANGE
MKTG 445 Marketing for Entrepreneurs (4)
(Changed title)
MKTG 445 New Product Development (4)
SPORTS BUSINESS (SBUS) New subject
code: SBUS
NEW COURSES
SBUS 199 Special Studies: [Topic] (1-4R) R 3 times for a maximum of 16 credits
when topic changes.
SBUS 401 Research: [Topic] (1-4R) Prereq: Instructor's and department head’s
consent. R 3 times for a maximum
of 16 credits when topic changes.
SBUS 405 Readings and Conference: [Topic] (1-4R) R 3 times for a maximum of 16 credits
when topic changes.
SBUS 406 Special Problems: [Topic] (1-4R) Prereq: Instructor's and department head's
consent. R 3 times for a maximum
of 16 credits when topic changes.
SBUS 407 Seminar: [Topic]
(1-4R) Prereq:
Instructor's and department head's consent.
R 3 times for a maximum of 16 credits when topic changes.
SBUS 409 Practicum: [Topic] (1-4R) Prereq:
Instructor's or department head's consent.
R 3 times for a maximum of 16 credits when topic changes.
(Subject previously taught as MKTG 450)
SBUS 450 Sports Marketing (4) Graded only. Essentials of effective
sports marketing. Includes research, segmentation, product development,
pricing, licensing, and communication channels such as advertising, sales
promotion, and publicity. Prereq: MKTG 311.
(Subject previously taught as MKTG 451)
SBUS 451 Sports Marketing Communication (4) Graded only. Publicity, public
relations, advertising, use of celebrities, sales promotion, sales force
involvement. Economic and public policy issues. Prereq: MKTG 450.
(Subject previously taught as MKTG 452)
SBUS 452 Sports Sponsorship (4) Graded only. Detailed consideration
of the relationship between sports and corporate sponsorship programs. Focuses
on alignment marketing, sponsor value, and sponsorship evaluation. Prereq: MKTG
450.
(Subject previously taught as MKTG 453)
SBUS 453 Law and Sports Marketing (4) Graded only. Law and sports
marketing, including contracts, legal aspects of licensing, relations with
agents, intellectual properties law. Public policy issues. Prereq: MKTG 450.
SBUS 410/510 Experimental Course: [Topic] (1-4R) Graded only. Recent topics include
Sports Economics, International Sport, and Sport and Technology. R 3
times for a maximum of 16 credits when topic changes.
SBUS 601 Research: [Topic] (1-4R) P/N only. Prereq: Instructor's and department head's consent. R 3 times for a maximum of 16 credits
when topic changes.
SBUS 605 Reading: [Topic]
(1-4R) R 3 times
for a maximum of 16 credits when topic changes.
SBUS 607 Seminar: [Topic]
(1-4R) Prereq:
Instructor's and department head's consent.
R 3 times for a maximum of 16 credits when topic changes.
SBUS 608 Special Topics: [Topic] (1-4R) Prereq:
Instructor's or department head's consent.
R 3 times for a maximum of 16 credits when topic changes.
SBUS 609 Practicum: [Topic] (1-4R) Prereq:
Instructor's or department head's consent.
R 3 times for a maximum of 16 credits when topic changes.
SBUS 610 Experimental Course (3R) Graded only. Topic. Recent topics
include International Sport, Sport and Technology. R When topic changes.
(Subject previously taught as MKTG 650)
SBUS 650 Marketing Sports Properties (3) Graded only. Examines essentials of
effective sports marketing. Includes product or property development, legal
aspects, segmentation , pricing, and communication channels (e.g., broadcast
media). Prereq: completion of first-year M.B.A. core.
(Subject previously taught as MKTG 652)
SBUS 652 Sports Sponsorship Alliances (3)
Graded only. Detailed consideration of the relation between
sports, law, and corporate sponsorship programs. Focuses on alignment marketing
issues, strategic communicatioin through sponsorship, sponsor value, and
sponsorship valuation. Prereq: completion of first-year M.B.A. core.
(Subject previously taught as MKTG 655)
SBUS 655 Economic Aspects of Sports (3) Graded only. Comprehensive coverage
of traditional and innovative revenue methods available to sports organizations
from public and private sources. Detailed consideration of venue-based income
sources (e.g., premium seating, permanent seat licenses). Prereq: completion of
first-year M.B.A. core.
COLLEGE OF EDUCATION
COUNSELING PSYCHOLOGY AND HUMAN SERVICES (COUN, CPSY, MFT)
OLD COURSES DROPPED
COUN 503 Thesis (1-16R)
COUN 601 Research (1-16R)
COUN 605 Reading and Conference (1-16R)
COUN 606 Special Problems (1-16R)
COUN 607 Seminar (1-5R)
COUN 608 Workshop (1-16R)
COUN 609 Practicum (1-16R)
COUN 610 Experimental Course (1-5R)
NEW COURSES
(Subject previously taught as CPSY 610)
CPSY 624 Alcohol and Drug Detection and Intervention (3) Graded only for majors. Research and
practice related to alcoholism and chemical dependency-detection, treatment,
etiology, diagnosis, and physiological and psychopharmacological aspects across
diverse ages and populations.
(Subject
previously taught as MFT 610)
MFT 632 Medical Family Therapy (3) Introduction to the theory, fundamentals,
and practical applications of medical family therapy.
EDUCATIONAL LEADERSHIP (EDLD)
OLD COURSES DROPPED
EDLD 441/541 History of American Education (3)
EDLD 612 School Improvement (3)
EDLD 633 Curriculum and Instructional Foundations (4)
EDLD 670 Human Resource Management (3)
EDLD 689 Economics of Education (3)
EDLD 692 Higher Education I: Governance & Organization
(4)
EDLD 693 Higher Education II: Leadership & Management
(4)
EDLD 695 History of Higher Education (3)
EXISTING COURSE CHANGES
EDLD 409 Practicum (1-21R)
(Changed credits, grading options)
EDLD 409 Practicum (1-12R)
Grading optional.
EDLD 609 Practicum (1-16R)
(Changed grading options)
EDLD 609 Practicum 1-16R)
Grading optional.
EDLD 614 Politics of Education (3)
(Changed credits, grading options)
EDLD 614 Politics of Education (4)
Grading optional.
EDLD 617 Dissertation Proposal Preparation (3R)
(Changed credits)
EDLD 617 Dissertation Proposal Preparation (1-3R)
EDLD 620 Educational Leadership (3)
(Changed credits)
EDLD 620 Educational Leadership (4)
EDLD 630 Comparative Education (3)
(Changed credits)
EDLD 630 Comparative Education (4)
EDLD 655 Analysis of Teaching & Learning (3)
(Changed credits)
EDLD 655 Analysis of Teaching & Learning (4)
EDLD 660 Qualitative Research Methods (3)
(Changed credits)
EDLD 660 Qualitative Research Methods (4)
EDLD 681 Program Evaluation for Educational Managers (3)
(Changed title, credits)
EDLD 681 Program Evaluation for Educational Managers I (4)
NEW COURSE
(Subject previously taught as 607)
EDLD 654 Information Management and Decision-Making (4) Help educational decision makers, and those
who advise them, locate, organize, display, analyze, and communicate pertinent
information to facilitate efficient and effective decision-making.
EDUCATIONAL STUDIES (EDST)
OLD COURSES DROPPED
EDST 211 Historical Foundations of Education (4)
EDST 311 Organizational Structures and Policymaking (4)
SPEECH, LANGUAGE AND HEARING SCIENCES (CDS)
EXISTING COURSE CHANGE
CDS 655 Stuttering (2)
(Changed credits)
CDS 655 Stuttering (3)
SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM AND
COMMUNICATION
OLD COURSES DROPPED
J 312 Introduction to Media Systems (3)
NEW COURSES
(Subject previously taught as J 399)
J 314 Introduction to Communication Studies (4) Graded only. Presents a historical
overview of the field and an in-depth discussion of the primary theoretical
approaches to media studies. Prereq: J 201.
J 413 Communication Studies Capstone (4) Graded only. Draws on skills and
knowledge learned in other communications studies and related classes to
demonstrate competence in broad areas of research. Prereq: completion of
requirements for the communication studies specialization.
(Subject previously taught as J 399)
J 454/554 Public Relations Campaigns and Case Studies (4) Graded only. Emphasizes research and
evaluation methods. Addresses the management of public relations and
communication functions in organizations. Professional portfolios prepared and
presented. Prereq: J 351, 453.
(Subject previously taught as J 410/510)
J 465/565 Cyberjournalism (4) Graded only. Critically examines
components of online journalism; explores various aspects of web publishing.
Participants collaborate in creating a class website. Prereq: J 331 or I
(Subject previously taught as J 410)
J 475/575 Flux Magazine Production (1-5R). Graded only. Magazine
production is an intensive, hands-on course in which students plan and produce
Flux magazine. Students make and carry out assignments, write and edit stories,
take photos sell advertising, and do all design and layout. Prereq: major
status, instructor’s consent. Repeatable for a maximum of 12 credits.
SCHOOL OF LAW
EXISTING COURSE CHANGE
LAW 673
Patent Law and Policy (2)
(Changed credits)
LAW 673
Patent Law and Policy (2-3) Effective
Fall 2003
SCHOOL OF MUSIC
DANCE
(DAN)
NEW
COURSE
DAN 412/512 Student Dance Concert (1-6R) Graded only. Students apply
ideas learned about concert choreography, production, and management. In a
cooperative venture, students produce their dance works in Dougherty Dance
Theatre. Prereq: DAN 225, 352. R for a maximum of 24 credits.
MUSIC (MUE, MUS)
The following courses with the MUE and MUS subject code
will restrict registrants to those with a major standing.
MUE
386, 387, 388, 486, 487, 488 Teaching Laboratory (1)
MUE 391 Voice Pedagogy (1R)
MUE 409, 609 Practicum: [Topic] (1-4R)
MUE 411/511 Band Methods (3)
MUE 412/512 Teaching Methods: Elementary Choral and General
(3)
MUE
413/513 Teaching Methods: Secondary Choral and General (3)
MUE
420/520 Orff-Kodály (3)
MUE
430/530 Music Classroom Ecology and Management (3)
MUE
636 Administration of School Music (3)
MUE
637 Technology of Teaching Music (3)
MUE 638 Curricular Strategies in Music Education (3)
MUE
777 Supervised Field Experience (1R)
MUE
442/542 Teaching Singing in the Classroom (3)
MUE
444/544 Choral Materials for Schools (3)
MUS 485/585 Advanced Choral Conducting (3)
MUSIC PERFORMANCE (MUP)
OLD COURSE
DROPPED
MUP 111/311
Performance Study for Nonmajors: [Topic] (2-4R)
EXISTING
COURSE CHANGES
MUP 140 Intermediate
Performance Studies Voice (2-4)
(Changed title, repeatability, prerequisites)
MUP 140 Performance Study Voice (2-4) Open to nonmajors. R for a
maximum of 12 credits. Prereq: Audition.
MUP 141
Intermediate Performance Studies Piano (2-4)
(Changed title, repeatability, prerequisites)
MUP 141 Performance Study Piano (2-4) Open to nonmajors. R for a
maximum of 12 credits. Prereq: Audition.
MUP 142
Intermediate Performance Studies Harpsichord (2-4)
(Changed title, repeatability, prerequisites)
MUP 142 Performance Study Harpsichord (2-4) Open to nonmajors. R for a
maximum of 12 credits. Prereq: Audition.
MUP 143
Intermediate Performance Studies Organ (2-4)
(Changed title, repeatability, prerequisites)
MUP 143 Performance Study Organ (2-4) Open to nonmajors. R for a
maximum of 12 credits. Prereq: Audition.
MUP 145
Intermediate Performance Studies Violin (2-4)
(Changed title, repeatability, prerequisites)
MUP 145 Performance Study Violin (2-4) Open to nonmajors. R for a
maximum of 12 credits. Prereq: Audition.
MUP 146
Intermediate Performance Studies Viola (2-4)
(Changed title, repeatability, prerequisites)
MUP 146 Performance Study Viola (2-4) Open to nonmajors. R for a
maximum of 12 credits. Prereq: Audition.
MUP 147
Intermediate Performance Studies Cello (2-4)
(Changed title, repeatability, prerequisites)
MUP 147 Performance Study Cello (2-4) Open to nonmajors. R for a
maximum of 12 credits. Prereq: Audition.
MUP 148
Intermediate Performance Studies Bass (2-4)
(Changed title, repeatability, prerequisites)
MUP 148 Performance Study Bass (2-4) Open to nonmajors. R for a
maximum of 12 credits. Prereq: Audition.
MUP 149
Intermediate Performance Studies Harp (2-4)
(Changed title, repeatability, prerequisites)
MUP 149 Performance Study Harp (2-4) Open to nonmajors. R for a
maximum of 12 credits. Prereq: Audition.
MUP 150
Intermediate Performance Studies Guitar (2-4)
(Changed title, repeatability, prerequisites)
MUP 150 Performance Study Guitar (2-4) Open to nonmajors. R for a
maximum of 12 credits. Prereq: Audition.
MUP 151
Intermediate Performance Studies Flute (2-4)
(Changed title, repeatability, prerequisites)
MUP 151 Performance Study Flute (2-4) Open to nonmajors. R for a
maximum of 12 credits. Prereq: Audition.
MUP 152
Intermediate Performance Studies Oboe (2-4)
(Changed title, repeatability, prerequisites)
MUP 152 Performance Study Oboe (2-4) Open to nonmajors. R for a
maximum of 12 credits. Prereq: Audition.
MUP 153
Intermediate Performance Studies Clarinet (2-4)
(Changed title, repeatability, prerequisites)
MUP 153 Performance Study Clarinet (2-4) Open to nonmajors. R for a
maximum of 12 credits. Prereq: Audition.
MUP 154
Intermediate Performance Studies Saxophone (2-4)
(Changed title, repeatability, prerequisites)
MUP 154 Performance Study Saxophone (2-4) Open to nonmajors. R for a
maximum of 12 credits. Prereq: Audition.
MUP 155
Intermediate Performance Studies Bassoon (2-4)
(Changed title, repeatability, prerequisites)
MUP 155 Performance Study Bassoon (2-4) Open to nonmajors. R for a
maximum of 12 credits. Prereq: Audition.
MUP 156
Intermediate Performance Studies Trumpet (2-4)
(Changed title, repeatability, prerequisites)
MUP 156 Performance Study Trumpet (2-4) Open to nonmajors. R for a
maximum of 12 credits. Prereq: Audition.
MUP 157
Intermediate Performance Studies French Horn (2-4)
(Changed title, repeatability, prerequisites)
MUP 157 Performance Study French Horn (2-4) Open to nonmajors. R for a
maximum of 12 credits. Prereq: Audition.
MUP 158
Intermediate Performance Studies Trombone (2-4)
(Changed title, repeatability, prerequisites)
MUP 158 Performance Study Trombone (2-4) Open to nonmajors. R for a
maximum of 12 credits. Prereq: Audition.
MUP 159
Intermediate Performance Studies Euphonium (2-4)
(Changed title, repeatability, prerequisites)
MUP 159 Performance Study Euphonium (2-4) Open to nonmajors. R for a
maximum of 12 credits. Prereq: Audition.
MUP 160
Intermediate Performance Studies Tuba (2-4)
(Changed title, repeatability, prerequisites)
MUP 160 Performance Study Tuba (2-4) Open to nonmajors. R for a
maximum of 12 credits. Prereq: Audition.
MUP 161
Intermediate Performance Studies Percussion (2-4)
(Changed title, repeatability, prerequisites)
MUP 161 Performance Study Percussion (2-4) Open to nonmajors. R for a
maximum of 12 credits. Prereq: Audition.
Other
Curricular Matters
LUNDQUIST COLLEGE OF BUSINESS
Certificate in Global Management. Effective Fall
1999.
COURSE PROPOSALS DENIED
The
following information is not provided for approval by the University
Senate. It is to inform academic and
administrative departments about the status of proposals received but not
approved by the UO Committee on Courses during Fall 2003.
The committee will continue to consider new proposals and
those completed since publication of the Fall 2003 Final Report. The committee will submit another quarterly
report to the University Senate in March 2004.
However, only proposals that were approved in the Fall 2003 Final Report
will appear in the 2004-2005 University of Oregon Catalog.
COUNSELING PSYCHOLOGY AND HUMAN SERVICES (FHS)
EXISTING COURSE CHANGES
FHS 405 Reading: Topic (1-5R)
(Changed credits)
FHS 405 Reading: [Topic] (1-21)
FHS 605 Reading: Topic (1-5R)
(Changed credits)
FHS 605 Reading: [Topic] (1-21)
COURSE PROPOSALS WITHDRAWN
TEACHER EDUCATION (EDST)
NEW COURSES
EDST 420/520 Foundations of Education (4)
EDST 443/543 Science and Health Methods (4)
EDST 444/544 Social Studies/Language Arts Methods (4)
EDST 447/547 Reading/Writing in Upper Elementary (4)
DROPPED COURSES
The
following courses are removed from the curriculum by action of the Committee on
Courses. These courses have not been
taught for three or more years. The
faculty has recommended that permanently numbered courses be offered at least
every other year to avoid misrepresentation of course offerings to prospective
students, and ensure that required courses are readily available to current
students.
Courses may be reinstated within a period of three years,
immediately conditional upon the following:
(a) there has been no change made to the course, (b) the department
provides the term the course will be taught, and (c) the department provides
the name of the faculty who will be responsible for teaching.
AAD 452/552 Women and Their Art (4); last taught Fall 1999
ART 474/574 Experimental Animators (3R); last taught Summer
2000
ART 482/582 Anatomy for Artists (3-4); last taught Winter
2000
ART 485/585 Artist’s Books (3-4R); last taught Spring 2000
ARTD 208 Foundations: [Topic] (3-4R); never taught
ARTO 478/578 Photography in Art and Culture (4R); last
taught Winter 2000
ARTV 260 Computers in Visual Design (3-4R); last taught
Summer 2000
PPPM 464/564 Cost-Benefit Analysis (4); last taught Winter 2000
ANTH 436/536 Culture of Island Southeast Asia (4); last
taught Fall 1999
ANTH 437/537 Cultures of Mainland Southeast Asia (4); last
taught Winter 2000
ASTR 323 Astrophysical Techniques (4); never taught
BI 481/581 Quantitative Genetics (4); last taught Winter
2000
BI 488/588 Evolution in Plant Populations (4); last taught
Fall 1999
CH 102 Science and Society (4)
EC
494/594 Issues in Modern Economic Thought (4); last taught Fall 1999
EMS 641 Motor Control I (4); never taught
EMS 642 Motor Control II (4); never taught
FLR 413/513 Folk Art and Material Culture (4); last taught
Winter 2000
GEOG 444/544 Geography of Languages (4); last taught Winter
2000
GEOL 470/570 Introduction to Geochemistry (4); last taught
Fall 1999
JPN 438/538 Classical Japanese Literary Language (4); last
taught Winter 2000
JPN 450/550 Japanese Bibliography (2); last taught Spring
2000
LING 144 Introduction to Foreign Language Learning (3);
last taught Fall 1999
REL
330 Buddhism and Asian Culture (4); last taught Summer 2000
RUSS 301 Readings in Russian Literature (4); last taught
Fall 1999
ACTG 623 Managerial and Financial Accounting Analysis (3);
last taught Winter 2000
BE 420 Business Law (4); last taught Winter 2000
BE 425 Business Social Responsibility (4); last taught
Spring 2000
MKTG
661 Advanced Analysis of Consumer Behavior (3); last taught Winter 2000
MKTG 662 Marketing Communications (3); last taught Winter
2000
CDS 666 Congenital Syndromes and Communication (3); last
taught Summer 2000
SPSY 628 Assessment of Infants and Preschoolers (3); last
taught Winter 2000
SPSY 629 History and Systems of Psychology (3); last taught
Spring 2000
J 435/535 Television Direction (4); last taught Winter 2000
J 464/564 Newspaper Design (4); last taught Fall 1999
J 649 International Communication (4); last taught Spring
2000
J 655 Gender and Media (4); never taught
LIB
240 Legal Research (3); last taught Spring 2000
DANC 178 International Folk I (1); last taught Spring 2000
DANC 179 Balkans and Eastern European (1); last taught Fall
1999
MUS 426/526 Score Reading (2R); last taught Winter 2000
PEAQ 321 Swim and Run (1-2R); last taught Spring 2000
PEOL 261 Cross-Country Skiing I (1-2R); last taught Winter
2000
PEOL 274 Telemark Skiing (1-2R); last taught Winter 1999
PEOL 382 Ski Touring Outing II (1-2R); never taught
PEOL
457 Administration of Outdoor Pursuits (3); last taught Winter 2000
PEOW 206 Fly Fishing II (1-2R); last taught Spring 2000
CONTENTS OF COURSE SYLLABUS
As the primary, commonly available, summary of a course,
the syllabus serves several purposes.
It outlines the course, it denotes what students may expect from the
course, and it locates the course in the curriculum. Not only read by prospective students, it is the best, concise,
description of a course by those who teach it that is available to students and
colleagues. The University Committee on
Courses uses course syllabi in its review of courses. To maximize a course the usefulness of a syllabus to students and
faculty, it is suggested that it contain the following contents.
1. Course Number
2. Title
3. Credits
4. Term, place, time, instructor
(For a new course proposal, indicate when
it is likely to be offered, and how frequently)
(For a new course proposal, indicate who
is likely to teach the course)
5. Place in Curriculum
•
Group requirement satisfying?
(Explain why)
•
Multicultural requirement satisfying? (Explain why)
•
Other general education requirement satisfying?
•
Satisfying other major or program requirement?
•
Preparatory for other courses?
•
Prerequisites or other suggested preparation.
6. Format (Lecture, Discussion, Lab, . . .)
7. Outline of subject and topics explored
8. Course materials (Texts, books, readings, .
. .)
9. Expectations for students
•
Explicitly (by pages assigned, lengths of assignments, etc.), or by
•
Expected student engagement (see suggested Student Engagement Inventory)
•
Readings
•
Problems
•
Attendance
•
Project
•
Writing
•
Laboratory
•
Field work
•
Electronic media/network/online
•
Performance
•
Presentation
•
Tests
•
Differential expected for graduate work for joint 400/500 level courses.
10. Assessment
•
Methods (testing, homework, . . .)
•
Times or frequency
•
Grading policy
[See
Faculty Handbook for other recommendations regarding university policies.]
STUDENT ENGAGEMENT INVENTORY
To
aid in assigning student credit hours uniformly to courses in the curriculum,
the committee inventories the amount of student engagement in a course. The committee has found the following tool
to be useful. Departments preparing
course proposals are invited to use this, when deciding how many SCH units to
request for a proposed course, and encouraged to report to the committee how
this tool may be improved for their use.
Please
identify the number of hours a typical or average student would be expected to
spend in each of the following activities. The general guideline is that each
credit should reflect 30 hours of student engagement. Therefore, a 3-credit
course would engage students for 90 hours total among the activities listed
below, whereas a 4-credit course would list 120 hours of activities in which
students are engaged over the course of the term.
Educational activity |
Hours
student engaged |
Explanatory comments (if any): |
Course attendance |
|
|
Assigned readings |
|
|
Project |
|
|
Writing assignments |
|
|
Lab or workshop |
|
|
Field work/experience |
|
|
Online interaction |
|
|
Performances/creative activities |
|
|
Total hours: |
|
|
Definition of terms:
Course attendance |
Actual time student spends in class with instructor or
GTF |
Assigned readings |
Estimated time it takes for a student with average
reading ability to read all assigned readings |
Writing assignments |
Estimated time it takes for a student with average
writing ability to produce a final, acceptable written product as required by
the assignment |
Project |
Estimated time a student would be expected to spend
creating or contributing to a project that meets course requirements
(includes individual and group projects) |
Lab or workshop |
Actual time scheduled for any lab or workshop activities
that are required but are scheduled outside of class hours |
Field work/ experience |
Actual or estimated time a student would spend or be
expected to spend engaged in required field work or other field-based
activities |
Online activities |
Actual or estimated time a student would spend or be
expected to spend engaged in online activities directly related to the
course, separate from online research required for projects or writing
assignments |
Performances/creative activities |
Actual or estimated time a student would spend or be
expected to spend outside of class hours engaged in preparing for required
performance or creative activity |
UNDERGRADUATE GENERAL-EDUCATION REQUIREMENTS
GROUP-REQUIREMENT POLICIES
The following criteria were
proposed by the Undergraduate Council and the College of Arts and Sciences
Curriculum Committee. The University
Senate approved them in May 1998.
1. Group-satisfying courses proposed by departments or individual
faculty members must be reviewed by both the College of Arts and Sciences
Curriculum Committee and the University Committee on Courses before submission
to the University Senate.
2. Group-satisfying courses must be numbered at
the 100, 200, and 300 levels.
Lower-division courses must be offered annually and upper division
courses at least biannually. Approved
courses must be at least 4 credits each [Senate Resolution US 9900-6, February
9, 2000].
3. No more than three courses with the same subject code may be
counted by a student as satisfying group requirements.
4. Group-satisfying courses in art and letters, social science, and
science must meet the following criteria:
b. Group-satisfying courses in the social sciences must be liberal in
nature rather than professionally oriented or devoted in substantial measure to
the performance of professional skills.
They must cover a representative cross-section of key issues,
perspectives, and modes of analysis employed by scholars working on the subject
matter addressed by the course. The
subject matter of the course will be relatively broad (e.g., involving more
than one issue, place, or time). Courses
with emphasis on methods and skills will satisfy the requirement only if there
is also a substantial and coherent theoretical component.
c. Group-satisfying courses in the sciences should introduce students
to the foundations of one or more scientific disciplines, or provide a
scientific perspective on a major problem facing society, or provide an
introduction to scientific methods (including the use of mathematics and
computers) used within or among disciplines.
5. In
particular:
a.
Courses designed
primarily for majors are not excluded a priori from group status.
b. Courses in methods or statistical analysis are
excluded in the social sciences, but courses in theory construction are
acceptable.
c.
Laboratory courses are
not excluded from group-satisfying status in the sciences.
d. Qualifying courses in arts and letters cannot
focus on teaching basic skills, so first-year German, for example, could not
qualify for group status, but reading Goethe in German might.
SUSTAINABLE COURSE DESCRIPTIONS
The 2000-2001 academic year was the first year that the Committee on
Courses systematically deleted from the University catalog courses that have
not been taught for three years or more.
In several cases, departments had
not offered a specialized course under a course number and title specified in
the catalog. Yet, similar courses had
been taught regularly in the department in various formats, under experimental
numbers (410, 510, 610), or under the general designations for special topics
seminars, workshops, or practicums (the 4/5/6 06,07,08,09 series). With time, departments had discovered that a
course description in the catalog was too specialized to apply to any of their
courses as actually being taught.
Unfortunately, removal of an
overly specialized course, although untaught, still might have consequences for
departments. Often, that course had
been the sole representatives in the catalog of subjects that are taught by a
department and are part of the regular curriculum. Dropping that course could make it appear that a department
offered no courses in that course’s subject area.
The committee has noted another,
companion problem. Over the years, the
committee has observed that new courses tailored to the particular research
interests and instructional style of an individual faculty member are likely to
fall into disuse within a few years as the person's teaching assignments and
interests change, or if the instructor becomes unavailable for teaching that
particular course.
The Committee on Courses
recommends that departments and programs develop more sustainable course
descriptions. A sustainable course
description would identify a subject area and general approach, but would not
be so restrictive as to exclude different perspectives or specializations also
representative of that subject area.
The Committee also recommends
that departments and programs be selective when proposing permanent course
status for specialized courses that can only be taught by one particular
instructor.
For example: A department with
several experts qualified to teach ceramics, but having only one instructor who
specializes in Ming porcelain per se,
might currently have a specialized course titled “Ming Dynasty Porcelains” in the catalog. A more sustainable course title could be
“Chinese Porcelains, ” or even “Porcelains,” depending upon the range of
expertise available to teach the course.
Another approach would use the topics course “Ceramics,” possibly
repeatable as the exact subject material–and transcript title–changes.
Departments following these recommendations could
then represent the full range of their curricular offerings and could maintain
a sustainable list of courses in the catalog.
MULTICULTURAL-CATEGORY DEFINITIONS
Category A:
American Cultures. The goal is
to focus on race and ethnicity in the United States by considering racial and
ethnic groups from historical and comparative perspectives. Five racial or ethnic groups are identified:
African American, Chicano or Latino, Native American, Asian American, European
American. Approved courses deal with at
least two of these groups in a comparative manner. They do not necessarily deal specifically with discrimination or
prejudice, although many do.
Category B:
Identity, Pluralism, and Tolerance.
The goal is to gain scholarly insight into the construction of
collective identities, the emergence of representative voices from varying
social and cultural standpoints, and the effects of prejudice, intolerance, and
discrimination. The identities at issue
may include ethnicities as in the American Cultures category, as well as
classes, genders, religions, sexual orientations, or other groups whose
experiences contribute to cultural pluralism.
This category includes courses that analyze the general principles
underlying tolerance, or the lack of it.
Category C: International Cultures. The goal is to study world cultures in
critical perspective. Approved courses
either treat an international culture in view of the issues raised in
Categories A and B—namely, race and ethnicity, pluralism and monoculturalism,
and/or prejudice and tolerance—or explicitly describe and analyze a
world-view—i.e., a system of knowledge, feeling, and belief—that is
substantially different from those prevalent in the 20th-century
United States.
CRITERIA FOR ADDING AN “H” SUFFIX TO A COURSE
NUMBER
The
Committee on Courses has discussed the criteria for adding an “H” suffix to a
course number and recommends the following:
The “H” suffix is intended to advise students that a course
provides honors content of significant difficulty and requires honors effort
from students. The University Committee on Courses will be looking for
evidence of the following in determining whether a course should hold an “H”
suffix designation:
1. Students enrolling should have a cumulative GPA of
at least 3.30 in their major.
2. The
content of the class, and the level of analysis, should be significantly deeper
than for non-honors classes.
3. Class
size should be small enough to promote intensive student participation.
4. The
faculty member(s) teaching the course should be available for close advising
outside of class.
UNDERGRADUATE MAJORS, MINORS, CERTIFICATES
MAJOR
Definition
Courses in designated primary subject
areas/disciplines in which a student commits to gaining in-depth knowledge,
skills, competence, and attitudes through a coherent pattern of courses. A footnote accompanies the major definition:
Divisional major programs emphasize a general and integrated approach to
learning, with the student’s major program broadly inclusive of work in several
of the discipline or subject areas within the specific division within which
the student’s degree program lies (i.e. humanities, social science, science). For instance, a divisional major program in
the social sciences would call for the student to include within his/her major
work from several of the disciplines or subject areas in the social sciences
(e.g. sociology, political science, economics). Because of the breadth of disciplines or subjects included in the
major, the student has less opportunity to delve in depth into a single subject
area such as sociology, political science, or economics, than they would be
able to do were they in a “departmental major” program in a single one of these
disciplines or subject areas.
Minimal Requirements
36 credits – of which a minimum of 24 must be upper
division. Departments should consider
setting minimum residency requirements.
MINOR
Definition
Courses in a designated secondary subject area or
discipline distinct from and usually outside the student’s degree major in
which knowledge is gained in a coherent pattern of courses.
Minimal Requirements
24 credits – of which a minimum of 12 must be upper
division. Should be within discipline
that already has a pre-existing major or sponsored by department.
CERTIFICATE
Definition
An approved academic award given in conjunction with the
satisfactory completion of a program of instruction requiring one year or more,
but less than four years, of full-time equivalent post-secondary level
work. The conditions and conferral of
the award are governed by the faculty and ratified by the governing board of
the institution granting the certificate.
Minimal Requirements
36 credits – 24 upper division with 12 minimum at 400
level. Sponsoring department must provide guidance – template/check list, name
of an advisor, with notice that student must consult an advisor to apply for
certificate at least two terms prior to graduation.
Web page spun on 22 November 2003 by Peter B Gilkey 202 Deady Hall, Department of Mathematics at the University of Oregon, Eugene OR 97403-1222, U.S.A. Phone 1-541-346-4717 Email:peter.gilkey.cc.67@aya.yale.edu of Deady Spider Enterprises |