FINAL WINTER 2007 CURRICULUM REPORT
Passed, as amended, by the
University Senate on March 14, 2007
OVERVIEW
The body of this report consists of two major sections: Course
Proposals reviewed
winter 2007 and Other Curricular Matters. Policies and definitions governing group and multicultural
general-education requirements are under Other Curricular Matters.
Course
proposals approved by both the University of Oregon Committee on Courses (UOCC)
and the University Senate are effective fall term 2007, unless a specific term
is requested by an academic department and stated otherwise in this report.
The UOCC will consider new proposals during spring term and
will submit a spring quarterly report to the University Senate in May 2007.
Routing
of Minor Changes:
The UOCC has confirmed that the following minor course changes may be made
without review by the full committee: minor edits of course description, pre-
or corequisites, grading option, and conditions of repeatability. Changes may
be submitted in writing directly to the Office of the Registrar and Creative
Publishing, in care of Mike Jefferis (jefferis@uoregon.edu)
and Scott Skelton (sskelton@uoregon.edu).
The memorandum should indicate the effective term for the change(s). Note:
extensive changes may be referred to the UOCC for review.
Courses
Not Taught Report:
The UOCC has changed the policy of dropping courses not taught within the past
three years from the fall curriculum report to the spring curriculum report.
This allows the correct listing of courses in the catalog for the following
curricular year. The intention for this change is to allow departments a chance
to reply earlier and provide a more thoughtful response while still involved in
curricular planning and staffing for the next academic year and can best
determine which courses they are able to offer.
Multicultural
Courses Policy:
As part of general-education, offerings of multicultural courses at the 100,
200, and 300 levels need to be available to a wide spectrum of students from
all across the University. Departments wishing to offer courses to satisfy the
multicultural requirement should make such these courses available at the more
general 100, 200, or 300 levels whenever possible, rather than at the more
specialized 400 level.
Extended Course
Descriptions for Group Satisfying Courses: All proposals for courses that
would satisfy a group requirement for general-education must include a suitable
extended course description, for use with the course, as specified in senate
legislation:
“For all
group-satisfying courses to be offered during a particular term, faculty or
departments are asked to post electronically, in the Schedule of Classes,
course descriptions that are substantially expanded over those provided in the
catalog. The posted course information should be understandable to someone
unfamiliar with the field and should emphasize the questions or issues that
reveal, by their breadth and significance, why the course has earned Group
status.”
(US03/04-8, May 12, 2004)
LOOKING AHEAD
March
21, 2007: Curricular
proposals for consideration in the spring round must be submitted to the
provost’s office.
May
6, 2007: University Senate considers spring
2007 preliminary report of the University of Oregon Committee on Courses.
July 2007: Publication of 2007–8 University
of Oregon Catalog.
The changes in the fall report will first appear in this catalog.
September
12, 2007: Curricular
proposals for consideration in the fall round must be submitted to the
provost’s office.
November
29, 2007: University Senate considers fall
2007 preliminary report of the University of Oregon Committee on Courses.
December
19, 2007: Curricular
proposals for consideration in the winter round must be submitted to the
provost’s office.
March
12, 2008: University Senate considers winter
2007 preliminary report of the University of Oregon Committee on Courses.
Members, University
of Oregon Committee on Courses
Voting: Paul Engelking, Chair Ex
officio: Jack Bennett
Jack
Boss Herb
Chereck
Emma
Martin John
Crosiar
Paul
Peppis Marian
Friestad
Arkady
Vaintrob Scott
Skelton
Frances White
Student: None Staff: Linda Adkins
Mike
Jefferis
Motion
The University of Oregon Committee on Courses moves that
the following course proposals and Other Curricular Matters be approved.
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 the UO Catalog. 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.
College of Arts and Sciences
Biology
REINSTATED
COURSE
(UOCC
Administrative Action)
BI
486/586 Population Genetics (4)
NEW
COURSES
(Course
previously taught as BI 410/510)
BI
422/522 Protein Toxins in Cell Biology (4) Mechanisms used by protein toxins to kill other
organisms and how they have been used as molecular scalpels to dissect pathways
in cell and neurobiology. Prereq: BI 322 or BI 360.
(Course
previously taught as BI 410/510)
BI
433/533 Bacterial-Host Interactions (4) Examines spectrum of interactions between bacteria and
animals, from pathogenesis to symbiosis, focusing on the molecular and cellular
bases of these interactions. Prereq: BI 320 or 322 or 330.
(Course
previously taught as BI 410/510)
BI
464/564 Biological Clocks (4) Biological time keeping at ecological, evolutionary,
behavioral, physiological, neurological, and molecular levels, with emphasis on
daily and seasonal rhythmicity. Prereq for BI 464: BI 360 and BI 320 or BI 328.
(Course
previously taught as BI 410/510)
BI
496/596 Conservation Genetics (4) Causes and consequences of changes in genetic diversity in
natural populations using tools and techniques from population, quantitative,
and molecular genetics, and systematics and phylogenetics. Prereq for BI 496:
BI 320 or BI 380. Offered alternate years. Effective summer session 2007.
Computer and Information
Science
REINSTATED
COURSE
(UOCC
Administrative Action)
CIS
423 Software Methodology II (4) Effective spring term 2007.
Dean’s Office
NEW
COURSES
(Course
previously taught as LING 199)
ARB
101 First-Year Arabic (5) Introduction to Arabic with emphasis on speaking, reading, writing, and
comprehension. Sequence with ARB 102, 103. Effective spring term 2007.
(Course
previously taught as LING 199)
ARB
102 First-Year Arabic (5) Introduction to Arabic with emphasis on speaking, reading, writing, and
comprehension. Sequence with ARB 101, 103. Prereq: ARB 101. Effective spring
term 2007.
(Course
previously taught as LING 199)
ARB
103 First-Year Arabic (5) Introduction to Arabic with emphasis on speaking, reading, writing, and
comprehension. Sequence with ARB 101, 102. Prereq: ARB 102. Effective spring
term 2007.
Economics
REINSTATED
COURSE
(UOCC
Administrative Action)
EC
451/551 Issues in Labor Economics (4)
NEW
COURSES
(Course
previously taught as EC 399)
EC
327 Introduction to Game Theory (4) [Graded only for majors] Introductory course in game
theory. Develops game-theoretic methods of rational decision making and
equilibriums, using many in-class active games. Prereq: EC 101 or 201. Approved
to satisfy Group II: Social Science general-education group requirement.
English
COURSES
DROPPED
ENG
495/595 English Grammar (4)
EXISTING
COURSE CHANGES
ENG
429/529 Old English II (4R)
(Changed
Course Description, Course Title, Repeatability)
ENG
429/529 Old English II: [Topic] (4R) Study of Old English prose or poetry in the original
language. R twice
when topic changes. Pre- or coreq: ENG 428/528.
ENG
430/530 Old English III (4R)
(Changed
Course Description, Course Title, Repeatability)
ENG
430/530 Old English III: [Topic] (4R) Study of Beowulf or works by other major Old English
authors in the original language. R twice when topic changes. Pre- or coreq: ENG 429/529.
Geography
EXISTING
COURSE CHANGES
GEOG
471/571 North American Cultural Landscapes (4)
(Changed
Course Title)
GEOG
471/571 North American Historical Landscapes
NEW
COURSES
(Course
previously taught as 410/510)
GEOG
412/512 Review of Geospatial Concepts (2) An online, self-guided introduction to the basic
concepts behind modern cartography and geographic information systems.
Geological Sciences
EXISTING
COURSE CHANGES
GEOL
473/573 Isotope Geochemistry (3)
(Changed
Course Description, Credits/Workload)
GEOL
473/573 Isotope Geochemistry (4) Introduction to nuclear physics and isotope systematics;
techniques of isotope analysis; applications of stable and radioactive isotopes
in geochronology and as tracers of geological processes.
NEW
COURSES
(Course
previously taught as GEOL 410/510)
GEOL
420/520 Geocommunication (3) [Graded only for majors] Scientific writing and
presentations for the geological sciences. Focus on writing scientific papers
and proposals, preparing oral and visual presentations.
(Course
previously taught as GEOL 410/510)
GEOL
455/555 Mechanical Earth (4) [Graded only for majors] Introduction to continuum
mechanics. Includes stress and strain, friction, elasticity, viscous fluids,
constitutive laws, equations of motion, and deformation of the earth. Prereq:
GEOL 315, PHYS 202, or equivalent; MATH 256.
GEOL
463/563 Computational Earth Science (4) [Graded only for majors] Practical techniques for
scientific computing using the interactive environment Matlab. Topics include
root finding, curve fitting, interpolation, integration and differentiation,
optimization, ordinary differential equations. Prereq: MATH 253.
(Course
previously taught as Geol 410/510)
GEOL
470/570 General and Environmental Geochemistry (4) [Graded only for majors] Lecture-
and project-based introduction to geochemical classification of elements,
element cycling, trace element geochemistry, geochemistry of surface
environments, basics of radiogenic, and stable isotope geochemistry. Prereq:
CHEM 221 and 222 and 223 and GEOL 311 or 332.
History
EXISTING
COURSE CHANGES
HIST 310
Perceptions and Roles of Women from the Greeks through the 17th century (4)
(Changed
Course Title)
HIST
310 Early Modern Women (4) Course retained Group II: Social
Science general-education group requirement.
HIST 329
The Mediterranean World: [Topic] (4)
(Changed
Course Description, Course Title, General Education Requirements,
Repeatability)
HIST
329 Mediterranean World, Antiquity to 1453 (4) Late antiquity, Byzantium, rise of
Islam, Abbasid caliphate, conquests of Spain and Sicily, religious tolerance,
the roles of women, trade, and intellectual exchange. Approved to satisfy
Group II: Social Science general-education group requirement and Category B:
Identity, Pluralism, and Tolerance multicultural requirement.
NEW
COURSES
HIST
330 Mediterranean World, 1453–1700 (4) The rise of the Ottomans, Venetian trade, Jewish
diaspora from Spain, the roles of women, piracy, slavery, and the decline of
the Mediterranean. Approved to satisfy Group II: Social Science
general-education group requirement and Category B: Identity, Pluralism, and
Tolerance multicultural requirement.
HIST
438/538 Golden Age Spain (4) [Graded only for majors] Spanish history during one of the
most important eras of its past, when it was a cultural leader in Europe and a
major world power. DENIED the request to satisfy Category B: Identity, Pluralism,
and Tolerance multicultural requirement.
International Studies
EXISTING
COURSE CHANGES
(Correction
from fall term 2006)
INTL
260 Culture, Capitalism, and Globalization (4) Effective
summer session 2007.
Linguistics
EXISTING
COURSE CHANGES
LING
451/551 Syntax and Semantics I (4)
(Changed
Course Title)
LING
451/551 Functional Syntax I
LING
452/552 Syntax and Semantics II (4)
(Changed
Course Title)
LING
452/552 Functional Syntax II
NEW
COURSES
LING
331 African Languages: Identity, Ethnicity, History (4) [Graded only for majors]
Introduction to the role of languages in understanding African identities,
cultures, and migrations. Major language families, linguistic diversity,
multilingualism, and historical change in African languages. Approved to
satisfy Category C: International Cultures multicultural requirement.
(Course
previously taught as ENG 495/595)
LING
494/594 English Grammar (4) [Graded only for majors] Survey of grammatical, syntactic,
and morphological structures of English in terms of semantic and functional
criteria.
(Course
previously taught as LING 199)
LT
199 Special Studies: [Topic] (1–5R) Various self-study languages offered through the
Yamada Language Center. R when topic changes.
Medieval Studies
NEW
COURSES
MDVL
199 Special Studies: [Topic] (1–5R)
MDVL
399 Special Studies: [Topic] (1–5R)
MDVL
403 Thesis (1-8R)
MDVL
405 Reading and Conference: [Topic] (1-4R)
MDVL
406 Field Studies: [Topic] (1-4R)
MDVL
408/508 Workshop: [Topic] (1-4R)
MDVL
410/510 Experimental Course: [Topic] (1–5R)
MDVL
503 Thesis (1-8R)
Physics
REINSTATED
COURSE
(UOCC
Administrative Action)
PHYS
686 Quantum Optics and Laser Physics (4) Effective spring term 2007.
Psychology
EXISTING
COURSE CHANGES
PSY
459/559 Cultural Psychology (4)
(Changed
Course Description, General Education Requirements)
PSY
459/559 Cultural Psychology (4) Examines interdependence between mind and culture in
substantive domains such as social cognition, motivation, emotion, and
psychopathology. Cultural pluralism, collective identities, tolerance, and
diversity considered. Pre- or coreq: WR 121 and 122 or 123; PSY 303. DENIED the request to satisfy Category
B: Identity, Pluralism and Tolerance multicultural requirement.
Religious Studies
COURSES
DROPPED
(UOCC Administrative
Action)
REL
316 Beginnings of Christianity (4)
EXISTING
COURSE CHANGES
REL 222
Introduction to the Bible (4)
(Changed
Course Description, Course Title)
REL
222 Introduction to the Bible I (4) Content and organization of the Hebrew scriptures (Old
Testament); examination of scholarly methods and research tools used in
biblical studies. Course
retained Group I: Arts & Letters general-education group requirement.
NEW
COURSES
(Course
previously taught as REL 316)
REL
223 Introduction to the Bible II (4) Examination of the written traditions of early Christianity
with an emphasis on the New Testament.
Approved to satisfy Group I: Arts & Letters general-education
group requirement.
REL
450/550 Readings in Daoism: [Topic] (4R) [Graded only for majors] Close reading of one or
more Daoist texts in English. Emphasis on religious, philosophical, historical
contexts; history of interpretation; critical scholarship. R when topic changes.
REL
454/554 Readings in Confucianism: [Topic] (4R) [Graded only for majors] Close
reading of one or more Confucian texts in English translation with attention to
religious, philosophical, historical contexts, history of interpretation,
critical scholarship. R when topic changes.
Romance Languages
REINSTATED
COURSES
(UOCC
Administrative Action)
FR
362 French Film (4)
(UOCC
Administrative Action)
FR
597 Francophone Women’s Writing (4)
NEW
COURSES
(Course
previously taught as RL 199)
PORT
101 First-Year Portuguese (5) Introduction to Brazilian Portuguese language and culture,
with emphasis on speaking, reading, writing, and listening comprehension
skills. Sequence with PORT 102, 103. Effective spring term 2007.
(Course
previously taught as RL 199)
PORT
102 First-Year Portuguese (5) Introduction to Brazilian Portuguese language and culture,
with emphasis on speaking, reading, writing, and listening comprehension
skills. Sequence with PORT 101, 103. Prereq: PORT 101 or equivalent. Effective
spring term 2007.
(Course
previously taught as RL 199)
PORT
103 First-Year Portuguese (5) Introduction to Brazilian Portuguese language and culture,
with emphasis on speaking, reading, writing, and listening comprehension
skills. Sequence with PORT 101, 102. Prereq: PORT 102 or equivalent. Effective
spring term 2007.
Russian and Eastern
European Studies Center
EXISTING COURSE CHANGES
(Correction
from fall term 2006)
REES
503 Thesis (1-9R) Effective
spring term 2007
(Correction
from fall term 2006)
RUSS
503 Thesis (1-9R) Effective
spring term 2007
PROFESSIONAL SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES
School of Architecture and
Allied Arts
ART History
REINSTATED
COURSE
(UOCC
Administrative Action)
ARH
341 Italian Renaissance Art (4)
Charles H. Lundquist College of
Business
Decision Sciences
NEW
COURSES
(Course
previously taught as 199)
DSC
240 Managing Business Information (4) [Graded only for majors] Data-oriented approaches for
structuring and analyzing information, with applications in the traditional
functional areas of business, emphasizing modern techniques for developing
fact-based decision models.
Management
DROPPED
COURSE
(UOCC
Administrative Action)
MGMT
602 Supervised College Teaching (1–5R)
School of Journalism and
Communication
REINSTATED
COURSE
(UOCC
Administrative Action)
J
419/519 Editing Theory and Production (4) Effective winter term 2007.
School of Law
Conflict and Dispute
Resolution
DROPPED
COURSE
(UOCC
Administrative Action)
CRES
609 Practicum (1–8R) Effective spring term 2007.
NEW
COURSE
(UOCC
Administrative Action)
CRES
604 Internship (1–8R) Effective spring term 2007.
Physical Activity and Recreation
Services
NEW
COURSES
(Course
previously taught as 399 in fall 2006)
PEF
291 Speed and Agility (1R) P/NP only. Topics include techniques for acquiring speed, agility, and
conditioning; learning movement skills and applying energy systems. Minimal
lectures complement practical application of drills. R once for credit.
Other Curricular Matters
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
winter term 2006.
College of Arts and Sciences
A
bachelor of science degree, in addition to the bachelor of arts degree, is now
an option for the international studies major program. Effective spring term 2007.
A
new minor in African studies has successfully completed the university review
and approval process. Effective spring term 2007.
A
new subject code for medieval studies (MDVL) and a series of generic courses
have successfully completed the university review and approval process. Effective
spring term 2007.
School of Music and Dance
The
Oregon University System has approved a degree title change from M.A. or Ph.D.
in music history to M.A. or Ph.D. in musicology. Effective fall term 2007.
DENIED PROPOSALS
None
PENDING PROPOSALS
History
HIST
423/523 Gender in European History: [Topic] (4R) [Graded only for majors] Range of
topics include witches and witchcraft; men, women and revolution; sex and
sexual difference in premodern Europe; and medieval religious women. DENIED
the request
to satisfy Category B: Identity, Pluralism, and Tolerance multicultural
requirement. Department’s response is needed.
(Course
previously taught as HIST 410)
HIST
437/537 Medieval Spain (4) [Graded only for majors] A study of two related aspects of medieval
Iberian history: Spain as a frontier society and Spain as a multicultural,
multireligious society. Department’s response is needed.
Physical Activity and
Recreation Services
PEOL 352
Backpacking II Outing (1)
(Changed
Course Title)
PEOL
352 Backcountry Navigation Need clarification from department on the title change for other
courses within the series.
WITHDRAWN PROPOSALS
Geology
GEOL
418/518 Data Analysis for Earth and Environmental Sciences (4) [Graded only for majors] Lecture-
and lab-based introduction to descriptive statistics, data visualization,
uncertainty analysis, error propagation, hypothesis testing, regression and
multiple regression, directional data, and other topics. Department will
resubmit the proposal at a later time.
SUBMITTING COURSE PROPOSALS
The Committee on Courses offers the following reminders:
ü
Proposals
to the Committee on Courses must be submitted on electronic forms, available on
the CAS website, http://uocurriculum.uoregon.edu/. Arrangements for access may be
made by contacting the appropriate college curriculum coordinator for each
individual professional school or college. Proposals submitted on old forms
will be returned, without review, to academic departments, schools, or
colleges. Proposals must be submitted to the Committee on Courses prior to the
beginning of the term in which they are to be considered. Proposals received
after the beginning of the term will be deferred to the following term. All departments should
consult their college curriculum coordinator for deadline dates or
go to http://uocurriculum.uoregon.edu/ and click the “Important Dates” link.
ü
The
following minor course changes may be made without review by the full
committee: minor edits of course description, pre- or co-requisites, grading
option, and conditions of repeatability. Changes may be submitted in writing
directly to the Offices of the Registrar and Creative Publishing, in care of
Mike Jefferis (jefferis@uoregon.edu) and Scott Skelton
(sskelton@darkwing.uoregon.edu), respectively. The memorandum should indicate
the effective term for the change(s). Note: extensive changes may be referred
to the UOCC for review.
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
Proposals
for new courses must be accompanied by full syllabi.
ü
For
4xx/5xx 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
The
minimal requirements for general-education status of a course are regarded as
necessary, but not always sufficient, for inclusion of a course as part of a
comprehensive general-education program at the university.
Group
satisfying courses are intended to provide students with a cohesive
general-education program. Proposals for group-satisfying status of a course
should explain how the course enhances general-education at the university,
explicitly stating how the course would complement other group-satisfying
courses, and which other courses would be especially suitable for students to
take in accompaniment. Approved March 10, 2004.
According to University Senate legislation, courses
submitted for group-satisfying status must be submitted to the Intercollege
General-education Review Committee.
Proposals for undergraduate group-satisfying and
multicultural courses must include written justification, regardless of whether
they are new or existing courses.
ü
The
minimal requirements for multicultural status of a course are regarded as
sufficient for inclusion of a course as part of the multicultural course
requirements.
Any course that might appear to satisfy the university
multicultural requirements, either by title, description, or content, is
carefully examined to see if it should be listed as a multicultural course. If
a course might appear on its face eligible for multicultural status, the
committee needs clear explanation of why the course does—or does
not—satisfy multicultural course guidelines. Arbitrary exclusion of
courses from the list of multicultural satisfying courses can engender student
confusion or cynicism. Approved on March 10, 2004.
ü
The
UO Committee on Courses has established the policy that the phrase “or instructor’s consent” will not be stated along with any
other course prerequisites. The prerequisites of any course may be overridden
by instructor’s consent, and need not be stated explicitly for individual
courses. Academic departments are able to override any prerequisite
requirements in Banner should a student qualify to enroll.
“Instructor’s consent” is reserved for use alone as a
sole prerequisite to allow departments to monitor suitability of enrollment in
courses for individual students, preventing enrollment without prior approval.
Academic departments should be aware they must code the courses correctly and
assume enrollment management responsibilities, preauthorizing each student
individually, with this option. Approved March 10, 2004.
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. The syllabus is the best,
most concise description of a course by its teacher available to both
prospective students and colleagues. The Committee on Courses uses syllabuses
in its review of courses. To maximize the usefulness of a syllabus to students
and faculty, it should 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.
Position in the curriculum
• Satisfies group requirement?
Explain why
• Satisfies multicultural requirement? Explain why
• Satisfies other general-education requirement?
• Satisfies other major or program requirement?
• Preparatory for other courses?
• List prerequisites or other suggested preparation
6. Format
(lecture, discussion, laboratory)
7. Outline
of subject and topics explored
8. Course
materials (texts, books, readings)
9.
Instructor expectations of students
• Be explicit (by pages assigned,
lengths of assignments)
• Level of student engagement expected (see suggested
Student Engagement Inventory on following page)
• Readings
• Problems
• Attendance
• Project
• Writing
• Laboratory
• Field work
• Work with electronic media, network, online
• Performance
• Presentation
• Exams
• Differential expected for graduate work for joint
4xx/5xx-level courses
10.
Assessment
• Methods (testing, homework)
• Times or frequency
• Grading policy
• Incomplete 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 form
when deciding how many SCH units to request for a proposed course. Departments
are 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 expect to spend in each of the following activities. The
general guideline is that each undergraduate credit should reflect thirty hours
of student engagement. Therefore, a 3-credit course would engage students for
ninety 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. (Graduate students are expected to perform work of higher
quality and quantity, typically with an additional 20–25 percent effort
expected.)
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 |
Performance,
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
criterions were proposed by the Undergraduate Council and the College of Arts
and Sciences Curriculum Committee. The University Senate approved them in May
2001 by Motion US0001-3 Replacement Motion governing the approval of courses
meeting general-education requirements and the distribution of courses student
must complete within each group.
1. Group satisfying courses in
Arts and Letters, Social Science, and Science must meet the following general
criteria:
1.1. Group satisfying courses in arts and letters must create meaningful
opportunities for students to engage actively in the modes of inquiry that
define a discipline. Proposed courses must be broad in scope and
demonstrably liberal in nature (that is, courses that promote open inquiry from
a variety of perspectives). Though some courses may focus on specialized subjects or
approaches, there must be a substantial course content locating that subject in
the broader context of the major issues of the discipline. Qualifying courses
will not focus on teaching basic skills but will require the application or
engagement of those skills through analysis and interpretation.
1.2. Group satisfying courses in the social sciences must be liberal in nature rather
than being professionally oriented or limited 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 an emphasis on methods and skills will satisfy the requirement
only if there is also a substantial and coherent theoretical component.
1.3. Group satisfying courses in the sciences should introduce students to the
foundations of one or more scientific disciplines, or should provide an
introduction to fundamental methods (such as mathematics) that are widely used
in scientific disciplines. Courses should introduce students to the process of
scientific reasoning.
2. Specific Criteria:
2.1. Group satisfying courses must be numbered at the 100,
200, and 300 levels.
2.2. Lower division courses must be offered annually, and
upper division courses at least every other year.
2.3. Approved courses must be at least 4 credits each.
2.4. Upper division group satisfying courses must provide
depth and rigor beyond that of typical lower-division general-education
courses. Departments must justify, in terms of content, workload, and method of
instruction, the assignment of a course to the upper level.
2.5. Courses that are offered for majors only are excluded
from group status, but courses that are designed for both majors and other
students may qualify.
2.6. Although laboratory courses are not automatically
excluded from group status in the sciences, to acquire this status, the courses
must not focus primarily on techniques or data collection.
3. Procedures governing
the approval of all courses designed to meet General-education requirements.:
3.1. Before submission to the
Senate, such courses proposed by departments must be reviewed at several
levels:
3.1.1. By the curricular committees
of the various colleges and schools
3.1.2. By an inter-college
committee including the members of the CAS Curricular Committee and two
representatives appointed by the deans of the others schools and colleges. This
second committee is also charged to review such courses as do not meet the
standards set in paragraph (2.) and to negotiate a solution with the sponsoring
department.
3.1.3. By the University Committee
on Courses.
3.2. The inter college committee is authorized to establish procedures
governing the review process.
4. Completion of group
requirements (student progress):
4.1. Within the full set of courses that fulfills all of
the requirements, students may not count
4.1.1. more than one course that has the subject code of
the major, or
4.1.2. more than three courses that have the same subject
code.
4.2. Within the smaller set of courses that fulfills the
requirements of each group, students must complete at least two courses that
have the same subject code.
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 406/407/408/409,
506/507/508/509, 606/607/608/609 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 representative 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, prejudice and
tolerance) or explicitly describe and analyze a worldview (i.e., a system of
knowledge, feeling, and belief) that is substantially different from those
prevalent in the twentieth-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 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.
SUGGESTIONS
FOR REVISING DEFINITIONS OF
UNDERGRADUATE
MAJORS, MINORS, CERTIFICATES
MAJOR
Definition
Courses in designated primary subject areas or
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
or her major work from several of the disciplines or subject areas in the
social sciences (such as sociology, political science, or 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 a discipline that already has a preexisting major or
is sponsored by a 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, postsecondary-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. The sponsoring
department must provide guidance—a template or check list and the name of
an adviser, with notice that the student must consult an adviser to apply for
the certificate at least two terms prior to graduation.
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