Development of philosophical writing and reasoning skills, including knowledge of logical concepts, their relations, and their expression in formal notation and informal argumentation. Systems to be studied include the propositional calculus and natural deduction. The relations of these systems to the syntax and semantics of natural language will be examined, with an emphasis on application of logical reasoning to arguments in philosophical and non-philosophical writing. Students will construct their own logical arguments in a term paper that incorporates library research and demonstrates appropriate use of secondary sources.
Environmental Sociology
This course explores the relationship between human societies and the natural environment. The course will review the history of natural resource use, pollution resulting from human activity, the limits that environments have placed on societies, the impact of human production and consumption on the environment, and social movements motivated by concern for the environment. Prerequisite:SOCI 101.
Collaboration, Communication, and Conflict Resolution: Considerations for Special Education
Special Education Methods, Assessment, and IEP Writing
Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
This 3-credit course is an examination of intellectual and other developmental disabilities, such as Down syndrome, Fragile X syndrome, and others. Discusses identification, treatment, education, classroom interventions, and social supports with an end toward understanding intellectual and developmental disabilities as both biological and social phenomena.
Inclusion in the School and Community
This 3-credit course will consider the perception of disability in a variety of settings. Of primary consideration is how schools and the community at large acknowledges and responds to the needs of people with disabilities so that they can be full members of school and community. Additionally, the course will address how to meet the instructional, social, and emotional needs of special education students in the general education classroom including strategies for providing modifications, accommodations, and specially-designed instruction.
Senior Topics Seminar in Mathematics
The Senior Topics Seminar is a capstone course for the Mathematics major centered around an in-depth study of an important field and/or open question in mathematics. Each seminar will have a small number of students who will work together to investigate an advanced topic that builds on their prior mathematics courses. Every student in the course will generate, either in a group or individually, two final products from the seminar: a public presentation in a form designated by the instructor, and a written report on the work to be kept by the department for the benefit of future students.
A detailed topic description will be available in the online “Schedule of Classes” before registration. May be repeated for credit if the topic is not repetitive. Prerequisite: Consent of the instructor.
Computer Music Notation
An introduction to music notation using computer software programs. The course is designed as a logical partner with MUSC 203, Music Theory I. Formerly offered as part of MUSC 310. Students who have completed MUSC 301 have satisfied this music major requirement and are not eligible for this course. Prerequisite: demonstrated ability to read music.
Composing with Computers
An overview of the possibilities opened to people seeking to create music through digital technology. The course will include an introduction to music sequencing, the creation and use of loops and sampled sounds, and digital sound editing, all of these applied to music creation. May be repeated once for credit. This course, if taken twice, fulfills the Core Curriculum requirement in the Arts.
History Capstone Seminar
The purpose of this class is to complete the newly required capstone project in History. It will provide a structure for student support to complete their projects and to present them to the public. Students will complete a 30-page research paper on a topic of their choice. This class will meet four times over the course of the semester, with individual student meetings on an as-needed basis:
- First class/organizing session
- Progress report the day after annotated bibliographies are due
- Progress report the week before first drafts are due
- Final presentation
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