History Requirements Europe from Antiquity to 1600: An Expanding World HIS 131 Course Overview: A survey of European history from antiquity to the early modern period, focusing on key political, social, economic, and cultural developments, as well as European interactions with the wider world. The Birth of Modernity: Europe 1648 to the Present HIS 132 Course Overview: A survey of the development of the West from the formation of modern European nation-states in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries to the present, emphasizing the rivalry of European powers, the impact of European expansion, the effect of industrialism and revolution upon Western Society, and the role of the New World.
Basic Spanish for Heritage Learners Course Overview: Designed for students with little or no prior instruction in Spanish who, because of family background or social experience, can understand some casual spoken Spanish and have a passive knowledge of the language, but do not speak the language themselves. Focus on developing basic speaking, reading, and writing abilities. Intermediate Spanish for Heritage Learners Course Overview: Designed for students with some prior instruction in Spanish who, because of family background or social experience, can understand casual spoken Spanish and have some functional communication abilities in the language. Focus on developing basic speaking, reading, and writing abilities. Advanced Spanish for Heritage Learners Course Overview: Designed for students with some prior instruction in Spanish who, because of family background or social experience, can understand casual spoken Spanish and have some functional communication abilities in the language. Focus on formal speaking, reading, and writing abilities. TAL 107 Course Overview: This course is designed to allow participants to learn about Deaf Culture and be able to sign with sufficient fluency to discuss work, social, and family topics using two to four sentence responses. TAL 207, (Intermediate) Course Overview: This course is designed to allow participants to learn about Deaf Culture and be able to sign with sufficient fluency to discuss work, social, and family topics using two to four sentence responses. Intermediate Algebra Course Overview: Real number operations, polynomials, factoring, rational numbers and rational expressions. Cannot be used to fulfill the 120 credits required for graduation Algebra for College Students Course Overview: Algebraic operations and properties of the real numbers; linear and quadratic equations and inequalities; polynomials and factoring; rational expressions; radical expressions; graphs of lines; systems of linear equations. Finite Mathematics Course Overview: Sets, logic, counting techniques, elementary probability and statistics, mathematics in finance, linear programming, algebraic structures, symmetry. The selection of topics may vary by instructor. Writing the Research Paper Course Overview: Advanced techniques in conducting research and writing the research paper. Use of traditional library resources, online searches, the Internet, and other research methods. Strategies for effective presentation of research findings. Topics in Comparative Literary Studies Course Overview: Comparative and/or interdisciplinary topics in the study of literature. Specific topics vary. See class schedule for details.Foreign Language Requirements
Spanish for Heritage Learners
SPA 107
SPA 207
SPA 208
American Sign Language I & II
Mathematics Requirements
MTH 099
MTH 101
MTH 113Interdisciplinary Courses
WRS 333
MLL 321