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Science and Engineering |
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SCENG 4950 - Internship 1 to 3 credits By permission only. Supervised practical training combined with academic studies in which students apply and develop their disciplinary knowledge and skills working for a business or non-profit institution. Students are required to conduct related academic studies under the supervision of a faculty advisor. Graded CR/F.
Registration Restriction(s): By permission only
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SCENG 4980 - Industry Co Op 0 credit hours Co Ops are paid, full-time work based learning opportunities that directly relate to the student’s field of study. Co Ops provide application of learned concepts in real world situations and integration of academic and work experiences. Permission only.
Terms Typically Offered: Spring
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Spanish |
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SPAN 1150 - Spanish Language I 5 credit hours An intuitive approach to understanding, speaking, reading, and writing Spanish. These courses constitute a systematic, programmed study of the Spanish language and culture. All of the Spanish language courses are taught in Spanish.
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SPAN 1250 - Spanish Language II 5 credit hours An intuitive approach to understanding, speaking, reading, and writing Spanish. These courses constitute a systematic, programmed study of the Spanish language and culture. All of the Spanish language courses are taught in Spanish.
Prerequisite Course(s): SPAN 1150
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SPAN 1350 - Spanish Language III 5 credit hours An intuitive approach to understanding, speaking, reading, and writing Spanish. These courses constitute a systematic, programmed study of the Spanish language and culture. All of the Spanish language courses are taught in Spanish.
Prerequisite Course(s): SPAN 1250
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SPAN 2000 - SABD Variable Topics 1 to 5 credit hours
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SPAN 2010 - SABD Variable Topics 1 to 5 credit hours
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SPAN 2020 - SABD Variable Topics 1 to 5 credit hours
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SPAN 2030 - SABD Variable Topics 1 to 5 credit hours
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SPAN 2040 - SABD Variable Topics 1 to 5 credit hours
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SPAN 2050 - SABD Variable Topics 1 to 5 credit hours
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SPAN 2150 - Spanish Language IV 5 credit hours An intuitive approach to understanding, speaking, reading, and writing Spanish. These courses constitute a systematic, programmed study of the Spanish language and culture. All of the Spanish language courses are taught in Spanish.
Prerequisite Course(s): SPAN 1350
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SPAN 2250 - Spanish Language V 5 credit hours An intuitive approach to understanding, speaking, reading, and writing Spanish. These courses constitute a systematic, programmed study of the Spanish language and culture. All of the Spanish language courses are taught in Spanish.
Prerequisite Course(s): SPAN 2150
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SPAN 2350 - Spanish Language VI 5 credit hours An intuitive approach to understanding, speaking, reading, and writing Spanish. These courses constitute a systematic, programmed study of the Spanish language and culture. All of the Spanish language courses are taught in Spanish.
Prerequisite Course(s): SPAN 2250
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SPAN 2910 - Special Topics 1 to 5 credit hours
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SPAN 2960 - Directed Study 2 to 5 credit hours
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SPAN 3000 - SABD Variable Topics 1 to 5 credit hours
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SPAN 3010 - SABD Variable Topics 1 to 5 credit hours
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SPAN 3020 - SABD Variable Topics 1 to 5 credit hours
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SPAN 3030 - SABD Variable Topics 1 to 5 credit hours
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SPAN 3040 - SABD Variable Topics 1 to 5 credit hours
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SPAN 3050 - SABD Variable Topics 1 to 5 credit hours
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SPAN 3080 - Spanish Grammar and Composition 5 credit hours A review of basic and fundamental Spanish grammar.
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SPAN 3150 - Latin American and Spanish Culture and Society 5 credit hours A study of the origins of Spain and Latin America as well as the fusion of both cultures and societies. With a socio-historical approach, strong emphasis is placed on cross-cultural differences and contemporary customs and lifestyles.
Prerequisite Course(s): SPAN 2350
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SPAN 3200 - Mexican Cultural Topics 5 credit hours This is a special class for students who are in the LASP program. This class is taught in Puebla, Mexico and it is an introduction to the Latin American culture.
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SPAN 3250 - Introduction to Latin American and Spanish Literature 5 credit hours An introduction to literary and critical analysis, with readings from Latin American and Spanish authors. This course also provides the student with a theoretical, historical, and cultural framework for more advanced study.
Prerequisite Course(s): SPAN 2350
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SPAN 3500 - History, Politics, and Society in Latin America 5 credit hours This course has an interdisciplinary nature. Students will be exposed to some aspects of the Latin American history, politics, and society. This course is taught in the LASP program in Puebla, Mexico.
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SPAN 3910 - Special Topics 1 to 5 credit hours
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SPAN 3960 - Directed Study 2 to 5 credit hours
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SPAN 4010 - Advanced Spanish Grammar & Composition 5 credit hours Problems of Spanish grammar and differences from English grammar.
Prerequisite Course(s): SPAN 2350, 3150, 3250
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SPAN 4050 - Methodology of Teaching Spanish 5 credit hours An overview of the various methods and approaches being used to teach Spanish.
Prerequisite Course(s): SPAN 2350, 3150. 3250
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SPAN 4100 - Cervantes 5 credit hours A study of the life and works of Miguel de Cervantes with special attention to Don Quijote de la Mancha.
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SPAN 4140 - Contemporary Spanish Detective Novel 5 credit hours A study of the origins and evolution of the detective novel in Spain, its roots, and its social and historical context.
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SPAN 4160 - Latin American and Spanish Literature and Culture, 19th century 5 credit hours A study of 19th Century literary movements in Latin America and Spain. An historical approach to major works in Spanish.
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SPAN 4180 - Latina and Latino Literature 5 credit hours This class will examine a diverse set of literary texts by U.S. Latinas and Latinos of Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, Domi-nican, and Central American heritage and identities. While the peoples of these nations all share the historical experience of Spanish colonization and U.S. imperialism, their immigration patterns have differed vastly-affecting not only their so-cial, cultural, and political trajectories in the United States, but also their relationships to concepts of “home” and “homel-and,” nation, diaspora, history, and memory.
Prerequisite Course(s): SPAN 2350, 3150, 3250
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SPAN 4220 - Contemporary Spanish Women’s Literature 5 credit hours A study of the works of Spanish women writers. The narrative texts will be examined from their socio historical context, focusing on the impact of women’s lives of the Civil War (1936-1939) and the “destape” which came as a result of the Franco regime during the post-Franco era, including the evolution and development of feminism in Spain.
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SPAN 4240 - Emerging Subjectivities in Chicana/o Literature 5 credit hours Narratives, poetry, prose and novels written by Chicanas/os in order to explore various elements of the relationship be-tween Mexican Americans and gender, class, race, sexuality, and society. Some of the narratives are biographical or semi-autobiographical (autobioethnographical) and present a reflexive voice regarding various themes central to the Chi-cano/a experience.
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SPAN 4260 - Latin American Literature and Culture 20th Century 5 credit hours A study of 20th Century Latin American literary movements; from the creative work of the “Novela del campo” - Gallegos, Rivera, Guiraldes - through the innovative expression of the “Vanguardia” - Asturias, Borges, Carpentier, Neruda, Rulfo, Vallejo, and the explosion of “Realismo Magico” - Marquez, Cortazar, Fuentes, Vargas Llosa, to present works.
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SPAN 4280 - Contemporary Spanish Literature and Culture 5 credit hours Spanish literature and culture of the 20th century; from the “generacion del 98” - Azorin, Baroja, Unamuno - through the “new Golden Age of Spanish Letters” - Alberti, Aleixandre, Cernuda, Guillen, Lorca - to present works.
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SPAN 4290 - Latin American Literary Movements through Short Stories 5 credit hours This course is a survey of the most important Latin American literary movements from the 20th century until the present. We will study various authors whose works are representative of these movements and will analyze their short stories and their contexts.
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SPAN 4300 - In and Out of Law 5 credit hours Through the study of some of the most significant literary texts of Latin America we will aim to (re)consider what we al-ready know. We will question the concept of outlaw and study the subject not only from the perspective that an outlaw Is a person breaking the law, but also someone who is not considered, protected or taken into account by legal systems.
Prerequisite Course(s): SPAN 2350, 3150, 3250
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SPAN 4310 - Literature and Revolution 5 credit hours The impact of social, political, and cultural revolutions upon the literary works of Latin American writers such as Alejo Carpentier, Arturo Uslar Pietri, Carlos Fuentes, Julio Cortazar, Mariano Azuela, and Omar Cabezas.
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SPAN 4390 - In Search for a Visa to Fulfill a Dream 5 credit hours Nowadays there seems to be a proliferation of different Latin American cultural products that deal with the topic of (il)legal immigration. Through the study of songs, theater plays, short stories, movies and film we will reflect upon what it means to be an immigrant and what are the causes and consequences of the experience.
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SPAN 4510 - Arts in the Hispanic World 5 credit hours This course attempts to develop visual literacy and cultural sensitivity to the rich and vast cultural aesthetic expression of the Hispanic world. We will examine significant aspects of pre-Hispanic art, and the different artistic movements that follow up to the present time.
Prerequisite Course(s): SPAN 2350, 3150, 3250
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SPAN 4550 - Latin America Through Film 5 credit hours This course will focus on the contemporary socio-historical, political and cultural aspects of some Latin American coun-tries viewed through a set of different films.
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SPAN 4560 - Latin American Literature and Film 5 credit hours Often times many well-known Latin American writers have been involved in the writing of scripts for films based on their literary work. The aim of the course is to study and analyze these types of works and reflect on the possibilities and limi-tations of each form of expression.
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SPAN 4630 - Contemporary Spanish Literature and Culture 5 credit hours Spanish literature and culture of the 20th century; from the “generacion del 98” - Azorin, Baroja, Unamuno - through the “new Golden Age of Spanish Letters” - Alberti, Aleixandre, Cernuda, Guillen, Lorca - to present works.
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SPAN 4770 - Honors: Directed Reading 5 credit hours
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SPAN 4790 - Honors: Thesis 5 credit hours
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SPAN 4900 - Senior Synthesis 5 credit hours
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SPAN 4910 - Special Topics 1 to 5 credit hours
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SPAN 4960 - Independent Study 1 to 5 credit hours
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Social Work |
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SOCW 1510 - Introduction to Social Work 5 credit hours Historical development of the social welfare practices and institutions. Theoretical bases underlying the structure and function of social welfare systems and services. Philosophy and methods used by professional social workers in meeting human need
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SOCW 2010 - Social Justice 5 credit hours This course focuses on social justice issues in the United States, providing a theoretical and empirical knowledge base related to oppression, privilege, social justice, and liberation. The course will help studentscritically examine their social identities,embedded in race, gender, sexual orientation, age, class, ability status, religion, and national origin, and tounderstand how social structures and institutions enact oppression upon different social identity groups.
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SOCW 3010 - Human Behavior in the Social Environment 3 credit hours The theoretical perspectives for studying human behavior. The importance of organizations, communities, society and global influence in understanding human behavior in the social environment.
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SOCW 3020 - Human Development and Social Work 5 credit hours Psychological, physiological and social approaches to human development across the life span. Examines the effects of culture, social systems and institutions on individual development from an ecological perspective.
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SOCW 3030 - Juvenile Justice 5 credit hours Overview of the etiology of juvenile violence and delinquency from a developmental, ecological, and risk and protective factors conceptual framework. Discussion of contemporary issues including youth violence and its prevention and control in American society. Examining research leading to the best practices for working with youth. Cross-listed with CRJS 3030.
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SOCW 3040 - U.S. Social Welfare Policy 5 credit hours This course will assist students to understand contemporary social welfare policies in the United States. The course will focus on the dominant cultural values and the social, economic, and political forces affecting the establishment and maintenance of laws, public policies, and social welfare programs. It will also provide an examination of the histories of social welfare policy and the social work profession.
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SOCW 3050 - Activism and Advocacy for Social Justice 3 credit hours This course will focus on developing students’ skills for pursuing social justice. Students will study principles of allyship, activism, organizing, and policy advocacy, and then assume the role of change agent as they conceptualize and engage in social change and activism. Students will develop the concrete skills for intervening in oppression both at the interpersonal level and at the community levels.
Registration Restriction(s): Majors only Prerequisite Course(s): SOCW 2010, SOCW 3040
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SOCW 3110 - Practice I: Social Work with Individuals and Families 5 credit hours First course in a three-course sequence of generalist practice methods. Focuses on the knowledge, values and ethics, and methods for working with individuals and families. Skills in assessment, planning, interviewing, intervening, evaluating and terminating. Accepted social work majors only (post candidacy).
Registration Restriction(s): Majors only. Prerequisite Course(s): SOCW 1510
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SOCW 3170 - Race and Ethnicity 5 credit hours Investigation of the social construction of race and ethnicity in comparative perspective, including the political and socio-historical factors affecting individual and group identities. Special attention paid to the economic and social-psychological dimensions of racism and domination. Cross-listed with SOCL 3320.
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SOCW 3310 - Global Social Welfare and International Aid 5 credit hours Examination of issues related to social welfare in a global context, including the role of international agencies such as the IMF, World Bank and humanitarian aid organizations. Critical comparison of social welfare in the USA and another country, with a focus on the role of culture in social welfare policy and practice. Study/service abroad for credit is an optional component of this course. Requisites may be bypassed by the department with permission of instructor.
Prerequisite Course(s): SOCW 1510
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SOCW 3320 - Mental Illness 5 credit hours The nature, dynamics, and treatment of madness and insanity from a socio-cultural perspective. Theoretical perspectives on the cause of mental illness, including social causes such as class gender and cultural differences. Therapeutic approaches in cross-cultural and historic perspectives. Contemporary definitions and treatment. Requisites may be bypassed by the department with permission of instructor.
Prerequisite Course(s): SOCW 1510
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SOCW 3330 - History of U.S. Social Welfare Policy 5 credit hours An examination of the history of attitudes and policies concerning poverty and related social problems in the United States. Covers historic roots of social policy focusing most intently on the late nineteenth century through mid-1980’s. History of the development of the social work field and the role social work plays in advancing social policy concerns. Requisites may be bypassed by the department with permission of instructor.
Prerequisite Course(s): SOCW 1510
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SOCW 3340 - Health and Human Services in Belize 5 credit hours An exploration of the history, culture, and health and human service infrastructure of Belize, in the context of thinking critically about global issues in health and social welfare. Students will meet weekly during spring quarter and spend 10 days working with agencies in Belize according to their interests and skill set. Requisites may be bypassed by the department with permission of instructor.
Prerequisite Course(s): SOCW 1510
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SOCW 3910 - Special Topics 1 to 5 credit hours
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SOCW 3960 - Directed Study 2 to 5 credit hours
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SOCW 4010 - Social Work Research Data Analysis 5 credit hours An introduction to data analysis strategies for quantitative and qualitative data. Introduction to the application of computers and computer software in descriptive and inferential statistics.
Registration Restriction(s): Majors only Prerequisite Course(s): SOCW 1510.
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SOCW 4020 - Social Work Research Methods 5 credit hours Methods of scientific investigation with application to the social welfare field. Values and ethics for social work research. Stages of the research process including design, data collection, qualitative and quantitative methods. Accepted social work majors only (post candidacy).
Registration Restriction(s): Majors only Prerequisite Course(s): SOCW 1510 Co-requisite Course(s): SOCW 4510 or 4520
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SOCW 4030 - Social Work Research Capstone 3 credit hours Serves as the final capstone experience in the BSW Program as well as the final requirement of the university’s Core Curriculum. The senior synthesis allows students to demonstrate their mastery of program curricular content and ability to integrate and apply knowledge from across the curriculum through evaluating a component of their field practicum. Accepted social work majors only (post candidacy). Meets senior synthesis requirement
Registration Restriction(s): Majors only Prerequisite Course(s): SOCW 1510 Co-requisite Course(s): SOCW 4630, SOCW 4530
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SOCW 4110 - Practice II: Social Work with Groups 3 credit hours Second course in the three-course sequence of generalist practice methods. Focuses on the values and ethics, knowledge base and intervention methods foundational to practice with groups. Skills In group participation and leadership. Accepted social work majors only (post candidacy).
Registration Restriction(s): Majors only Prerequisite Course(s): SOCW 3110
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SOCW 4120 - Practice III: Social Work with Organizations and Communities 3 credit hours Third course in a three-course sequence of generalist practice methods. Focuses on the values and ethics, knowledge base and intervention methods foundational to practice with organizations and communities. Working with organizations and communities to solve problems through assessment, planning, intervening, and evaluating. Accepted social work majors only (post candidacy).
Registration Restriction(s): Majors only Prerequisite Course(s): SOCW 4110
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SOCW 4310 - Working with Troubled Families 5 credit hours Behavioral dynamics in family systems, the reciprocal nature of relationships, and conceptual framework for working with families. Examination of: child abuse, oppressed families, family violence, chronic illness, death and dying, and addictions. Requisites may be bypassed by the department with permission of instructor.
Prerequisite Course(s): SOCW 1510
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SOCW 4320 - Domestic Violence 3 credit hours An overview of issues central to understanding and intervening upon intimate partner violence in the United States. An introduction to current theories, research, and implications for policy, prevention, and practice. Exploration of local services and legal remedies for domestic violence victims, perpetrators and their children.
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SOCW 4330 - Politics of Homelessness 3 credit hours This course examines homelessness in Seattle and King County from social, economic, political, and ethical perspectives. Consideration will be given to the causes, characteristics, and potential cures of/for homelessness. Presentations from homeless and formerly homeless people, service providers, and local public officials responsible for policy responses to homelessness, are a key feature of this course
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SOCW 4340 - Introduction to Alcohol and Drug Addiction 3 credit hours History, scope, physiological, social, psychological, and family aspects of alcohol and other drug problems. Impaired driving. Progression and symptoms of addiction; types of alcoholics. Nature of addictive diseases: causality, treatment, and prevention.
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SOCW 4350 - Social Work with Children and Youth 5 credit hours An examination of current ecological influences and their impact on culturally diverse children and youth in America including poverty and homelessness, exposure to community violence, child abuse and neglect, teenage parenting, and substance abuse in families. Exploration of child welfare policy and services, emphasizing the continuum of child welfare interventions.
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SOCW 4510 - Field Practicum I 3 credit hours The first quarter of three, totaling 450-hour field practicum allows the student to critically apply knowledge to actual practice and to develop as a professional while placed in a social service agency under the supervision of a social work professional. Accepted social work majors only (post candidacy). Mandatory credit/no credit.
Registration Restriction(s): Majors only Prerequisite Course(s): SOCW 3110
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SOCW 4520 - Field Practicum II 3 credit hours The second quarter of three, 450-hour field practicum allows the student to critically apply knowledge to actual practice and to develop as a professional while placed in a social service agency under the supervision of a social work professional. Accepted social work majors only (post candidacy). Mandatory credit/no credit.
Registration Restriction(s): Majors only Prerequisite Course(s): SOCW 3110
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SOCW 4530 - Field Practicum III 3 credit hours The 450-hour field practicum allows the student to critically apply knowledge to actual practice and to develop as a professional while placed in a social service agency under the supervision of a social work professional. Accepted social work majors only (post candidacy). Mandatory credit/no credit.
Registration Restriction(s): Majors only Prerequisite Course(s): SOCW 3110 Co-requisite Course(s): SOCW 4610-4630
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SOCW 4610 - Field Seminar I 1 credit hour The field seminar is offered concurrent with the Field Practicum experience. Integration and application of social work foundation content areas with generalist practice. Professional development and growth, including peer consultation.Accepted social work majors only (post candidacy).
Registration Restriction(s): Majors only Prerequisite Course(s): SOCW 3110
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SOCW 4620 - Field Seminar II 1 credit hour The field seminar is offered concurrent with the Field Practicum experience. Integration and application of social work foundation content areas with generalist practice. Professional development and growth, including peer consultation.Accepted social work majors only (post candidacy).
Registration Restriction(s): Majors only Prerequisite Course(s): SOCW 3110
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SOCW 4630 - Field Seminar III 1 credit hour The field seminar is offered concurrent with the Field Practicum experience. Integration and application of social work foundation content areas with generalist practice. Professional development and growth, including peer consultation.Accepted social work majors only (post candidacy).
Registration Restriction(s): Majors only Prerequisite Course(s): SOCW 3110
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SOCW 4770 - Honors: Directed Reading 3 credit hours
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SOCW 4780 - Honors: Directed Study 3 credit hours
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SOCW 4790 - Honors:Thesis Supervision 4 credit hours
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SOCW 4910 - Special Topics 1 to 5 credit hours
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SOCW 4950 - Internship 1 to 5 credit hours
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SOCW 4960 - Independent Study 1 to 5 credit hours
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SOCW 4990 - Directed Research 1 to 5 credit hours
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Sociology |
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SOCL 2960 - Independent Study 1 to 5 credit hours
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SOCL 3110 - Sociological Reasoning 5 credit hours An in-depth study of the field of sociology outlining the structure of the discipline, major theoretical and methodological perspectives, and definition of sociological problems. History of the field, relations and boundaries with other disciplines and current issues in sociology will also be covered. Required of all SOCL majors.
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SOCL 3120 - Sociological Theory 5 credit hours An overview of both classical and contemporary theory with special emphasis on conceptualization of theoretical problems, comparison of theoretical approaches and limitations of given theoretical perspectives. Central sociological themes: the transition from traditional to modern society, the relation of ideas to social structure and the focus of identity in post-modern society will be discussed. Required of all SOCL majors.
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SOCL 3130 - Sociological Research Methods 5 credit hours This course deals with the why and how of social research. We will cover two main themes: the epistemology of social science and the logic of study design. Students will chart the logic of a social study and establish criteria for evaluating this study. At the conclusion of this course students will be able to understand and interpret information about the contemporary social world. Required of all SOCL majors.
Prerequisite Course(s): SOCL 3120
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SOCL 3210 - Society and Behavior 5 credit hours Inquiry into fundamental relations between the individual and society. Theoretical perspectives on interaction and communication, formation of personal identity through identification with models, internal organization of self, formation and changes of perceptions, attitudes, beliefs, and behavior; small-group dynamics, collective behavior.
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SOCL 3220 - Social Problems 5 credit hours Exploration of the basic institutions and social structure of America. Analysis of main patterns and trends since WWII in population, environment, technology, economy, politics, family, and class, interpreted as a transformation to a post-industrial soci-ety. Reflection on origin and nature of American values and character structure (esp. Weber); problems and future prospects.
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SOCL 3230 - Deviance and Social Control 5 credit hours Analysis of the nature and dynamics, norms and values, deviance and sanctions, and modes of social control. Theories of causes of deviant behavior, types of deviance, processes of becoming deviant, stigmatization; deviant groups and subcultures, deviance and race, ethnicity, gender, and class differences; deviance, innovation, and social change. Cross-listed with CRJS 2000.
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SOCL 3240 - Family and Kinship 5 credit hours Analysis of the nature of family systems. Kinship as the primordial social bond, and the evolution of families in relation to changes in the larger social structure. Contemporary family types, dynamics, development, policy; changes in contemporary family and kinship relations. Cross-listed with ANTH 3310.
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SOCL 3310 - Class and Inequality 5 credit hours Exploration of the nature and development of social inequality and societal stratification. Alternative theories of Marx, Weber, functionalist and others on the dynamics and evolution of stratification systems, especially the emergence of the modern class system, in relation to changes in social structure. Special focus on classes and the elite in America, and contemporary changes.
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SOCL 3320 - Race and Ethnicity 5 credit hours Investigation of the social construction of race and ethnicity in comparative perspective, including the political and socio-historical factors affecting individual and group identities. Special attention paid to the economic and social-psychological dimensions of racism and domination. Cross-listed with SOCW 3170.
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