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Showing 1,901-2,000 of 3,885 items.
#CodeNameUGGRADCSubjectSubject CodeAcademic DepartmentStatus 
  
1901FNCE595Independent Study
Individualized research into a selected topic chosen by the faculty adviser and the student.

Credits: 3, Level: Graduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Graduate (2002 — Indefinite)    
✔️Finance (FNCE)FNCESchool of BusinessActive
1902FNCE597Finance Research
A research project under the supervision of a faculty in the discipline, which includes review of literature, research design, data collection and analysis leading to a paper appropriate for professional publication and/or presentation.

Credits: 3, Level: Graduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Graduate (2002 — Indefinite)    
✔️Finance (FNCE)FNCESchool of BusinessActive
1903FREN101Elementary French I
This is a foundation course in basic language skills. Students who have any background in French must take the language placement examination. Students should contact department for details on specific scores. This course develops listening and reading strategies with emphasis on oral and written forms of communication. Laboratory work required.

Credits: 3, Lab Fee 04 ($30), Level: Undergraduate, Offered: FALL

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2026 — Indefinite)     Future (2026-01-01)

Proposal — Workflow Step: UG Curriculum Committee, Undergraduate Curriculum Committee
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesReview
1904FREN101Elementary French I
This is a foundation course in basic language skills. Students who have any background in French must take the language placement examination. Students should contact department for details on specific scores. This course develops listening and reading strategies with emphasis on oral and written forms of communication. Laboratory work required.

Credits: 3, Lab Fee 03 ($20), Level: Undergraduate, Offered: FALL

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (1979 — Indefinite)    
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1905FREN101LElementary French I Lab
NULL

Credits: 0, Lab Fee 04 ($30), Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: (2026 — Indefinite)     Future (2026-01-01)

Proposal — Workflow Step: Records Office Approval 1A, Records Office
French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesReview
1906FREN101LElementary French I Lab
NULL

Credits: 0, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: (2016 — Indefinite)    
French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1907FREN102Elementary French II
This course is a continuation of the development of basic language skills. Written and oral communication is strongly emphasized. It concentrates on developing the ability to use the language creatively to deal with daily life situations within the French-speaking context. Laboratory work required.

Credits: 3, Lab Fee 04 ($30), Level: Undergraduate, Offered: WINTER

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2026 — Indefinite)     Future (2026-01-01)

Proposal — Workflow Step: Records Office Final Approval, Records Office
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesReview
1908FREN102Elementary French II
This course is a continuation of the development of basic language skills. Written and oral communication is strongly emphasized. It concentrates on developing the ability to use the language creatively to deal with daily life situations within the French-speaking context. Laboratory work required.

Credits: 3, Lab Fee 03 ($20), Level: Undergraduate, Offered: WINTER

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (1979 — Indefinite)    
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1909FREN102LElem French II Lab
NULL

Credits: 0, Lab Fee 04 ($30), Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: (2026 — Indefinite)     Future (2026-01-01)

Proposal — Workflow Step: Records Office Approval 1A, Records Office
French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesReview
1910FREN102LElem French II Lab
NULL

Credits: 0, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: (2016 — Indefinite)    
French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1911FREN207Intermediate French I
Review and expansion of grammar/vocabulary as students develop speaking, writing, reading, and listening skills. Readings and discussions focus on topics related to the culture of the French-speaking world. Laboratory work required.

Credits: 3, Lab Fee 03 ($20), Level: Undergraduate, Offered: FALL

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (1992 — Indefinite)    
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1912FREN207LIntermediate French I Lab
NULL

Credits: 0, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: (2016 — Indefinite)    
French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1913FREN208Intermediate French II
Continues to review and expand student-knowledge of grammar/vocabulary as students develop speaking, writing, reading, and listening skills. Readings and discussions focus on topics related to the culture of the French-speaking world. Laboratory work required.

Credits: 3, Lab Fee 03 ($20), Level: Undergraduate, Offered: WINTER

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (1992 — Indefinite)    
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1914FREN208LIntermediate French II Lab
NULL

Credits: 0, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: (2016 — Indefinite)    
French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1915FREN244French Composition and Conversation
Course designed to enhance oral and written proficiency along with vocabulary expansion, and to review grammatical structures. It emphasizes description and narration, extending to the broader French-speaking world. FREN 244 and FREN 344 is a strongly suggested sequence for students who minor in French.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: FALL

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2002 — Indefinite)    
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1916FREN265Topics in French
Selected topics in French presented in a classroom setting. Subjects covered will determine how the course applies to the major. This course may be repeated for credit.

Credits: 1 - 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: FALL | WINTER

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2013 — Indefinite)    
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1917FREN295Directed Study
Emphasizes individual, directed study. Designed for students who want to conduct independent research in a specific subject in the field of modern languages. Faculty will assist student with selection of topic and serve as consultant for the project. This course is limited primarily to the department majors and must be approved by the Chair of Modern Languages.

Credits: 1 - 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (1985 - 2023)     Discontinued (2022-01-01)
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1918FREN295Independent Study
Emphasizes individual study. Designed for students who want to conduct independent research in a specific subject in the field of modern languages. Faculty will assist student with selection of topic and serve as consultant for the project. This course is limited primarily to the department majors and must be approved by the Chair of Modern Languages.

Credits: 1 - 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2023 — Indefinite)    
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1919FREN305French for Business
This course seeks to develop knowledge and proficiency in the French economic and business world. It includes vocabulary review; practice of oral and written expression, marketing, banking, employment, job hunting, interviewing, accounting, and publicity. Written expression of business correspondence is one of the topics discussed.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2005 — Indefinite)    
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1920FREN344Advanced French Composition and Conversation
Designed to enhance oral and written proficiency along with vocabulary expansion, and to review grammatical structures. It focuses on Nous and Les Autres, incorporating description and narration, extending to the broader French-speaking world, incorporating current events and argumentation along with vocabulary study and grammar refinement. FREN 244 and 344 is a sequence particularly suggested for students who minor in French.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: FALL

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (1983 — Indefinite)    
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1921FREN350French Linguistics
An intensive course designed to enhance oral and written proficiency along with vocabulary expansion. It focuses on the study of syntax, morphology, phonetics, and phonology as components of the generative grammar of the French language. Open to eligible students returning from ACA. This course is required for majors in French.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2002 — Indefinite)    
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1922FREN353Contemporary French Culture and Civilization (SERV-2)
This course focuses on contemporary French culture and civilization and emphasizes social, political, and artistic trends, and intellectual movements that have contributed to the institutions and character of modern France. Course conducted entirely in French.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2002 — Indefinite)    
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1923FREN357Survey of French Medieval and Renaissance Literature (W)
Close reading and discussion of selected works from the period (eleventh through sixteenth centuries) viewed in the socio-historical, intellectual, and artistic context: Chanson de Roland, Roman de Renart, Aucassin et Nicolette, Farce de Maître Pathelin, and works by Chrétien de Troyes, Villon, Rabelais, the Pléiade, and Montaigne.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2002 — Indefinite)    
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1924FREN358Survey of French 17th and 18th Centuries Literature (W)
This course is a study of neo-classical tragedy and comedy as illustrated in select texts of Corneille, Mohère, Racine, Marivaux, and Beaumarchais. It experiments in narrative fiction, including works by Mme de Lafayette and Prévost. The art of epistolarity: Pascal and the polemical letter, Mme de Sévigné and the personal letter, Voltaire and the traveler's letter. Focus on topics: préciosité and sensibility; feminism and modernity; rationalism and esprit critique.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: FALL | WINTER

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2002 - 2024)     Discontinued (2023-01-01)
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1925FREN358Survey of French 17th and 18th Centuries Literature (W)
This course is a study of neo-classical tragedy and comedy as illustrated in select texts of Corneille, Mohère, Racine, Marivaux, and Beaumarchais. It experiments in narrative fiction, including works by Mme de Lafayette and Prévost. The art of epistolarity: Pascal and the polemical letter, Mme de Sévigné and the personal letter, Voltaire and the traveler's letter. Focus on topics: préciosité and sensibility; feminism and modernity; rationalism and esprit critique.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: FALL | WINTER

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2024 — Indefinite)    
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1926FREN441Morphology & Syntax
A grammar course presenting the advanced functions of the noun, the use of the modes and the tenses, particular sentence constructions, nominal and verbal transformations, direct and indirect style, propositions. Numerous exercises.

Credits: 2, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: N/A

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2022 — Indefinite)    
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1927FREN458Survey of French 19th and 20th Centuries Literature (W)
Studies the main literary works and currents in the modern era in their historical context. Based on an interdisciplinary approach linking literary theory with history, sociology, and psychology. Works studied: Chateaubriand, Réné; Balzac, Le Père Goriot; Hugo, Hernani; Baudelaire, Les Fleurs du mal; Gide, La Symphonie pastorale; Camus, L'Etranger; Duras, Moderato Cantabile.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: FALL | WINTER

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2002 - 2024)     Discontinued (2023-01-01)
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1928FREN458Survey of French 19th and 20th Centuries Literature (W)
Studies the main literary works and currents in the modern era in their historical context. Based on an interdisciplinary approach linking literary theory with history, sociology, and psychology. Works studied: Chateaubriand, Réné; Balzac, Le Père Goriot; Hugo, Hernani; Baudelaire, Les Fleurs du mal; Gide, La Symphonie pastorale; Camus, L'Etranger; Duras, Moderato Cantabile.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: FALL | WINTER

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2024 — Indefinite)    
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1929FREN459Francophone Cultures and Literatures (W)
This course proposes a cultural and literary journey based on a variety of texts throughout the main French-speaking regions of the world: the African continent, South East Asia, French Canada, Belgium, Switzerland, the French-speaking islands of the Caribbean. This approach is intended to stress and place into perspective these geographical and national entities. Guest-speakers closely related, either as native speakers or by their professional experience to French-speaking Africa, Canada, or the Caribbean will be invited when available.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2002 — Indefinite)    
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1930FREN465Topics in French
See FREN 265 for course description.

Credits: 1 - 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: FALL | WINTER

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2008 — Indefinite)    
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1931FREN487French Literature I
This course introduces students to a panorama of French Literature. The course book helps students to grasp the principal literary currents and the writers associated with them, while reading memorable extracts of literary works.

Credits: 1, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2022 — Indefinite)    
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1932FREN488French Literature II
This course introduces students to a panorama of French Literature. The course book helps students to grasp the principal literary currents and the writers associated with them, while reading memorable extracts of literary works.

Credits: 1, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2021 — Indefinite)    
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1933FREN490Comprehensive Examination Preparation
This course is designed to provide academic support for French majors who will be taking the MCE required for graduation. One member of the faculty will meet with the student regularly to provide the opportunity to cover material pertinent to this examination. French majors must take this course in the last semester prior to graduation. Results of the MCE will be the final grade for this course.

Credits: 1, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: FALL | WINTER

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2002 — Indefinite)    
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1934FREN495Directed Study
See FREN 295 for course description.

Credits: 1 - 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (1979 - 2023)     Discontinued (2022-01-01)
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1935FREN495Independent Study
Emphasizes individual, independent study. Designed for students who want to conduct independent research in a specific subject in the field of modern languages. Faculty will assist student with selection of topic and serve as consultant for the project. This course is limited primarily to the department majors and must be approved by the Chair of Modern Languages.

Credits: 1 - 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2023 — Indefinite)    
✔️French (FREN)FRENModern LanguagesActive
1936GEOG204World Geography (SERV-2)
Maps, land forms, soil, mineral resources, weather, and climate are considered. Man's adjustment to various physiographic regions is studied.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: WINTER

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2024 — Indefinite)    
✔️Geography (GEOG)GEOGHistory and Political StudiesActive
1937GEOG204World Geography (SERV-2)
Maps, land forms, soil, mineral resources, weather, and climate are considered. Man's adjustment to various physiographic regions is studied.

Credits: 3, Lab Fee 04 ($30), Level: Undergraduate, Offered: WINTER

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (1975 - 2024)     Discontinued (2023-01-01)
✔️Geography (GEOG)GEOGHistory and Political StudiesActive
1938GRMN101Elementary German I
A foundation course in the basic language skills. Laboratory work is required. Students who have not taken any German language must enroll in GRMN 101. This course develops listening and reading strategies with an emphasis on oral and written forms of communication.

Credits: 3, Lab Fee 04 ($30), Level: Undergraduate, Offered: FALL

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2026 — Indefinite)     Future (2026-01-01)

Proposal — Workflow Step: UG Curriculum Committee, Undergraduate Curriculum Committee
✔️German (GRMN)GRMNModern LanguagesReview
1939GRMN101Elementary German I
A foundation course in the basic language skills. Laboratory work is required. Students who have not taken any German language must enroll in GRMN 101. This course develops listening and reading strategies with an emphasis on oral and written forms of communication.

Credits: 3, Lab Fee 03 ($20), Level: Undergraduate, Offered: FALL

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (1975 — Indefinite)    
✔️German (GRMN)GRMNModern LanguagesActive
1940GRMN101LElementary German I Lab
NULL

Credits: 0, Lab Fee 04 ($30), Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: (2026 — Indefinite)     Future (2026-01-01)

Proposal — Workflow Step: Records Office Approval 1A, Records Office
German (GRMN)GRMNModern LanguagesReview
1941GRMN101LElementary German I Lab
NULL

Credits: 0, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: (2016 — Indefinite)    
German (GRMN)GRMNModern LanguagesActive
1942GRMN102Elementary German II
This course is a continuation of the development of basic language skills. Oral and written communication are strongly emphasized. Laboratory work is required. Those students who have any background in German must seek departmental permission to enroll in any German course other than GRMN 101.

Credits: 3, Lab Fee 04 ($30), Level: Undergraduate, Offered: WINTER

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2026 — Indefinite)     Future (2026-01-01)

Proposal — Workflow Step: UG Curriculum Committee, Undergraduate Curriculum Committee
✔️German (GRMN)GRMNModern LanguagesReview
1943GRMN102Elementary German II
This course is a continuation of the development of basic language skills. Oral and written communication are strongly emphasized. Laboratory work is required. Those students who have any background in German must seek departmental permission to enroll in any German course other than GRMN 101.

Credits: 3, Lab Fee 03 ($20), Level: Undergraduate, Offered: WINTER

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (1975 — Indefinite)    
✔️German (GRMN)GRMNModern LanguagesActive
1944GRMN102LElementary German II Lab
NULL

Credits: 0, Lab Fee 04 ($30), Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: (2026 — Indefinite)     Future (2026-01-01)

Proposal — Workflow Step: Records Office Approval 1A, Records Office
German (GRMN)GRMNModern LanguagesReview
1945GRMN102LElementary German II Lab
NULL

Credits: 0, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: (2016 — Indefinite)    
German (GRMN)GRMNModern LanguagesActive
1946GRMN207Intermediate German I
Continued emphasis on the development of listening and speaking skills. There is, however, an increased emphasis on reading and writing skills through short selections in German. Laboratory work is required. Students may receive credit by passing a "Challenge Examination" with a grade of B or better. For information on the examination, students should refer to Southern's Catalog and/or Modern Languages faculty for details. Those students who have any background in German must seek departmental permission to enroll in any German course other than GRMN 101.

Credits: 3, Lab Fee 03 ($20), Level: Undergraduate, Offered: FALL

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (1992 — Indefinite)    
✔️German (GRMN)GRMNModern LanguagesActive
1947GRMN207LIntermediate German I Lab
NULL

Credits: 0, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: (2016 — Indefinite)    
German (GRMN)GRMNModern LanguagesActive
1948GRMN208Intermediate German II
This course maintains a strong emphasis on listening and speaking skills. Through reading of more extensive texts and informal writing as a support for speaking, it develops oral fluency toward more effective narrative. Laboratory work is required. Students may receive credit by passing a "Challenge Examination" with a grade of B or better. For information on this examination, students should refer to Southern's Catalog and/or Modern Languages faculty for details. Those students who have any background in German must seek departmental permission to enroll in any German course other than GRMN 101.

Credits: 3, Lab Fee 03 ($20), Level: Undergraduate, Offered: WINTER

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (1992 — Indefinite)    
✔️German (GRMN)GRMNModern LanguagesActive
1949GRMN208LIntermediate German II Lab
NULL

Credits: 0, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: (2016 — Indefinite)    
German (GRMN)GRMNModern LanguagesActive
1950GRMN295Directed Study
A course emphasizing individual directed study. This course is for students who want to conduct independent research in a specific subject of modern languages. Faculty will assist students with selection of topic and serve as a consultant for the project. This course is limited primarily to the department majors and must be approved by the Chair of Modern Languages.

Credits: 1 - 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2015 - 2023)     Discontinued (2022-01-01)
✔️German (GRMN)GRMNModern LanguagesActive
1951GRMN295Independent Study
A course emphasizing individual study. This course is for students who want to conduct independent research in a specific subject of modern languages. Faculty will assist students with selection of topic and serve as a consultant for the project. This course is limited primarily to the department majors and must be approved by the Chair of Modern Languages.

Credits: 1 - 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2023 — Indefinite)    
✔️German (GRMN)GRMNModern LanguagesActive
1952GRMN495Directed Study
See GRMN 295 for course description.

Credits: 1 - 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (1975 - 2023)     Discontinued (2022-01-01)
✔️German (GRMN)GRMNModern LanguagesActive
1953GRMN495Independent Study
A course emphasizing individual study. This course is for students who want to conduct independent research in a specific subject of modern languages. Faculty will assist students with selection of topic and serve as a consultant for the project. This course is limited primarily to the department majors and must be approved by the Chair of Modern Languages.

Credits: 1 - 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2023 — Indefinite)    
✔️German (GRMN)GRMNModern LanguagesActive
1954HADM520Operations Management and the Clinical Professional
Concepts of decision models for planning, control, forecasting, scheduling, and analysis. Guest lecturers from clinical areas included.

Credits: 3, Level: Graduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Graduate (1998 — Indefinite)    
✔️Healthcare Administration (HADM)HADMSchool of BusinessActive
1955HADM530Healthcare Administration
The theory and practice of healthcare in Western culture. Different types of care delivery studied. Environments, services offered, process of entry into care systems. Health and quality of care, medical ethics, environmental health, and delivering of services addressed. Designed for all avenues of healthcare.

Credits: 3, Level: Graduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Graduate (1998 — Indefinite)    
✔️Healthcare Administration (HADM)HADMSchool of BusinessActive
1956HADM532Healthcare Economics and Finance
This course explores healthcare finance and economics from the perspective of healthcare providers and non-financial managers of health services. Financial management principles, the healthcare reimbursement system, reimbursement process, and factors influencing the financial environment are discussed with emphasis on strategies to promote and sustain the financial viability of healthcare. Theory and application are integrated throughout the course with a particular focus on the clinical role of the DNP and other healthcare professionals within the contemporary healthcare environment.

Credits: 3, Level: Graduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Graduate (2012 — Indefinite)    
✔️Healthcare Administration (HADM)HADMSchool of BusinessActive
1957HADM536Advanced Nursing Leadership and Role Development
A student can receive credit for this course from only one program. Examines the role of the nurse executive or manager within the managed care system through analyses of selected leadership, management, and nursing theories. The concepts derived from these analyses are applied to the various role functions (leader, strategic planner, organizer, facilitator, evaluator). Leadership principles, continuous quality improvement, human resources management, negotiation skills, marketing, and strategic planning are emphasized. This course is cross-listed with NURS 638 in the School of Nursing. Prerequisite(s): Permission of program coordinator.

Credits: 3, Level: Graduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Graduate (2020 — Indefinite)    
✔️Healthcare Administration (HADM)HADMSchool of BusinessActive
1958HADM536Advanced Nursing Leadership and Role Development
A student can receive credit for this course from only one program. Examines the role of the nurse executive or manager within the managed care system through analyses of selected leadership, management, and nursing theories. The concepts derived from these analyses are applied to the various role functions (leader, strategic planner, organizer, facilitator, evaluator). Leadership principles, continuous quality improvement, human resources management, negotiation skills, marketing, and strategic planning are emphasized. This course is cross-listed with NRSG 578 in the School of Nursing. Prerequisite(s): Permission of program coordinator.

Credits: 3, Level: Graduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Graduate (2003 - 2020)     Discontinued (2019-01-01)
✔️Healthcare Administration (HADM)HADMSchool of BusinessActive
1959HADM545Healthcare Policy
Healthcare policy supports the delivery and financing of healthcare. This course reviews the policy analysis process, the push and pull of specific healthcare goals, the constraining effects of resource limitations, and the resulting healthcare system in the United States. Benefits and drawbacks associated with healthcare systems both within and outside of America will be considered.

Credits: 3, Lab Fee 05 ($60), Level: Graduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Graduate (2009 — Indefinite)    
✔️Healthcare Administration (HADM)HADMSchool of BusinessActive
1960HADM552Healthcare Marketing and Human Resources
The provision of healthcare within the United States includes features that are unique with respect to the marketing of healthcare services. Additionally, healthcare professionals operate within an environment that recognizes superior human resource knowledge and skills. This course addresses marketing for healthcare facilities, and human resource opportunities and realities that exist within the healthcare industry. Legal and cooperative relationships within the industry will be explored.

Credits: 3, Level: Graduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Graduate (2009 — Indefinite)    
✔️Healthcare Administration (HADM)HADMSchool of BusinessActive
1961HADM555Communication and Professional Relationships
The healthcare industry typically involves many semi-autonomous groups coalescing around individual patients in order to provide services. The professionalism with which these groups are communicated and partnered, determines, in part, the quality of the rendered services and the operational health of the providing institution. This course explicitly identifies certain of the professional relationships which exist within healthcare and provides strategies for effectively meeting the needs of other professional groups, especially with respect to communication.

Credits: 3, Level: Graduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Graduate (2009 — Indefinite)    
✔️Healthcare Administration (HADM)HADMSchool of BusinessActive
1962HADM585Contemporary Issues in Healthcare Administration
A seminar of open discussion and guest lectures relating to current issues developing within the healthcare industry. Included in the discussion will be topics in healthcare finance and legal issues.

Credits: 3, Level: Graduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Graduate (2001 — Indefinite)    
✔️Healthcare Administration (HADM)HADMSchool of BusinessActive
1963HADM595Independent Study
Individualized research into a selected topic chosen by the faculty adviser and the student.

Credits: 3, Level: Graduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Graduate (2000 — Indefinite)    
✔️Healthcare Administration (HADM)HADMSchool of BusinessActive
1964HADM597Healthcare Administration Research
A research project under the supervision of a faculty in the discipline, which includes review of literature, research design, data collection and analysis leading to a paper appropriate for professional publication and/or presentation.

Credits: 3, Level: Graduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Graduate (2001 — Indefinite)    
✔️Healthcare Administration (HADM)HADMSchool of BusinessActive
1965HIST130Introduction to the History of Science (IN-6)
The course focuses on the history of science from the late middle ages to the present. The class will consider how science was understood and practiced primarily in Europe as well as the United States. The course will survey the beginnings of the physical sciences, cosmology, and the Scientific Revolution. The class will also consider the Enlightenment and Industrial Revolution as well as discoveries in physics, chemistry, and biology in the 20th century. For history majors, this class could substitute for one of the World Society survey courses required for the major.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2021 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1966HIST130Science, Society and the State (IN-6)
The course focuses on the history of science from the late middle ages to the present. The class will consider how science was understood and practiced primarily in Europe as well as the United States. The course will survey the beginnings of the physical sciences, cosmology, and the Scientific Revolution. The class will also consider the Enlightenment and Industrial Revolution as well as discoveries in physics, chemistry, and biology in the 20th century. For history majors, this class could substitute for one of the World Society survey courses required for the major.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2026 — Indefinite)     Future (2026-01-01)

Proposal — Workflow Step: UG Curriculum Committee, Undergraduate Curriculum Committee
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesReview
1967HIST140Introduction to African-American History (IN-6)
This course is an introduction to the history of Black Americans from when the first Africans were brought to North America through the contemporary period. The history of the United States is fundamentally shaped by the contributions of African-Americans and this class looks at national history by focusing on the political, cultural, economic and religious experiences of Black Americans. Special attention will be paid to Black Seventh-day Adventists and their contributions to and experiences of the Adventist church in the USA. For history majors, this class could substitute for one of the US History survey courses required for the major.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2021 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1968HIST141Introduction to Asian American History
This course is a historical survey of the perceptions of and experiences of Asian-descended people and Asian Americans from the seventeenth century to the present. We will trace the history of Orientalism and consumption of goods from Asia in the colonial periods, immigration from and to China, Japan, and Korea and the “importation” of Buddhism in the nineteenth century, expatriate nationalist movements, Japanese internment, and South and Southeast Asian cultures in the United States in the twentieth century, and more.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: N/A

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2025 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1969HIST145The American Civil War: From the Cornfields to the Battlefields
This course covers the American Civil War, from the major figures and the politics and battles they fought, to the common soldiers on the fields of battle and the civilians on the home front. A variety of resources are used in the class, including primary source material, texts, and various other secondary sources. No general education credit given.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2000 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1970HIST154U.S. History through the Civil War (IN-6)
An introductory survey of the nation from colonial times to reconstruction. The development of its politics, government and social institutions is covered in each semester of the sequence. This course is recommended as general education for freshmen and sophomores.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (1975 - 2022)     Discontinued (2021-01-01)
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1971HIST154U.S. History through the Civil War (IN-6)
An introductory survey of the nation from colonial times to reconstruction. The development of its politics, government and social institutions is covered in each semester of the sequence. This course is recommended as general education for freshmen and sophomores.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: FALL

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2022 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1972HIST154TUS History through Civil War
NULL

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: (2019 — Indefinite)    
History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1973HIST155U.S. History since the Civil War (IN-6)
An introductory survey of the nation from reconstruction to the present. The development of its politics, government and social institutions is covered in each semester of the sequence. This course is recommended as general education for freshmen and sophomores.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (1975 - 2022)     Discontinued (2021-01-01)
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1974HIST155U.S. History since the Civil War (IN-6)
An introductory survey of the nation from reconstruction to the present. The development of its politics, government and social institutions is covered in each semester of the sequence. This course is recommended as general education for freshmen and sophomores.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: WINTER

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2022 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1975HIST174World Societies to 1500 (IN-6)
A study of the development of Western and non-Western culture and government, emphasizing the evolution of European society and its interaction with non-European civilizations. This course is recommended as general education for freshmen and sophomores.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (1975 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1976HIST175World Societies since 1500 (IN-6)
A study of the development of Western and non-Western culture and government, emphasizing the evolution of European society and its interaction with non-European civilizations. This course is recommended as general education for freshmen and sophomores.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (1975 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1977HIST180Migrations and Global Encounters Since 1400
This course analyzes and describes how the global movement of people have shaped ways of living, politics, inventions, and spread of ideas since the integration of the Americas. Special emphasis is placed on the ways Christianity has spread around the world since 1400. This will include the ways migrations have changed since the development of modern technological ways of organizing humans into nation-states.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: N/A

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2025 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1978HIST181Creating Families in World History Since 1500
This course analyzes and describes how the development of the modern world shaped domestic life from the medieval role to the present. The role of Europe in the definitions and expectations of modernity is explored, with the implications for people who are Christians and who consider the Bible to be their authority regarding the will of God. We study the responses of the entire world to the realities of modernity, including the regions outside Europe. Emphasis is on the ways that communities as well as families changed with the industrial revolution, world migrations, and within ideologies such as communism, conservative Islam, capitalism, and liberal democracies.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: N/A

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2025 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1979HIST250Women in American History (IN-6)
This course is a survey of women in the history of the Americas over the last 500 years, with emphasis on women in US history. Readings will focus on how women's lives were shaped by marriage and family customs, political rights, and labor practices. Special attention will be paid to women's contributions to the Christian church and the Adventist denomination. For history majors, this class could substitute for one of the US History survey courses required for the major.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2021 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1980HIST260North American Environmental History (IN-6)
This course is a reading and writing seminar on the historical relationship between human beings and nature in the United States. The central objective is to explore the varied and changing relations Americans have held with the landscapes they inhabited. Focusing on the past three centuries, we will investigate how humans have used, imagined, and remade this land, and in the process, ourselves. For history majors, this class could substitute for one of the US History survey courses for the major. Print-Friendly Page (opens a new window)

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2021 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1981HIST265Topics in History
Selected topics in history presented in classroom setting. Subjects covered will determine whether credit is granted in Area I or Area II. This course may be repeated for credit.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (1993 - 2023)     Discontinued (2022-01-01)
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1982HIST266Topics in History
Selected topics in history presented in classroom setting. Subjects covered will determine whether credit is granted American or non-American history credit. This course may be repeated for credit.

Credits: 1 - 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2025 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1983HIST266Topics in History
Selected topics in history presented in classroom setting. Subjects covered will determine whether credit is granted in Area I or Area II. This course may be repeated for credit.

Credits: 1 - 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2023 - 2025)     Discontinued (2024-01-01)
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1984HIST280H:Technology and Power (IN-6)
This course is required for Southern Scholars. Utilizing a combination of primary and secondary sources, this honors history course will look at the dramatic extension of European power into Asia, Africa, and the Americas, beginning in the 15th century and proceeding through the 19th century. We will examine how the interplay among accumulated technique, a culture of competition, and varying environments led to extensive conquest. We will further consider how societies choose how and to what extent to utilize available technologies to pursue national goals.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2015 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1985HIST294International Study Tour
Study tours led by historians outside the United States of America will combine tourism with reading and writing based on primary and/or secondary texts which support the study of the places being visited.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2013 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1986HIST295Directed Study
A course emphasizing individual directed study. The instructor to whom a student is assigned will determine whether credit is upper or lower division. This course also includes credit offered by the History Department on directed study tours. Writing emphasis credit for HIST 495 only. Approval of the department is required prior to registration.

Credits: 1 - 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (1980 - 2023)     Discontinued (2022-01-01)
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1987HIST295Independent Study
A course emphasizing individual study. The instructor to whom a student is assigned will determine whether credit is upper or lower division. This course also includes credit offered by the History Department on independent study tours. Writing emphasis credit for HIST 495 only. Approval of the department is required prior to registration.

Credits: 1 - 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2023 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1988HIST296U.S. Study Tour
Study tours led by historians in the United States of America will combine tourism with reading and writing based on primary and/or secondary texts which support the study of the places being visited.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2013 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1989HIST298Historiography (SERV-2)
A course examining historiography, which is the study of historical consciousness and historical writing. The class will focus on Western historiography (classical, European, and the United States). General education credit will not be given.

Credits: 3, Lab Fee 17 ($600), Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2025 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1990HIST298Historiography (SERV-2)
A course examining historiography, which is the study of historical consciousness and historical writing. The class will focus on Western historiography (classical, European, and the United States). General education credit will not be given.

Credits: 3, Lab Fee 16 ($500), Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2020 - 2025)     Discontinued (2024-01-01)
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1991HIST312Historical and Political Geography
This course considers the interaction between world cultures, environments, and geographic regions to explain patterns of human history and political development.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2017 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1992HIST322Modern Latin America
This course covers the region from Mexico to Brazil to Chile that some call “Latin America.” Examines the revolutionary nineteenth century to the present day. Particular emphasis on race and religion, including the Catholic presence, evolution of Pentecostal and other Protestant communities, and Afro-Caribbean religious practice.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: N/A

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2025 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1993HIST322Modern Latin America
This course covers the region from Mexico to Brazil to Chile that some call “Latin America.” Examines the revolutionary nineteenth century to the present day. Particular emphasis on race and religion, including the Catholic presence, evolution of Pentecostal and other Protestant communities, and Afro-Caribbean religious practice.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: N/A

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2022 - 2025)     Discontinued (2024-01-01)
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1994HIST330Science and Religion: Synthesis from 1500 to the Present (IN-6) (W)
This course focuses on the interaction between science and religion from the Scientific Revolution to our own present time. While often being seen as at war with one another and incompatible, an examination of the historical record shows much synthesis between science and religion as well as numerous interactions between both scientists and theologians. Through the readings and discussions, the class examines the historical nature of how scientists and society in general have dealt with issues concerning the nature of reality. Additionally, focusing on specific disciplines and how issues of religious and scientific beliefs have been discussed and debated provides a means of examining how synthesis may have occurred. Some of the topics include Copernicus, Kepler, and Galileo’s understandings of the location of the earth and sun; Darwin’s theory of evolution and the resulting debate including the Scopes trial and intelligent design movement; medicine and the role of religious beliefs in treatments; and relativity and quantum mechanics and their religious implications.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: N/A

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2022 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1995HIST340Modern East Asia
This course covers the period from the late nineteenth to twenty-first centuries. Particular emphasis on cultural, geopolitical, and economic interactions between Japan, China, and the Koreas. Students will gain fluency in broader themes of imperialism, modernization, nationalism, and gender.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: N/A

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2022 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1996HIST345Middle Eastern Politics and History (IN-6) (W)
This course traces the major religious and political developments in the Middle East from the rise of Islam through the twentieth century. Any or all of the following topics may be included: Islamic empires; Crusades; Ottoman nationalism; Islam's encounter with the West; the issue of Islamic-Arab nationalism. This course is cross-listed with PLSC 345. A student may receive credit for this course from only one program.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2004 - 2022)     Discontinued (2021-01-01)
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1997HIST345Modern Middle East (IN-6) (W)
This course traces the major religious and political developments in the Middle East from the rise of Islam through the twentieth century. Any or all of the following topics may be included: Islamic empires; Crusades; Ottoman nationalism; Islam's encounter with the West; the issue of Islamic-Arab nationalism. This course is cross-listed with PLSC 345. A student may receive credit for this course from only one program.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: WINTER EVEN YEARS

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2022 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1998HIST351Colonial Latin America (IN-6) (W)
Set in the context of Spanish empire and imperial ideology, the course begins with the cultural legacy of high pre-Columbian civilizations in Latin America and traces the interaction of the native people with Spanish exploration and conquest. It focuses primarily on Spanish political and social organization, the responses of the native people to growing Spanish political hegemony, and the gradual development of theories of race, empire, faith which culminated in a recognizably unified Spanish American world.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2006 - 2022)     Discontinued (2021-01-01)
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
1999HIST351Colonial Latin America (IN-6) (W)
Set in the context of Spanish empire and imperial ideology, the course begins with the cultural legacy of high pre-Columbian civilizations in Latin America and traces the interaction of the native people with Spanish exploration and conquest. It focuses primarily on Spanish political and social organization, the responses of the native people to growing Spanish political hegemony, and the gradual development of theories of race, empire, faith which culminated in a recognizably unified Spanish American world.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: WINTER EVEN YEARS

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2022 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive
2000HIST352Nineteenth Century America (IN-6) (W)
A study of American history from the early republic to the 20th century, including Jeffersonian and Jacksonian America, the Civil War, Reconstruction, and the Gilded Age.

Credits: 3, Level: Undergraduate, Offered: VARIABLE

Catalog: ✔️ Undergraduate (2020 — Indefinite)    
✔️History (HIST)HISTHistory and Political StudiesActive