May 16, 2024  
2014-2015 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
2014-2015 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Courses



 

Sociology

  
  • SOCI 3280 - Industrial Sociology


    3

    P: SOCI 2110 . Application of sociological concepts in understanding the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services in modern and developing societies.
  
  • SOCI 3289 - Community Organization


    3 S

    P: SOCI 2110 . Theoretical perspectives and social organization in communities of varying complexity. Theory and practices relative to problems of American communities.
  
  • SOCI 3325 - Sociology of Human Sexuality


    3 F

    P: SOCI 2110  or consent of instructor. Human sexuality as part of social behavior and social interaction. Emphasis on sexuality as learned via social scripting.
  
  • SOCI 3326 - LGBT Identity, Society, and Politics


    3 DD

    P: SOCI 2110  . Introduction to the social science research on LGBT people and communities.
  
  • SOCI 3327 - Introductory Medical Sociology


    3

    P: SOCI 2110  or consent of instructor. Social aspects of health and health-related behavior.
  
  • SOCI 3385 - History of Sociology


    3 WI

    P: SOCI 2110 . Schools of sociological thought and development of scientific sociology from Comte to present.
  
  • SOCI 3400 - Introduction to Gender and Society


    3 DD

    P: SOCI 2110 . Various expressions of masculinity and femininity and analysis of structure of gender inequality. Attention given to intersection of gender, race, and social class.
  
  • SOCI 3410 - Introduction to Maritime Sociology


    3

    P: ANTH 1000  or SOCI 2110 . People in marine environment. Emphasis on interrelationship of social, economic, and technological systems.
  
  • SOCI 3500 - Economy and Society


    3

    P: SOCI 2110 . Current state of sociological knowledge and research on economy as a social institution.
  
  • SOCI 3600 - Power and Politics in Society


    3

    P: SOCI 2110 . Political sociology analyzing relationship of state and society. Sociological perspectives on power, politics, and the state are considered by analyzing contemporary social issues, conflicts, and political alignments.
  
  • SOCI 4000 - Selected Topics in Sociology


    3

    3 classroom and/or lab hours per week. May be repeated for maximum of 6 s.h. P: SOCI 2110 ; 6 s.h. of SOCI above 1999. Specialized topics and current developments.
  
  • SOCI 4001 - Selected Topics in Sociology


    3

    3 classroom and/or lab hours per week. May be repeated for maximum of 6 s.h. P: SOCI 2110 ; 6 s.h. of SOCI above 1999. Specialized topics and current developments.
  
  • SOCI 4200 - Advanced Techniques in Quantitative Sociology


    3

    2 lecture and 2 lab hours per week. P: MIS 2223 ; SOCI 3213 . Techniques of statistical analysis in applied sociology. How to select statistical methods, carry them out, and present results in technical reports. Emphasis on computer exercises using contemporary statistical software.
  
  • SOCI 4201 - Advanced Techniques in Applied Research


    3

    P: SOCI 3216 . Major techniques in applied research (e.g., needs assessment, process and outcome assessment, organizational analysis, client and consumer surveys, cost-benefit analysis, key informant surveys, and focus groups). Effective techniques for presenting applied research results.
  
  • SOCI 4202 - Special Topics in Applied Social Research


    3

    P: Statistics or research design course; SOCI 2110 . Topics vary based on current faculty applied research.
  
  • SOCI 4300 - Sociology of Emotion


    3

    P: SOCI 2110  or consent of instructor. Analysis of the social origins, expression, and consequences of emotion.
  
  • SOCI 4320 - Sociology of Law


    3

    P: SOCI 2110 . Legal system from social perspective. Emphasis on history of legal and punishment systems and their organization, socialization of participants, and alternatives to traditional organization.
  
  • SOCI 4322 - Law and Social Change


    3

    P: SOCI 2110 . Relationship between law and social change. In-depth analysis of social conditions leading to, and societal consequences of, such legal decisions as related to desegregation, age discrimination, abortion, euthanasia, and school prayer.
  
  • SOCI 4325 - Marriage and the Family


    3 F,S,SS

    P: SOCI 2110 . Family cycle, roles, and status of members in their relationships. Family and social class. Nature, causes, and consequences of family problems and methods of adjustment.
  
  • SOCI 4327 - Gender and Adolescence


    3 DD

    P: SOCI 1010 . Sociological understanding of adolescence, and how gender affects and is affected by the social construction of adolescence.
  
  • SOCI 4330 - Criminology


    3

    P: SOCI 2110 . Nature, extent, causes, and methods of treatment and prevention of crime and delinquency.
  
  • SOCI 4337 - Principles of Sociology


    3 S

    May not count toward SOCI major. Intensive study of basic sociological concepts and their applications to understanding modern society.
  
  • SOCI 4341 - Sociology of Religion


    3 S DD

    P: SOCI 2110 . Mutual effects of religion and society on each other in ongoing social system. Focus on founded religions in literate societies.
  
  • SOCI 4345 - Racial and Cultural Minorities


    3 S DD

    P: ANTH 1000  or SOCI 2110 . Origin and present status of American minorities, sources and consequences of prejudice and discrimination, and goals and strategies of change in race and ethnic relations.
  
  • SOCI 4347 - Social Inequality


    3 F DD

    P: SOCI 2110 . Stratification systems of various societies. Emphasis on concepts and theories relative to American communities.
  
  • SOCI 4350 - Social Change


    3

    P: SOCI 2110 . Theoretical perspectives and cross-cultural analyses of social change in developed and developing societies and resulting consequences.
  
  • SOCI 4385 - Theoretical Perspectives and Applications


    3

    P: SOCI 2110 . History and nature of sociological theory reviewed and applied to selected social problems and social issues.
  
  • SOCI 4400 - Sociological Perspectives of Sport


    3 F

    P: SOCI 2110  or consent of instructor. Sociological investigation of sport through the lenses of classical, modern, and postmodern sociological theories, including issues of power, privilege, and social difference as they are manifested in sport and sports participation.
  
  • SOCI 4521 - Readings in Sociology


    1 F,S,SS

    May be repeated for maximum of 9 s.h. May count maximum of 9 s.h. of readings in SOCI and from practicum in SOCI (SOCI 4950 , SOCI 4951 , SOCI 4952 ) toward the BA in SOCI major or minor. P: Consent of instructor and dept chair. Extensive or selected readings taken from modern sociological research monographs or in specialized areas of sociology in which student has taken one or more courses.
  
  • SOCI 4522 - Readings in Sociology


    2 F,S,SS

    May be repeated for maximum of 9 s.h. May count maximum of 9 s.h. of readings in SOCI and from practicum in SOCI (SOCI 4950 , SOCI 4951 , SOCI 4952 ) toward the BA in SOCI major or minor. P: Consent of instructor and dept chair. Extensive or selected readings taken from modern sociological research monographs or in specialized areas of sociology in which student has taken one or more courses.
  
  • SOCI 4523 - Readings in Sociology


    3 F,S,SS

    May be repeated for maximum of 9 s.h. May count maximum of 9 s.h. of readings in SOCI and from practicum in SOCI (SOCI 4950 , SOCI 4951 , SOCI 4952 ) toward the BA in SOCI major or minor. P: Consent of instructor and dept chair. Extensive or selected readings taken from modern sociological research monographs or in specialized areas of sociology in which student has taken one or more courses.
  
  • SOCI 4550 - Honors


    3 F,S

    To be taken in succession. No grade or credit recorded until second course is completed. P: Senior SOCI major; admission to Sociology Honors Program. Reading, research, or service program resulting in writing of honors paper.
  
  • SOCI 4551 - Honors


    3 F,S

    To be taken in succession. No grade or credit recorded until second course is completed. P: Senior SOCI major; admission to Sociology Honors Program. Reading, research, or service program resulting in writing of honors paper.
  
  • SOCI 4800 - Senior Seminar


    3 WI F,S

    P: SOCI major; SOCI 3216 ; SOCI 3385  or SOCI 4385 . Integration of sociological knowledge and analysis of meaning of current sociological issues to develop sociological perspectives and better understand career choices.
  
  • SOCI 4950 - Practicum in Sociology


    3

    140 work and academic hours per semester for 3 s.h. credit. Practicum must be arranged at least 30 days before term begins. May be taken concurrently for a maximum of 9 s.h. P: SOCI major; 27 s.h. in SOCI with a minimum grade of C (2.0) in each course; consent of dept chair, practicum coordinator, and faculty member who will supervise the practicum. Supervised internship in area of applied sociology. Practical experience in research or agency work. Parallel readings and study. Emphasis on guided application of concepts and principles from related courses and structured readings to applied situations.
  
  • SOCI 4951 - Practicum in Sociology


    3

    140 work and academic hours per semester for 3 s.h. credit. Practicum must be arranged at least 30 days before term begins. May be taken concurrently for a maximum of 9 s.h. P: SOCI major; 27 s.h. in SOCI with a minimum grade of C (2.0) in each course; consent of dept chair, practicum coordinator, and faculty member who will supervise the practicum. Supervised internship in area of applied sociology. Practical experience in research or agency work. Parallel readings and study. Emphasis on guided application of concepts and principles from related courses and structured readings to applied situations.
  
  • SOCI 4952 - Practicum in Sociology


    3

    140 work and academic hours per semester for 3 s.h. credit. Practicum must be arranged at least 30 days before term begins. May be taken concurrently for a maximum of 9 s.h. P: SOCI major; 27 s.h. in SOCI with a minimum grade of C (2.0) in each course; consent of dept chair, practicum coordinator, and faculty member who will supervise the practicum. Supervised internship in area of applied sociology. Practical experience in research or agency work. Parallel readings and study. Emphasis on guided application of concepts and principles from related courses and structured readings to applied situations.
  
  • SOCI 5100 - Seminar in Social Inequality and Diversity


    3

    P: For undergraduates: SOCI 2110  and consent of instructor; for graduate students: Graduate standing in SOCI or consent of instructor. Critical examination of theory and research on stratification. Consequences for industrial and non-industrial societies. Emphasis on method and design for analysis.
  
  • SOCI 5200 - Seminar in the Sociology of Health


    3

    P: SOCI 2110  or consent of instructor. Individual as health care consumer. Social factors affecting distribution of disease in population, socio-political structure of health care services in US, and health care system from perspective of various health care providers.
  
  • SOCI 5300 - Seminar in Juvenile Delinquency


    3

    P: SOCI 2110  or consent of instructor. Juvenile delinquency as a socio-legal phenomenon. Special attention to theoretical and methodological issues in study of delinquency, consequences of and societal responses to delinquency, and prediction and intervention techniques.
  
  • SOCI 5318 - Social Aspects of Death and Dying


    3

    P: SOCI 2110  or consent of instructor. Sociological perspective. Focus on organizational aspects of death and dying as process and status.
  
  • SOCI 5335 - Sociology of Marriage Problems


    3

    For students planning to work in marriage counseling. P: SOCI 2110 ; consent of instructor. Advanced study of nature, causes, consequences, and treatment of marriage problems. Supervised individual experience in sociological and counseling techniques.
  
  • SOCI 5400 - Seminar in Gender Roles


    3

    P: For undergraduates: SOCI 2110  and consent of instructor; for graduate students: SOCI 2110  or graduate standing or consent of instructor. Origins of gender roles and gender stratification. Personal, interpersonal, and social consequences of gender. Alternatives to traditional gender relations.
  
  • SOCI 5500 - Seminar in Population


    3

    P: For undergraduates: SOCI 2110  and consent of instructor; for graduate students: SOCI 3222  or SOCI 3225  or SOCI 3235  or consent of instructor. Intensive study of substantive theory, methods of population analysis, and select problems of population dynamics, communities, and regions.
  
  • SOCI 5600 - Seminar in Aging


    3

    P: SOCI 2110  or consent of instructor. Places experience of aging in a social context. Begins with examination of aging from demographic and entitlement perspectives and concludes with application of sociological theory to changing self definition accompanying age-related functional decline.
  
  • SOCI 5700 - Seminar in Social Interaction


    3

    P: For undergraduates: SOCI 2110  and consent of instructor; for graduate students: SOCI 2110  or graduate standing. Empirical research on interaction in small groups and relations between group structure and personality. Emphasis on micro-sociological research methods and results.
  
  • SOCI 5800 - Seminar in the Family


    3

    P: For undergraduates: SOCI 2110  and consent of instructor; for graduate students: SOCI 2110  or graduate standing or consent of instructor. Sociological theories, methods, and applications involving family and social policies. Emphasis on comparative and social historical perspectives for understanding family in social context and change.

Sociology Banked Courses

  
  • SOCI 2125 - The Sociology of Parenthood


    3

  
  • SOCI 3214 - Introduction to Quantitative Sociology


    0

  
  • SOCI 3285 - Social Thought Before Comte


    3

  
  • SOCI 3429 - Sociology of Formal Organizations


    3

  
  • SOCI 4500 - Work and Organizations


    3 S FC:SO

    P: SOCI 2110 . Contemporary problems in work and organizational settings examined from sociological perspective.
  
  • SOCI 4960 - Practicum Seminar


    3

  
  • SOCI 5311 - Contemporary Social Problems


    3


Spanish

  
  • SPAN 1001 - Spanish Level I


    3

    Lab work. Recommended early in college career for BA students and potential SPAN majors and minors. First of four-course sequence. P: Appropriate score on Spanish placement test. Focus on basic skills of listening, speaking, reading, and writing Spanish. Emphasis on life and culture of Spanish-speaking world.
  
  • SPAN 1002 - Spanish Level II


    3

    Lab work. Recommended early in college career for BA student and potential SPAN majors and minors. P: SPAN 1001  or equivalent or placement by Spanish placement test. Second of four-course sequence. Increased exposure to and command over basic skills of listening, speaking, reading, and writing Spanish. Fosters understanding of Hispanic cultures.
  
  • SPAN 1003 - Spanish Level III


    3

    Lab work. Recommended early in college career for BA students and potential SPAN majors and minors. P: SPAN 1002  or equivalent or placement by Spanish placement test. Third of four-course sequence. Further refinement of command over basic skills of listening, speaking, reading, and writing Spanish. Fosters understanding of Hispanic cultures.
  
  • SPAN 1004 - Spanish Level IV


    3

    Recommended early in college career for BA students, and potential SPAN majors and minors. P: SPAN 1003  or equivalent or placement by Spanish placement test. Fourth of four-course sequence. Further refinement of command over basic skills of listening, speaking, reading, and writing Spanish. Readings further acquaint student with life, literature, and cultures of Hispanic world.
  
  • SPAN 1220 - Conversational Spanish Practiced in a Spanish-Speaking Country


    3

    P: Consent of instructor. Practice in formal classroom situation and in Spanish-speaking country. Exception to classroom requirement would be Spanish language program approved by instructor.
  
  • SPAN 1440 - Spanish Culture Experienced in a Spanish-Speaking Country


    2

    3 months’ residence in Spanish-speaking country. Culture (social customs, the fine arts, architecture, historical and political influences) of Spanish-speaking country experienced in the country.
  
  • SPAN 2110 - Cultural Readings in Spanish


    3

    P: SPAN 1004  or consent of instructor. Further development of language proficiency and cultural appreciation through study of selected works of literature (including children’s literature), film, and fine arts.
  
  • SPAN 2117 - Spanish for Professions


    3

    P: SPAN 1004  or consent of instructor. Introduces vocabulary and cultural concepts necessary to communicate and function effectively in Spanish-speaking professional world. Fields may include but are not limited to business, criminal justice, health sciences, and social sciences.
  
  • SPAN 2222 - Intermediate Spanish Conversation


    3

    For students with limited experience in Spanish-speaking environments. P: Minimum grade of B- (2.7) in SPAN 1004  or consent of instructor; RC: SPAN 2330 . Develop oral communication skills. Emphasis on use of language in everyday situations, vocabulary growth, listening comprehension, and correctness in grammar.
  
  • SPAN 2330 - Intermediate Spanish Composition and Review of Grammar


    3

    P: Minimum grade of B- (2.7) in SPAN 1004  or consent of instructor; RC: SPAN 2222 . Intensive practice in task-oriented compositions and comprehensive review of grammatical forms and usage. Emphasis on vocabulary development.
  
  • SPAN 2440 - Spanish Culture and Civilization


    3 WI*: Selected Sections are Writing Intensive

    P: SPAN 2222  or SPAN 2330  or consent of instructor. Readings, films, and discussion about artistic, political, historical, and social development of Spain and its geography and regional diversity.
  
  • SPAN 2441 - Latin-American Culture and Civilization


    3

    P: SPAN 2222  or SPAN 2330  or consent of instructor. Overview and contrastive study of geography, history, social and political structures, currents of thought, and artistic expressions of Latin America which contribute to contemporary life.
  
  • SPAN 2550 - Approaches to the Study of Hispanic Literature


    3 FC:HU

    P: SPAN 2222  or SPAN 2330  or consent of instructor. Interpretation of Spanish literature. Relevant terminology and its application to representative Spanish and Spanish-American prose, poetry, and drama.
  
  • SPAN 2611 - Early Experiences for the Prospective Teacher


    1

    Minimum of 16 hours of directed observations and planned participation in appropriate school environments and 8 hours of seminar class instruction in the teaching area. For prospective teachers. May not count toward BA major or minor. Introduction to teaching Spanish.
  
  • SPAN 2700 - Special Topics in Hispanic Studies


    3

    May be repeated for maximum of 6 s.h. with change of topic. P: SPAN 1004  or consent of instructor. Selected topics relating to language, literature, culture, or civilization of Spain or Latin America.
  
  • SPAN 3220 - Advanced Oral Communication Through Multimedia


    3

    P: SPAN 2222  or consent of instructor. Advanced practice in spoken Spanish. Emphasis on topics of current interest. Use of material available through newspapers, magazines, films, radio and television broadcasts, software, and the world wide web.
  
  • SPAN 3225 - Spanish Phonetics


    3

    Lab work. P: SPAN 2222 , SPAN 2330 ; or consent of instructor. Physiology of phonetics applied to Spanish language. Sound system of Spanish contrasted with English. Introduction to various dialects. Emphasis on improving pronunciation. Phonetic transcription.
  
  • SPAN 3330 - Advanced Composition


    3 WI

    P: SPAN 2222  or SPAN 3220 ; SPAN 2330 . Refinement of Spanish writing skills through exercises which enhance control of grammar, expand vocabulary, and promote greater awareness of rhetoric, critical reading, and revising.
  
  • SPAN 3335 - Structure of the Spanish Language


    3

    P: SPAN 3330  or consent of instructor. Contemporary linguistic theory and its practical application to teaching of syntactic and semantic components of Spanish. Contrasts structures of Spanish and English.
  
  • SPAN 3340 - Introduction to Translation


    3

    P: SPAN 3330  or consent of instructor; RC: SPAN 3335 . History, theory, and techniques of translation. Intense practice in Spanish-English and English-Spanish translations. Short prose texts from areas of general knowledge, such as those dealing with cultural information and current events.
  
  • SPAN 3700 - Special Topics in Hispanic Studies


    3

    May be repeated for maximum of 6 s.h. with change of topic. P: SPAN 2222  or SPAN 3220 ; SPAN 2330 ; or consent of instructor. Selected topics relating to language, literature, culture, or civilization of Spain or Latin America.
  
  • SPAN 4340 - Intermediate Translation


    3

    P: SPAN 3335 , SPAN 3340 ; or consent of instructor. Further practice in Spanish-English and English-Spanish translation. Longer texts from areas of general knowledge. Introduction to translation of specialized material (such as business, medical and legal documents, and literary texts). Study of related lexical and stylistic.
  
  • SPAN 4555 - Medieval Spain (900-1499)


    3 WI

    P: SPAN 2440 , SPAN 2550 ; or consent of instructor. Selected texts of Medieval Spain from primitive lyric to La Celestina examined against background of cultural, social, and historical transformations of Spanish Middle Ages.
  
  • SPAN 4556 - Renaissance and Baroque Spain (1500-1681)


    3

    P: SPAN 2440 , SPAN 2550 ; or consent of instructor. Reading and discussion of representative works from drama, poetry, and prose of great literary figures of Renaissance and Golden Age (such as Garcilaso de la Vega, the Mystics, Cervantes, Lope de Vega, Calderon de la Barca, Gongora). Cultural, social, and political factors that influenced their development.
  
  • SPAN 4557 - Spain from Neo-Classicism to Realism (1681-1898)


    3

    P: SPAN 2440 , SPAN 2550 ; or consent of instructor. Selected texts from Spain from Neoclassic Period to end of nineteenth century. Emphasis on social, political, and cultural context.
  
  • SPAN 4558 - Contemporary Spain (1898-Present)


    3

    P: SPAN 2440 , SPAN 2550 ; or consent of instructor. Selected texts of contemporary Spain analyzed in social, political, and cultural contexts of monarch, republic, dictatorship, and democracy.
  
  • SPAN 4560 - Major Latin-American Authors


    3 WI

    P: SPAN 2441 , SPAN 2550 ; or consent of instructor. Evolution of Latin-American literature from period of discovery to present. Readings and discussion of representative writers, movements, and genres within context of political, social, historical, and artistic realities.
  
  • SPAN 4561 - Colonial Latin America in Texts and Images


    3

    P: SPAN 2441 , SPAN 2550 ; or consent of instructor; RP: SPAN 4560 . Development of Latin-American literature and culture through analysis of representative texts from late Pre-Columbian times through Colonial Period.
  
  • SPAN 4562 - Latin-American Texts of the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries


    3

    P: SPAN 2441 , SPAN 2550 ; or consent of instructor; RP: SPAN 4560 . Representative literary works and reappraisal of critical problems and themes within aesthetic framework of movements of Neoclassicism, Romanticism, Realism, Naturalism, Modernism, and the Avantgarde, and within political, social, and economic realities of period from Independence to early twentieth century.
  
  • SPAN 4563 - Latin-American Texts: The Boom and Beyond


    3

    P: SPAN 2441 , SPAN 2550 ; or consent of instructor; RP: SPAN 4560 . Major Latin-American writers from mid-twentieth century to present.
  
  • SPAN 4611 - Teaching Second Languages in Grades K-12


    5

    5 lectures per week and approximately 60 hours of field experience per semester. May not be used to fulfill requirements for BA major or minor. P: Admission to upper division; 18 s.h. of SPAN above SPAN 1004  or consent of instructor. Modern methodologies, techniques and strategies, instructional resources, and evaluation procedures.
  
  • SPAN 4700 - Special Topics in Hispanic Studies


    3

    May be repeated for maximum of 6 s.h. with change of topic. P: Consent of instructor. Selected topics relating to language, literature, culture, or civilization of Spain or Latin America.
  
  
  • SPAN 4881 - Internship Seminar: Issues in Spanish Teaching


    1

    P: Admission to upper division; C: SPAN 4880 . Individualized study of problems or issues related to teaching Spanish.
  
  • SPAN 4882 - Internship for Professions


    1 F,S,SS

    Supervised internship in appropriate professional setting during junior or senior year of the Hispanic studies degree program. P: Consent of instructor. Fields may include but are not limited to business, criminal justice, health sciences, and social sciences.
  
  • SPAN 4883 - Internship for Professions


    1 F,S,SS

    Supervised internship in appropriate professional setting during junior or senior year of the Hispanic studies degree program. P: Consent of instructor. Fields may include but are not limited to business, criminal justice, health sciences, and social sciences.
  
  • SPAN 4884 - Internship for Professions


    1 F,S,SS

    Supervised internship in appropriate professional setting during junior or senior year of the Hispanic studies degree program. P: Consent of instructor. Fields may include but are not limited to business, criminal justice, health sciences, and social sciences.
  
  • SPAN 4950 - Directed Readings in Spanish


    1

    P: Consent of instructor. In-depth exploration of selected topics relating to language, literature, culture, or civilization of Spain or Latin America.
  
  • SPAN 4951 - Directed Readings in Spanish


    1

    P: Consent of instructor. In-depth exploration of selected topics relating to language, literature, culture, or civilization of Spain or Latin America.
  
  • SPAN 4952 - Directed Readings in Spanish


    1

    P: Consent of instructor. In-depth exploration of selected topics relating to language, literature, culture, or civilization of Spain or Latin America.
  
  • SPAN 4953 - Directed Readings in Spanish


    1

    P: Consent of instructor. In-depth exploration of selected topics relating to language, literature, culture, or civilization of Spain or Latin America.
  
  • SPAN 4954 - Directed Readings in Spanish


    1

    P: Consent of instructor. In-depth exploration of selected topics relating to language, literature, culture, or civilization of Spain or Latin America.
  
  • SPAN 4990 - Honors


    3

    P: Minimum 3.5 GPA in SPAN. Independent study of selected aspect of Spanish culture under direction of faculty member in student’s major area of interest.
  
  • SPAN 5340 - Advanced Translation I


    3

    P: SPAN 4340 . Practice of translation skills with greater variety of style and subject matter.
  
  • SPAN 5440 - Contemporary Issues of the Hispanic World


    3

    May be repeated for maximum of 6 s.h. with change of topic. P: Consent of instructor. Selected events, artistic trends, and currents of thought that significantly contribute to life in contemporary Hispanic societies.
  
  • SPAN 5445 - Hispanic Cinema


    3

    May be repeated for maximum of 6 s.h. with change of topic. P: Consent of instructor. Films as cultural product reflecting social, political, and economic realities. Power to represent, inform, and create. Viewed and discussed by representative directors.
 

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