May 20, 2024  
Graduate Bulletin 2009-2010 
    
Graduate Bulletin 2009-2010 [Archived Catalog]

Part 4 — Course Descriptions


Part 3 consists of course descriptions in an alphabetical order that parallels the order used in the Schedule of Classes. Because of certain groupings of courses by sponsoring departments, you will find some cross-references, such as Statistics (STAT)-See Mathematical Sciences.

Standard information for each course includes the number, title, and credits (sometimes called credit hours or semester hours). For some courses, you will find information about the hours of laboratory or studio for which the course is scheduled during each week of a regular semester; these weekly hours are expanded during summer sessions. Fees for courses are assessed on the basis of credits and other factors.

V.T. (Variable Title) is shown for courses approved for variable titles. The title used for the course may be changed to specify the topic or other special focus of each offering of the course.

The course numbering system generally suggests levels of difficulty and appropriateness. Undergraduate courses eligible for graduate credit have numbers below 500. Courses at the 500 level in Purdue University departments are open to both advanced undergraduate and graduate students; other courses numbered 500 and above are generally open only to graduate students.

Preparation for courses is indicated as follows:


P: Indicates a prerequisite that must precede your enrollment in the course described. You may find one or more specific course numbers, the number of credits you should already have in a subject, or other conditions.


C: Indicates a corequisite that must be taken no later than the same semester you take the course described.


R: Indicates a recommendation concerning conditions to be met for enrollment in the course.


When no subject code is shown for prerequisites, corequisites, and recommended courses, they are in the same subject area as the course being described. If you lack a prerequisite or corequisite, you may seek the instructor’s consent to enroll in the course.

Session indicators (fall, spring, summer) suggest the times at which courses are generally offered. However, scheduling patterns may vary.

IPFW reserves the right to add, withdraw, or change courses without notice.

 
  
  • ENG B613 - Middle English Literature


    Selected themes and writers in English from 1100 to 1500.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B622 - Elizabethan Poetry


    Spenser and other major Elizabethan poets.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B624 - Elizabethan Drama and Its Background


    English drama, excluding Shakespeare, from the Middle Ages to 1642.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B625 - Shakespeare


    Critical analysis of selected texts.

    Cr. 3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B627 - English Poetry of the Early 17th Century


    Major poets and their intellectual milieu, 1600 to 1660.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B628 - Milton


    Poetry and prose, with special attention to Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained, and Samson Agonistes.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B635 - British Literature 1660-1790


    Poetry and nonfictional prose. Emphasis on Dryden, Pope, Swift, and Johnson and his circle.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B639 - British Fiction to 1800


    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B642 - Romantic Literature


    Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley, Keats, and other writers of the British Romantic movement.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B644 - Victorian Literature


    Poetry and non-fictional prose from 1837 to 1900.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B645 - British Fiction 1800-1900


    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B648 - 20th Century British Poetry


    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B649 - 20th Century British Fiction


    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B651 - American Literature 1800-1865


    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B652 - American Literature 1865-1914


    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B654 - American Literature since 1914


    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B655 - American Fiction to 1900


    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B656 - 20th Century American Fiction


    American fiction since 1900, including such writers as Dreiser, Lewis, Fitzgerald, Hemingway, and Faulkner.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B657 - Recent Writing


    May be repeated once for credit under a different topic.

    Cr. 3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B660 - Studies in British and American Writers


    May be repeated once for credit under a different topic.

    Cr. 3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B666 - Survey of Children’s Literature


    Survey of literature for children and adolescents from the Medieval period to the present.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B668 - Topics in Children’s Literature


    Study of a period, a genre, or a group of writers. May be repeated once for credit under a different topic.

    Cr. 3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B673 - Studies in Women and Literature


    Women writers and literary representations of women.

    Cr. 3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B675 - Studies in American Ethnic and Minority Literature and Culture


    May be repeated once for credit under a different topic.

    Cr. 3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B680 - Special Topics in Literary Study and Theory


    Readings in sociological, political, psychological, and other approaches to literature. May be repeated once for credit under a different topic.

    Cr. 3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B688 - Irish Literature and Culture


    Study of one writer, a group of writers, a period, or a genre. May be repeated once for credit under a different topic.

    Cr. 3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B695 - Individual Readings in English


    Independent study.

    Cr. 1-3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B699 - Master’s Thesis


    Cr. 3-6.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B712 - Chaucer


    Preparation for Course
    P: B612, B613, or equivalent.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B725 - Shakespeare


    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B731 - Milton


    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B733 - Restoration and Augustan Literature


    Cr. 3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B739 - British Fiction to 1800


    Cr. 3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B741 - Romantic Literature


    Cr. 3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B743 - Victorian Literature


    Cr. 3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B745 - British Fiction 1800-1900


    Cr. 3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B749 - 20th Century British Literature


    Cr. 3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B751 - Major American Writers 1700-1855


    Cr. 3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B753 - Major American Writers 1855 to the Present


    Cr. 3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG B780 - Special Studies in British and American Literature


    May be repeated for credit under a different topic.

    Cr. 3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C501 - Teaching of Composition in College


    Practical teaching of composition; current theories and policies.

    Cr. 1-2.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C505 - Teaching Composition: Issues and Approaches


    Fundamental issues in the teaching of writing. Topics include teaching invention and revision, diagnosing errors, teaching style and organization, making assignments, and evaluating student writing.

    Cr. 2-3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C507 - Writing Center Theory and Praxis


    Examines techniques for responding to writers in writing centers, including nontraditional populations and writers in various disciplines. Understand and test cognitive, social constructionist, and collaborative theories through consulting in the writing center mentored by experienced writing consultants and the director. Write journals, a case study outline, and a paper linking theory to practice.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C511 - Writing Fiction


    Preparation for Course
    P: permission of instructor.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C513 - Writing Poetry


    Preparation for Course
    P: permission of instructor.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C515 - Writing Prose Nonfiction


    Study and practice in such modes as the personal essay, autobiography, and documentary. Review of historical thematic, and stylistic range of work in these modes with emphasis on producing informed, thoughtful, and effective documents.

    Cr. 3
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C517 - Professional Scholarship in Writing Studies


    Students will explore the development of the writing studies discipline through the past five decades, paying particular attention to the growth of creative writing, rhetoric and composition, professional writing, and literacy studies as academic fields of inquiry.

    Cr. 3.
  
  • ENG C521 - Introduction to Professional Writing


    Discourse in professional disciplinary contexts (e.g., engineering, sciences, social sciences, humanities). Emphasis on research tools in professional writing and on methods of contextual, intentional, structural, and stylistic analysis.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C531 - Theory and Practice of Exposition


    Primarily for secondary-school and junior-college teachers of English.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C532 - Advanced Argumentative Writing


    Techniques for analyzing and constructing arguments for different disciplines and professions, especially the use of proofs, evidence, and logic; major issues of argument, such as the ethics of persuading audiences and the uses of style.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C565 - Theories and Practices of Editing


    Students will examine textual and literary approaches to editing given particular rhetorical contexts. Emphasis will be placed on how to make editorial judgments that promote editorial standards without violating authorial intent.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C567 - Writing for Multiple Media


    Introduces principles and practices of multimedia design and implementation, with emphasis on writing in multimedia contexts. Students will consider ways that new media affect the production and reception of writing and its relationship to other forms of communication (e.g., oral and visual).

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C572 - Composing the Self


    Study of the ways in which language underlies ways in which our identities are formed, sustained, and reformed, particularly with respect to gender, race, class, and sexuality. Focus on both exploratory and polished writing as well as works by various authors.

    Cr. 3
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C576 - Writers Reading/Readers Writing


    Investigation of how writers, readers, and texts are shaped within the contexts of literature, composition, and professional writing. Focus on using current conventions more consciously and flexibly to generate new ways of reading and writing that better serve our specific needs, desires, and goals.

    Cr. 3
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C590 - Internship in Writing


    A supervised internship in uses of language in the workplace. Evaluations by workplace supervisor and reports to faculty supervisor including a portfolio of completed assignments and an evaluation of the internship experience are required.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C601 - History of Rhetoric


    Development of rhetorical theory from Plato to the present, including the influence of historical rhetoric on present-day composition theory.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C602 - Contemporary Theories of Composition


    Current research in rhetoric and composition. Draws on insights from linguistic theory, cognitive theory, and rhetorical theory to develop greater understanding of the writing process and build pedagogical applications.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C611 - Writing Fiction


    Preparation for Course
    P: C511 or permission of the instructor.

    Cr. 3.
    Notes
    May be repeated once for credit.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C613 - Writing Poetry


    Preparation for Course
    P: C513 or permission of the instructor.

    Cr. 3.
    Notes
    May be repeated once for credit.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C620 - Publications Managment and Production


    Explores the document production process and asks students to practice this process by individually creating a suite of publications and by working with a team of writers to produce a published book or website. Students study theories of publication and production as applied to writing groups.

    Cr. 3.
  
  • ENG C625 - Research Methods for Professional Writers


    Examines quantitative, qualitative, and action research practices of professional writers in the light of contemporary theories of researched writing. Take students through the process of designing a scholarly or organizational research project, and the completion of the research proposal or prospectus.

    Cr. 3
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C682 - Topics in Rhetoric and Composition


    Cr. 3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Notes
    May be repeated once for credit under a different topic.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C697 - Independent Study in Writing


    Preparation for Course
    P: permission of instructor.

    Cr. 1-3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG C780 - Special Studies in Rhetoric and Composition


    Cr. 3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Notes
    May be repeated once for credit under a different topic.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG D552 - Linguistics and the Teacher of English


    Topics in applied English linguistics, intended for English teachers at all levels.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG D600 - History of the English Language


    Survey of the evolution of the English language from its earliest stages to the present, with reference to its external history and to its phonology, morphology, syntax, and vocabulary.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG D601 - Introduction to Old English


    Introduction to the phonology, morphology, and syntax of Old English and intensive reading of major prose and verse texts.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG G500 - Introduction to the English Language


    An introduction to the English language: its nature, structure, and development.

    Cr. 3-4.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENG G541 - Materials Preparation for ESL Instruction


    Students will learn about materials preparation, syllabus design, and test preparation by applying a variety of theories to books and other ESL (English as a Second Language) teaching devices, (e.g., tapes, videotapes, computer and software programs) in order to evaluate their usefulness and will learn to evaluate ESL materials for adequateness.

    Cr. 4.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • ENGR 698 - Master of Science in Enginering (M.S.E.) Thesis Research


    This course number will be used to offer credit for original research in systems engineering leading to their preparation of a thesis or dissertation. Project will be supervised by a faculty member after bring approved by the Engineering Department thesis committee and after project initiation, thesis projects will be periodically reviewed by the thesis committee.

    Cr. 1-18.
  
  • FILM K502 - Genre Study in Film


    Topic varies: major periods of film history and their relationship to the intellectual and social climate of the time; studies in genres or individual artists; studies of technology and modes of production; close reading of major works of film theory; new developments in theory and criticism.

    Cr. 3.
    Hours
    Class 3,
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • FINA H401 - Art Theory IV


    Art theory of the 19th and 20th centuries.

    Cr. 3-4.
    Hours
    Class 3-4,
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FINA H411 - 19th Century Art I


    1780-1850. Major artistic movements in Western Europe and the United States during the first half of the 19th century.

    Cr. 3-4.
    Hours
    Class 3-4,
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FINA H412 - 19th Century Art II


    Major artistic movements in Western Europe and the United States during the second half of the 19th century.

    Cr. 3-4.
    Hours
    Class 3-4,
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FINA H413 - 20th Century Art: 1900-1924


    European artists and movements of the first part of the 20th century: Symbolism, Fauvism, Expressionism, Cubism, etc., for painting, and Art Nouveau, de Stijl, Bauhaus, Sullivan, and early Wright for architecture.

    Cr. 3-4.
    Hours
    Class 3-4,
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FINA H414 - 20th Century Art: 1925-Present


    Painting, sculpture, and architecture from 1925 to the present. Emphasis on American developments, including historical background from Armory Show to migration of Surrealism, Abstract Expressionism, Op, Pop, Minimal, and Kinetic art. A worldview of architecture will cover such topics as International Style and New Brutalism.

    Cr. 3-4.
    Hours
    Class 3-4,
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FINA H415 - Art of Pre-Columbian America


    A survey of the arts of pre-Hispanic America with emphasis on the arts of ancient Mesoamerica.

    Cr. 3-4.
    Hours
    Class 3-4,
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FINA H495 - Readings and Research in Art History


    Preparation for Course
    P: consent of instructor.

    Cr. 1-4.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Notes
    May be repeated for a total of 12 credits at the graduate level.
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FINA P421 - Advanced Drawing III


    Continuation of P322. May be repeated for up to 18 credits.

    Preparation for Course
    P: P322.

    Cr. 3.
    Hours
    Class 3; Studio 3;
    Session Indicators
    (fall)
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FINA P422 - Advanced Drawing IV


    Continuation of P322. May be repeated for up to 18 credits.

    Preparation for Course
    P: P322.

    Cr. 3.
    Hours
    Class 3; Studio 3;
    Session Indicators
    (spring)
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FINA P425 - Advanced Painting III


    Continuation of P326. May be repeated for up to 18 credits.

    Preparation for Course
    P: P326.

    Cr. 3.
    Hours
    Class 3; Studio 3;
    Session Indicators
    (fall, summer)
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FINA P426 - Advanced Painting IV


    Continuation of P326. May be repeated for up to 18 credits.

    Preparation for Course
    P: P326.

    Cr. 3.
    Hours
    Class 3; Studio 3;
    Session Indicators
    (spring, summer)
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FINA P431 - Advanced Sculpture III


    Continuation of P332 with advanced problems determined in relation to the major objectives and interests of the student. May be repeated for up to 18 credits.

    Preparation for Course
    P: P332 and senior standing.

    Cr. 3.
    Hours
    Class 3; Studio 3;
    Session Indicators
    (fall)
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FINA P432 - Advanced Sculpture IV


    Continuation of P332 with advanced problems determined in relation to the major objectives and interests of the student. May be repeated for up to 18 credits.

    Preparation for Course
    P: P332 and senior standing.

    Cr. 3.
    Hours
    Class 3; Studio 3;
    Session Indicators
    (spring)
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FINA P433 - Advanced Metalsmithing III


    Advanced problems in metalsmithing determined by the skills, interests, and major objectives of the student. May be repeated for up to 18 credits.

    Preparation for Course
    P: P333, P334.

    Cr. 3.
    Hours
    Class 3; Studio 3;
    Session Indicators
    (fall)
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FINA P434 - Advanced Metalsmithing IV


    Advanced problems in metalsmithing determined by the skills, interests, and major objectives of the student. May be repeated for up to 18 credits.

    Preparation for Course
    P: P333, P334.

    Cr. 3.
    Hours
    Class 3; Studio 3;
    Session Indicators
    (spring)
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FINA P435 - Advanced Ceramics III


    Advanced problems in ceramics determined by the skills, interests, and major objectives of the student. May be repeated for up to 18 credits.

    Preparation for Course
    P: P335, P336.

    Cr. 3.
    Hours
    Class 3; Studio 3;
    Session Indicators
    (fall)
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FINA P436 - Advanced Ceramics IV


    Advanced problems in ceramics determined by the skills, interests, and major objectives of the student. May be repeated for up to 18 credits.

    Preparation for Course
    P: P335, P336.

    Cr. 3.
    Hours
    Class 3; Studio 3;
    Session Indicators
    (spring)
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FINA P441 - Advanced Printmaking III


    Continuation of P342. Advanced problems in printmaking determined in relation to the major objectives and interests of the student. May be repeated for up to 18 credits.

    Preparation for Course
    P: P342 and senior standing.

    Cr. 3.
    Hours
    Class 3; Studio 3;
    Session Indicators
    (fall)
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FINA P442 - Advanced Printmaking IV


    Continuation of P342. Advanced problems in printmaking determined in relation to the major objectives and interests of the student. May be repeated for up to 18 credits.

    Preparation for Course
    P: P342 and senior standing.

    Cr. 3.
    Hours
    Class 3; Studio 3;
    Session Indicators
    (spring)
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FINA P495 - Independent Study in Fine Arts


    Senior standing and permission of chair. This course provides the opportunity for a student to pursue studio interests (such as mixed media) not served in other course offerings. Projects may vary.

    Cr. 3.
    Hours
    Class 3, Studio 3,
    Session Indicators
    (fall, spring)
    Notes
    May be repeated.
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FNR 505 - Molecular Ecology and Evolution


    Lectures cover the genetic attributes of both conventional and contemporary molecule markers. Discussions focus primarily on the use of DNA-based markers to address conceptual issues in ecology and evolutionary biology (e.g., mating systems, systematics, phylogeography).

    Preparation for Course
    P: BIOL 218, one semester of biochemistry is recommended.

    Cr. 3
  
  • FNR 523 - Aquaculture


    Historical perspectives and current practices in aquaculture, including production systems, feeds, water quality requirements, and diseases of commercially important species.

    Preparation for Course
    P: BIOL 217 and 219 or permission of instructor.

    Cr. 3
  
  • FOLK F512 - Survey of Folklore


    Content and scope of folk belief and tradition: various genres (tale, legend, myth, and ballad) and approaches to folklore. Folklore of both literate and nonliterate peoples.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • FOLK F600 - Asian Folklore/Folk Music


    Folk religion, material culture, social customs, oral literature, and folk music of Asian societies. Relationship between political movements and the use of folklore scholarship. Transformations of traditions in modern contexts. May be repeated for credit when topics vary.

    Cr. 3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • FOLK F640 - Native American Folklore/ Folk Music


    Comparative examination of various verbal, musical, and dance forms of Native American societies in North and South America. Examination of contributions of folklore and ethnomusicological scholarship to Native American studies. May be repeated for credit when topics vary.

    Cr. 3.
    Variable Title
    (V.T.)
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • FOLK F801 - Teaching Folklore


    A consideration of the philosophical, cultural, and practical issues attached to the teaching of folklore.

    Cr. 0-3.
    Notes
    May be repeated once.
    Dual Level Course
    Graduate Level
  
  • FREN F325 - Oral French for Teachers


    Practice in diction and phonetic analysis. Study of idiomatic expressions, and intensive review of irregular verbs. Individual diagnosis of speech difficulties, with corrective exercises in audio laboratory. Some conversation and practice-teaching presentation. May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits.

    Preparation for Course
    P: F204; R: F213.

    Cr. 3-8.
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FREN F410 - French Literature of the Middle Ages


    Introduction to Old French language and major literary works. Readings may be broadly representative of the period or reflect a particular thematic concern.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
  
  • FREN F413 - The French Renaissance


    Rabelais, Montaigne, the Pleiade, and others.

    Preparation for Course
    P: F305 and F306.

    Cr. 3.
    Dual Level Course
    Undergraduate Level, Eligible for Graduate Credit
 

Page: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8