BEREA COLLEGE SCHEDULE OF CLASSES FOR. Fall Term, 2015
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1 BEREA COLLEGE SCHEDULE OF CLASSES FOR Fall Term, 2015 Please read all instructions carefully. Course offerings, meeting days and times, instructors, and exam time and day as shown in this schedule are subject to revision prior to the opening of the term for which they are given. Campus constituents are notified of changes via and updates are posted at the website. OFFICE OF THE REGISTRAR March 16, 2015 For textbook selections, please visit: Updated 04/01/2015
2 BEREA COLLEGE ACADEMIC CALENDAR FALL TERM, 2015 Aug 17-21, Mon-Fri Aug 22-25, Sat-Tue Aug 23, Sun Aug 25, Tue Aug 25, Tue Aug 25, Tue Aug 26, Wed Sept 1, Tue Sept 1, Tue Sept 1, Tue Sept 1, Tue Sept 23, Wed Oct 12-13, Mon-Tue Oct 20, Tue Oct 21, Wed Oct 23, Fri, Oct 29, Thr Nov TBD Nov 9-18, Mon-Wed Nov 13, Fri Nov 25, Wed Nov 30, Mon Dec 4, Fri Dec 10, Thr Orientation for International Students Orientation for All New Students Opening Convocation for College Faculty Continuing Students Arrive Labor Assignment Orientation and Training (New and Continuing Students Must Attend) Registration Classes Begin Last Day to Add a Course. All Registration Procedures for Fall Term, 2015, Must Be Completed by 5:00 p.m.** Last Day to Drop a Course without W on Record First Day College-Sanctioned Athletic Competition Last Day to Change a Labor Position (Non First-year Students) Last Day to Withdraw from a Course without WP/WF Grade Being Recorded Reading Period (Classes Cancelled) Midterm Grades Due Mountain Day (Classes Cancelled) BIST Summer 2016 Applications Due Last Day to Withdraw from a Fall Course Homecoming Registration for Spring Labor Status Forms for Thanksgiving Break due Thanksgiving Vacation Begins Thanksgiving Vacation Ends & Classes Resume Labor Status Forms for Christmas Break Due Last Day of Classes: Last Day to Withdraw from the College without Final Grades Being Recorded Reading Period Recognition Service for Mid-Year Graduates Dec 11, Fri Dec 13, Sun Dec 14-17, Mon-Thr Final Examinations *** Dec 21, Mon Final Grades Due at 8:00 a.m. SPRING TERM, 2016 Jan 11, Mon Jan 12, Tue Jan 15, Fri Jan 18, Mon Jan 18, Mon Jan 18, Mon Jan 18, Mon Feb 15, Mon Feb 16, Tue Feb 19, Fri Feb 23, Tue Mar 1, Tue Registration Classes Begin Mid-Point or Final Fall Student Labor Evaluations Due Last Day to Add a Course. All Registration Procedures for Spring Term, 2016, Must Be Completed by 5:00 p.m.** Last Day to Change a Labor Position (Non-First Year Students) Last Day to Drop a Course without W on Record Observance of Martin Luther King Day (Classes Cancelled) Last Day to Withdraw from a Course without WP/WF Grade Being Recorded Deadline for Designation of Exploratory Area of Interest for First-Year Students Labor Status Forms Due for Spring Break Labor Day - Exploring Learning, Labor, Service (Classes Cancelled) Midterm Grades Due Mar 2, Wed Summer Labor Status Forms Due (Required for Summer Registration Mar 2-4, Wed-Fri Summer Registration (Summer Labor Status Form Required) Mar 7, Mon Spring Vacation Begins Mar 14, Mon Spring Vacation Ends & Classes Resume Mar 18, Fri Last Day to Withdraw from a Spring Course Mar 24, Thr Labor Status Forms Due for Mar 25, Fri Good Friday Observance (Classes Cancelled) Apr 1, Fri Student Labor Experience Evaluation Due Apr 11-20, Mon-Wed Registration for Fall Term 2016 Apr 15, Fri Deadline for Summer Internship Proposals Apr 15, Fri Summer Labor Status Forms Due for Labor Only Apr 28, Thr Last Day of Classes; Last Day to Withdraw from the College without Final Grades Being Recorded Apr 29, Fri Reading Period May 2-5, Mon-Thr Final Examinations *** May 6, Fri Final Senior Grades Due May 8, Sun Baccalaureate and Commencement Services May 10, Tue Final Non-senior Grades Due May 20, Fri Final Academic Year or Spring Student Labor Evaluations Due SUMMER TERM 2016 May 16, Mon Registration May 16, Mon First 4-Week and 8-Week Sessions Begin May 16, Mon Last Day to Add or Drop a First 4-Week Session course without a W on record May 18, Wed Last Day to Add or Drop an 8-Week Session Course without a W on record May 23, Mon Last Day to Withdraw from a First 4-Week Session course without WP/WF Grade Being Recorded May 27, Fri Last Day to Withdraw from a First 4-Week Session course May 30, Mon Memorial Day Holiday (Classes Cancelled) June 7, Tue Last Day to Withdraw from an 8-Week Session Course without WP/WF Grade Being Recorded June 10, Fri Last Day of Classes for First 4-Week Session Courses June 13, Mon Second 4-Week Session Courses Begin June 13, Mon Last Day to Add or Drop a Second 4-Week Session Course without a W on record June 14, Tue Last Day to withdraw from an 8-Week Session course June 20, Mon Last Day to withdraw from a Second 4-Week Session course without WP/WF Grade Being Recorded June 27, Mon Last Day to withdraw from a Second 4-week Session course July 4, Mon Fourth of July (Classes Cancelled) July 8, Fri Last Day of Classes for Second 4-Week and 8-Week Session Courses July 12, Tue Final Grades Due Aug 15, Mon Final Summer Student Labor Evaluations Due ** Students who have been attending classes or labor may be withdrawn from the College *** Students who fail to register by the end of the term for the coming term must submit a request for delayed registration or be withdrawn from the College. Updated
3 BEREA COLLEGE REGISTRATION FOR CURRENT STUDENTS FOR FALL TERM, 2015 MARCH 30-APRIL 8, 2015 We hope you are ready to register for another term at Berea. You will also receive instructions in addition to this Schedule of Classes via . Please arrange to meet with your advisor between Monday, March 16, and Friday, March 27 to plan your schedule. You should include alternate courses in the event your preferred courses are not available at the time of registration. COMPLETE THE FOLLOWING PROCEDURES IN THE ORDER GIVEN FOR REGISTRATION: 1. Contact your academic advisor for an appointment to plan your academic program. 2. You are expected to do preliminary planning of your schedule prior to your meeting with your advisor. Also, be prepared to discuss your future career plans and how you are currently progressing with your academic advisor. Please bring a copy of your degree audit (listed as Degree Evaluation) along with other relevant materials with you to the appointment with your advisor. 3. After your schedule(s) is completed, your advisor will give you an alternate PIN (which is a Personal Identification Number to use for registration only). This PIN is equivalent to the advisor s signature and indicates that the two of you have met and completed the schedule planning process. You will be asked for your Alternate Pin after you go in to the Registration screens. Please take care not to misplace this important part of your registration information only your advisor can give it to you again. 4. Take your schedule and alternate PIN to begin your registration on myberea according to the schedule below. (You will not be able to register until your scheduled time.) The Web registration screens provide instructions on how to proceed with registration. 5. Please be aware that your labor contract for fall must be completed prior to registration.
4 ORDER OF REGISTRATION Registration day and time is determined by the number of credits you have earned (does not include the credits for which you are currently enrolled). Please check the menu on myberea for the section Check your Registration Status to view your assigned time for registration. This will also give you access to see if you have any holds that would prevent your registration (Emergency Contact Information Update, Health Service, Financial Aid, Student Payroll, Student Accounts). Any holds will need to be cleared through the office that placed the hold on your record before you can register. Credits Earned Day of Registration You may begin registering at: Group 1 28 and above Monday 7:00 AM Group to 24 Monday 12:00 PM Group to 20 Tuesday 7:00 AM Group to 15 Tuesday 12:00 PM Group to Wednesday 7:00 AM Group 6 11 to 7 Wednesday 12:00 PM Group to 4 Thursday 7:00 AM Group to 0 Thursday 12:00 PM CLOSED CLASSES, COURSE TIME CONFLICTS, PREREQUISITES You will not be required to get the signature of your advisor if you encounter closed classes, have a course time conflict, or if you have problems with prerequisites. Instead, please contact the instructor of the course. If you are given permission to enroll in the course, that instructor will process the override and you would then register for the course by going back to the Web Registration. INTERNSHIP AND INDEPENDENT STUDY To register for any 495 Internship, you must submit the appropriate application materials with required signatures to the Internship Office. Be sure you are aware of deadlines. The Internship Office will submit a list of the approved internships to the Office of the Registrar (116 Lincoln Hall) for registration processing. Procedures concerning the approval of Independent Studies (390/490/090 A or B) and Team Initiated Studies (397/497 A or B) are provided in the catalog online at Fields-of-Study REGISTRATION PROCEDURES FOR APPLIED MUSIC (PRIVATE LESSONS) You will sign up for these courses in the Music Building (Presser Hall) at the beginning of the Fall and Spring terms. The Registrar will register you for these courses once the list of students is complete. CHANGE OF PROGRAM (DROPPING/ADDING COURSES) You will be permitted to drop-add, without fee, anytime between the time you register and Tuesday, September 1,2015 by Web Registration. After these dates, you are not permitted to add a course. To withdraw from a course, you will need to process a change of registration form with your advisor s signature and take it to the Student Service Center in Lincoln Hall. Any course withdrawals after September 1, 2015 will be assigned a withdrawal grade and will be charged $5.00 per form submitted to the Student Service Center.
5 POLICY REGARDING COURSES DROPPED Courses dropped during official registration periods or the first week of class of a regular term after classes begin will not be reflected on the permanent record. The letter W (withdrawn) will be used to indicate courses dropped during the second through fourth weeks of a regular term after classes begin. You may withdraw from a course during the following four weeks and your instructor will be asked to indicate the quality of any completed work to that point with a WP (withdrawn passing) or a WF (withdrawn failing). No course may be dropped during the final seven weeks of the term. WF/WF will not be counted in calculating the GPA. (See calendar above for official drop/withdrawal dates.) TEACHER CERTIFICATION Students planning to complete requirements for teacher certification must follow the guidelines given in Program for Preparation for Teachers in the Berea College Catalog. COURSE FEES Course fees, shown in the SCHEDULE OF CLASSES and in the current BEREA COLLEGE CATLOG are charged to the student s account. The fee is automatically charged upon registration for the course. The student s account is credited if the course is dropped by the end of the first week of class as indicated in the official College calendar. SCHEDULE OF CLASS HOURS Letters following course numbers (A,B,C, etc.) indicate sections of the same course. Letters attached to the course (i.e., 186A) indicate a specialized topic. The time of the class meeting is indicated by CLOCK hours, (e.g., 0800 is 8:00 am, 1000 for 10:00 am, 0100 for 1:00 p.m. The days of class meetings are indicated as follows: M=Monday, T=Tuesday, W=Wednesday, R=Thursday, F=Friday. CONVOCATION CREDIT All students will automatically be enrolled in a.25 credit convocation course (CNV 100) during each of their regular terms of enrollment, with the exception of the final term of enrollment, for a maximum of eight such terms. For each term of enrollment in CNV 100, the student will earn a grade of CA (which is calculated as an A in the GPA) for attending at least seven convocations. The grade of CF (which is calculated as an F in the GPA) will be awarded for attendance at fewer than seven convocations. Enrollment in this course is optional during the final term at Berea (or is prohibited if the student has already enrolled in this course eight terms). BEREA COLLEGE BUILDLING ABBREVIATIONS Abbreviations used in this schedule for the campus buildings are as indicated below. Rooms are numbered so that all 100 series numbers are on the floor entered from the main entrance. Rooms are numbered clockwise beginning with the first room to the left of the entrance. For each listing, the room number and the building abbreviation are given (e.g., F 101 is on the first floor of Frost Building). AG Agriculture Building KA Kentucky Annex AB Art Building N Nursing Building D Draper Building P Presser Hall DT Danforth Technology (Formerly IA) PS Phelps Stokes EM Emery Building S Seabury Center F Frost Building SC Science Building JD Jelkyl Drama Center SH Stephenson Hall (Formerly Bruce) KH Knapp Hall
6 IMPORTANT Course Loads: The Maximum course credit load is 4.5 for all full-time students. Approval for course overload will be made by the Academic Advisor on a course registration form which should then be taken to the Student Service Center in Lincoln Hall. Overloads will be added to the student schedule the day before classes begin on August 26, Underloads: For degree candidates, all class underloads (less than 3 credits) must have prior approval of the Student Admission and Academic Standing Committee. Requests for course underloads should be submitted to the Academic Services office (110 Lincoln Hall). SATISFACTORY ACADEMIC PROGRESS Students will be placed on Academic Probation at the end of any regular term for failure to maintain a minimum 2.0 cumulative grade point average (GPA) or meet the credits requirement identified in the Satisfactory Academic Progress (SAP) chart listed in the College Catalog ( Students who are deficient in meeting the SAP requirements may make up the deficiency during the Summer Term at Berea College or another regionally accredited institution. If credit is to be earned elsewhere, permission must be secured from the Berea College Academic Records Analyst by completing the appropriate form, Application for Transfer Credit, available in the Student Self-Serve Room on the first floor of Lincoln Hall prior to enrollment.
7 BEREA COLLEGE, BEREA, KY Cost of Attendance, TOTAL FALL SPRING Tuition Fee 24,300 12,150 12,150 Labor Grant 6,000 3,000 3,000 Federal, State, Outside, and College Grants 18,300 9,150 9,150 Student Expense for Tuition REGISTRATION COSTS: TOTAL FALL SPRING Housing ($97.70/wk - no increase from 14/15) 3,322 1,661 1,661 Meals ($90.82/wk, 3% increase) 3,088 1,544 1,544 Health Fee Accident Fund Campus Activities Fee Student Government Assoc PINNACLE (School newspaper) CHIMES (School yearbook) Technology Fee Health Insurance (Estimated) Subtotal 6,980 3,490 3,490 Average Other Costs: Books and Supplies Transportation Personal 1, Subtotal Average Other Costs: 3,100 1,550 1,550 TOTAL STUDENT EXPENSE BUDGET 10,080 5,040 5,040 TOTAL COST OF ATTENDANCE 34,380
8 General Education Perspectives Afr-Amer, Appalachian, Women s Perspectives AFR 132 Intro to Race in America (SOC) AFR 141 African-American Lit (ENG) AFR 165 Intro to Afr-Amer History (HIS) AFR 186 AB Afr. Amer. Orators & Oratory AFR 186 JB Readings in Black (Afr) Psy AFR 286 MP Food & Ag/Afr & Afr Ppl (ANR) AFR 222 Intro to African-Amer Studies AFR 230 African-Amer Appalachia (APS) AFR 231 African Amer Rel Traditions AFR 286 AB Feminist Solo Perf. (THR/WGS) ANR 286 MP Food & Ag/Afr & Afr Ppl (AFR) ANR 386 SH Appalachian Plants & Ppl (APS) APS 113 Appalachian Weaving APS 121 Appalachian Cultures APS 140 Appalachian Literature (ENG) APS 209 Appalachian Foodways (CFS) APS 210 Health in Appalachia (HLT) APS 215 Sustainable Appl Comm (SENS APS 224 Appalachian Music (MUS) APS 230 African Amer Appalachia (AFR) APS 386 SH Appalachian Plants & Ppl (ANR) CFS 207 Family Relations (WGS) CFS 209 Appalachian Foodways (APS) COM 310 Communication and Gender (WGS) ENG 140 Appalachian Literature (APS) ENG 141 African-American Lit (AFR) ENG 237 Women and Literature (WGS) HIS 165 Intro to Afr Amer History (AFR) HLT 210 Health in Appalachia (AST) HLT 236 Women and Health (WGS) MUS 224 Appalachian Music (APS) PSJ 210 Diversity and Social Justice SENS 215 Sustainable Appl Comm (APS) SOC 132 Intro to Race in America (AFR) SOC 325 Gender and Sex Roles (WGS) THR 286 AB Feminist Solo Perf. (AFR/WGS) Afr-Amer, Appalachian, Women s Perspectives Cont. WGS 124 Intro to Women & Gender Studies WGS 207 Family Relations (CFS) WGS 236 Women and Health (HLT) WGS 237 Women and Literature (ENG) WGS 286 AB Feminist Solo Perf. (AFR/THR) WGS 286 CK Childbearing: A Global Perspective WGS 310 Communication and Gender (COM) WGS 325 Gender and Sex Roles (SOC) Arts Perspective AFR 141 African-American Lit (ENG) AFR 286 AB Feminist Solo Perf. (THR/WGS) APS 224 Appalachian Music (MUS) ARH 262 Italian Renaissance Art & Arc. ARH 286 MD Visual Cultures of Science ART 115 Drawing Fundamentals ART 116 Painting I ART 123 Ceramics I ART 130 Sculpture I CSC 111 Storytelling-Comp Animation ENG 124 Intro to Creative Writing ENG 141 African-American Lit (AFR) ENG 282 Workshop in Creative Writing FRN 340 Twentieth Century French Lit GER 325 German Narrative Prose HHP 249 Dancing Through Space & Time MUS 106 World Music MUS 224 Appalachian Music (APS) SPN 331 Spanish American Literature II TAD 180 Graphic Com and Design TAD 202 Photography THR 286 AB Feminist Solo Perf. (AFR/WGS) WGS 286 AB Feminist Solo Perf. (AFR/THR)
9 7 International Perspective ARH 239 Native Nrth Amer Art & Archaelog ENG 103 ESL and American Culture ENG 225 Film: Out West/Outback ENG 310 Renegades & Romance GER 140 German Civilization HIS 140 History of Spain (SPN) HIS th Centrucy World History LAT 117 Classical Etymology SPN 140 History of Spain (HIS) Practical Reasoning BUS 120 Accounting I CFS 145 Consumer Decision Making CSC 111 Storytelling-Comp Animation CSC 126 Intro to Robotics MAT 315 Fundamental Concepts of Math PHI 104 Morality, Law & Philosophy PHI 106 Introductory Reasoning PHI 218 Symbolic Logic PHY 111 Introduction to Astronomy PSY 100 General Psychology SENS 100 Intro-Sustainability & Environ SOC 335 Methods of Social Research International Non-Western Perspective AFR 286 MP Food & Ag/Afr & Afr Ppl (ANR) ANR 286 MP Food & Ag/Afr & Afr Ppl (AFR) ARH 186 EM Arts of East Asia (AST) AST 122 History of China (HIS) AST 135 Religions of Japan (REL) AST 186 EM Arts of East Asia (ARH) AST 186 LM Japanese Politics (PSC) AST 286 GG Kin & Gen in SE Asia (SOC/WGS) AST 323 Sem in Japanese History (HIS) GST 186 DH Civil., Leadrshp, & Paradigms HIS 122 History of China (AST) HIS 175 His & Pol of Arab-Isr (PSC) HIS 323 Sem in Japanese His (AST) MUS 106 World Music PSC 175 His & Pol of Arab-Isr (HIS) PSC 186 LM Japanese Politics (AST) REL 135 Religions of Japan (AST) SOC 286 GG Kin & Gen in SE Asia (AST/WGS) WGS 286 GG Kin & Gen in SE Asia (SOC/WGS) WGS 286 CK Childbearing: A Global Perspective Practical Reasoning w/ Quantitative Analysis CHM 131 Accelerated General Chemistry ECO 250 Applied Statistics MAT 104 Introduction to Statistics MAT 105 Intro to Discrete Math MAT 108 Environ Issue: Math Model Appr MAT 115 College Algebra with Modeling MAT 125 Trigonometry with Applications MAT 135 Calculus I MAT 225 Calculus II MAT 312 Operations Research MAT 437 Differential Equations PHY 130 Applied Math for Physics & Eng. SENS 320 Intro-Geographic Info Systems
10 Religion Perspective AFR 231 African Amer Rel Traditions AST 135 Religions of Japan (REL) HIS 215 Christianity to 1600-(REL) REL 105 Intro to Old Testament REL 135 Religions of Japan (AST) REL 215 Christianity to 1600 (HIS) REL 228 The Bible, His. & Archeology Social Science Perspective ARH 234 Intro to Archaeological Method AST 186 LM CFS 207 COM 220 ECO 101 ECO 102 ECO 301 HIS 200 PSC 100 PSC 110 PSC 186 LM PSY 100 SOC 100 SOC 110 SOC 220 WGS 207 Japanese Politics (PSC) Family Relations Theories of Communication Principles of Macroeconomics Principles of Microeconomics Intermediate Macroeconomics Intro to Historical Study Intro to Study of Politics American Government Japanese Politics (AST) General Psychology Sociology of Everyday Life Problems of Amer Institutions Cultural Anthropology Family Relations Western History Perspective AFR 165 Intro to Afr-Amer History (HIS) ARH th and 21 st Century Art ARH 262 Italian Renaissance Art & Arc. ARH 286 MD Visual Cultures of Science ENG 186 KE War Stories ENG 310 Renegades & Romance GER 140 German Civilization HIS 101 Western Civilization I HIS 140 History of Spain (SPN) HIS 161 American History to 1865 HIS 165 Intro to Afr Amer His (AFR) HIS 215 Christianity to 1600 (REL) LAT 186 JC Sport and Spectacle PHI 305 Classical Philosophy PSY 420 His & Systems of Psychology REL 215 Christianity to 1600 (HIS) SPN 140 History of Spain (HIS) Active Learning Experience CFS 221 Fundamentals of Nutrition CFS 441 Family Resource Management COM 315 Public Relations CSC 330 Database Systems EDS 228 Adolescent Dev & School Struct EDS 471 Mid Grades Std Tchng Seminar EDS 472 Midl Grades Student Teaching EDS 482 Secondary Std Teaching EDS 487 Elementary Std Teaching NUR 341 Essential-Hlt Assess & Nurs I PSJ 210 Diversity and Social Justice PSY 211 Abnormal Psychology SOC 360 Soc Policy Study & Eval Resrch SPN 310 Spanish Composition TAD 140 Design Prod. In Woods
11 Final examination periods are 9:00 to 10:50 am; 1:00 to 2:50 pm; 3:00-4:50 pm. The scheduled meeting time for the course (day and time) determines the final examination hour and day. Any student with more than three (3) examinations scheduled on one day shall be entitled to have an examination rescheduled. The student must submit in writing a petition for rescheduling addressed to the Director of Academic Services and turned in at the Student Service Center no later than one week prior to the last class meeting. Spring Term 2016 For Classes Scheduled on MW or MWF Beginning: Final Examination Class Block Type For Classes Scheduled on MW or MWF Beginning: Final Examination Class Block Type 8:00am, 8:30am, or 9:00am 3:00pm Wednesday (Dec 16) Standard A, 3-Day LB A, & Advanced Art Studio 8:00am, 8:30am, or 9:00am 9:00am Tuesday (May 3) Standard A, 3-Day LB A, & Advanced Art Studio 9:20am 1:00pm Thursday (Dec 17) Standard B 10:40am 3:00pm Monday (Dec 14) Standard C & 3-Day LB B 12:00 noon & 12:40pm 1:00pm Tuesday (Dec 15) Standard D, MW LB A 1:20pm 9:00am Wednesday (Dec 16) Standard E 9:20am 3:00pm Wednesday (May 4) Standard B 10:40am 1:00pm Thursday (May 5) Standard C & 3-Day LB B 12:00 noon & 12:40pm 3:00pm Monday (May 2) Standard D, MW LB A 1:20pm 3:00pm Tuesday (May 3) Standard E 2:40pm 9:00am Thursday (Dec 17) Standard F, 3-Day LB C, & MW Experiential/Lab Block 2:40pm 9:00am Wednesday (May 4) Standard F, 3-Day LB C, & MW Experiential/Lab Block 4:00pm 9:00am Monday (Dec 14) MW LB B 7:00pm 9:00am Tuesday (Dec 15) MW LB C For Classes Scheduled on TR Beginning: 8:00am 1:00 Tuesday (Dec 15) TR Long Block A 10:00am 1:00 Wednesday (Dec 16) TR Long Block B 12:00 noon or 1:00pm 1:00 Monday (Dec 14) TR Long Block C 4:00pm 9:00am Thursday (May 5) MW LB B 7:00pm 9:00am Monday (May 2) MW LB C For Classes Scheduled on TR Beginning: 8:00am, 8:30am, or 9:00am 1:00 Monday (May 2) TR Long Block A & TR Experiential/Lab Block A 10:00am 1:00 Tuesday (May 3) TR Long Block B 12:00 noon or 1:00pm 1:00 Wednesday (May 4) TR Experiential Lab Block B & TR Long Block C Key for Class Scheduling: 3-Day LB Monday, Wednesday and Friday (A 8:00-9:50; B 10:40-12:30; C 2:40-4:30) Advanced Art Studio Monday and Wednesday (9:00-11:50) Standard Monday, Wednesday and Friday (A 8:00-9:10; B 9:20-10:30; C 10:40-11:50; D 12:00-1:10; E 1:20-2:30; F 2:40-3:50) MW LB Monday and Wednesday (A 12:40-2:30; B 4:00-5:50; C 7:00pm-8:50) MW Experiential/Lab Block Monday and Wednesday 2:40-5:30 TR Experiential/Lab Block Tuesday and Thursday (A 8:00 (9:00)-10:50 (11:50); B 12:00-2:50) TR Long Block Tuesday Thursday (A 8:00-9:50; B 10:00-11:50; C 1:00-2:50
12 2015 Special Topics Course Descriptions AFR 186/PSY 186 JB - Readings in Black (African) Psychology - The historical foundations for the beginnings of Psychology and Psychiatry are rife with an anti-african and anti-black bias, and that bias is fundamentally rooted within the peculiar historical relationship between Africa and Europe following the Asiento or Triangle Trade. Consequently most of American history is jaded by centuries of African enslavement, followed by a violently segregationist ( Jim Crow ) system. The White Supremacist ideology which emerged from this encounter would remain the mainstay of the U.S. and several other western societies, up until the 20 th century. This course will not only seek to acquire a clearer picture of the historical conditions in which Blacks were mired, but it will also address how Black health professionals: Psychologists and Psychiatrists, have sought to explain and confront the mental health consequences of anti-black thought. Many Psychologists and Psychiatrists of predominant African ancestry set about reassessing their discipline, and by the 1960 s introduced a new field within Psychology known as Black (African) Psychology. Seminal names like Francis Sumner, Kenneth and Mamie Clark, Bobby Wright, Amos Wilson, Alvin Poussaint, Francis Cress-Welsing, and Na im Akbar are but a few such trailblazers whose work reveals a profoundly important chapter in the history of Psychology. And yet, they are little known outside of the field of Africana/African American Studies. This course will introduce students to how these women and men offered new mental health paradigms which were intended to meet the unique needs, conditions, history, and perspectives of African peoples within the U.S. specifically and westernized societies in general. Meets the Appalachians, African Americans, and Women s Perspective. AFR 286/HIS 286 DM - Black Urban History - In this Special Topics cross listed course students will examine the complex and dynamic historical experiences of Black urban America since the colonial period. Students will also better understand the African American experience as it relates to the evolution of urban America. The course content is delivered through an interdisciplinary lens. Disciplines and fields used to examine Black Urban History include Black Studies; Urban Studies; Social history; American history; Women s and Gender Studies; and Labor history. Meets the Appalachians, African Americans, and Women s Perspective and the Western History Perspective-pending COGE approval. AFR 286/WGS 286-Black & White Sexualities- The title of this course highlights the constricted, binary, and often racialized ways in which people generally view sexuality. In this interdisciplinary course, we will use a critical, socio-historical lens to explore how binary thinking shapes our understanding of the diversity of human sexuality and how the socio-historical lens reveals the various ways that sexuality is socially constructed. This can be seen particularly in relation to the racialized conceptions of sexuality. For example, stereotypical beliefs about African peoples sexualities persist and have been legitimized historically by various social institutions, such as the state, and academic fields, such as science, medicine, anthropology, and history. Misperceptions of this nature also hold true in relations to Appalachian and rural people with regard to their sexual identities as well. By deconstructing the discourses surrounding sexuality, we will learn to develop new ideas and insights into sexuality. Meets the Appalachians, African Americans, and Women s Perspective -pending COGE approval.
13 AFR 286/WGS 286-Black Feminism- One might say that Black feminism emerges as a criticism and commentary on the ways in which Black women s lives were being marginalized within the feminist movement. But is this the entire story? Is it possible to trace an historical lineage of Black women s engagement with questions of gender and notions of equality? This course will attempt to answer this question by analyzing Black Women s writing from the early 1900s until the present in order to give an account of the varied commitments of what has come to be known as Black feminism. As such, the course will center on how African American philosophers respond to, engage with, and critique feminist philosophy. The writings of Anna Julia Cooper, Audre Lorde, bell hooks, Lorraine Hansberry, the Combahee Feminist Collective, Patricia Hill Collins, and Kathryn Gines, among others, will be discussed throughout the course. Meets the Appalachians, African Americans, and Women s Perspective -Pending COGE approval. AFR 286/THR 286/WGS 286-Feminist Solo Performance- An active introduction to the basic principles of the Solo performance process. Feminist Solo Performance is a way to highlight and honor the importance of issues pertaining to Women. Students will study important artists such as bell hooks and Anna Deveare Smith. Students will also create their own texts to later implement in a Final Solo performance. By the end of the course, students should have a deeper understanding of the fantastic world of theatre. Meets the Arts Perspective and the Appalachians, African Americans, and Women s Perspective. AFR 286/ANR 286 MP Food & Agriculture of Africa and African American People - The popular image of Africa today is of a hungry continent, chronically unable to feed itself, and dependent on food aid from the rest of the world for its survival. However, this is only a recent development. In the thousands of years before the advent of recorded history, African peoples developed rich and varied agricultural traditions derived from domestication of local plants and animals and sustainably integrated these into the local climates and ecosystems. Africa is a continent of farmers. In this course we will explore the origin and spread of agriculture on the continent of Africa. We will examine how different cultural groups interact with their environments, both traditionally and how this interaction is being shaped and changed in the modern world. We will also explore the legacy of the slave trade on agriculture production and food systems both on the African continent and across the Atlantic, among the African diaspora, connecting the food and agriculture practices of the African diaspora to their roots in African traditions and crops. Additionally we will examine how European colonialism in Africa affected local agricultural traditions and relationships with land and how this shapes the current state of agriculture, food policy and food security on the African continent today and in the future. Meets the Appalachians, African Americans, and Women s Perspective and the International Non-Western Perspective. ANR 386/SENS 386 NG Ecological Weed Management - A study of ecological weed control principles. At least one-third of all crop losses worldwide are due to weeds. Weeds affect all areas of landscape and agricultural management: pastures, orchards, row crops, greenhouses, ornamentals, lawns, golf courses, and wilderness. Students in this course will gain a broad understanding of weed management practices and a detailed understanding of how to manage weeds in many different contexts.
14 ANR 386/APS 386 SH Appalachian Plants & People - A course that explores the historic and current-day uses (including food, drink, medicine, fiber, fuel, tools, wildcrafting, etc.) of plants present in the Appalachian region, and of the people who have used them. The class will cover both native and introduced plants of the Appalachians. Field trips, videos, readings, class discussion, and independent research will be used throughout the course. Students will learn how to identify some plants in the field, as well as the use of those plants. Each student will be responsible for a research paper or project that focuses on one plant or specific use that they choose. Two lectures and one laboratory session each week. Meets the Appalachians, African Americans, and Women s Perspective. ARH 186/AST 186 AE Arts in East Asia - This course will consider the visual arts of East Asia from prehistory to the present. Moving from China eastwards through Korea to Japan, the course will explore the connections between the different rich visual cultures of East Asia as well as the ways in which East Asian art and architecture has interacted with global culture. A variety of types of art, including architecture, sculpture and painting, will be covered. In order to understand the meaning and importance of these monuments and art objects for the people who created them, the course will approach artworks in terms of their cultural and historical contexts, with reference to pertinent political, social, religious, and cultural institutions. Meets the International Non-Western Perspective. ARH 286 MD Visual Cultures of Science - Arranged thematically, this course explores how artists both responded to and were involved in scientific innovation in the West as well as how scientists were aware of and contributed to innovations in the arts. Artists worked to interrogate their world using similar approaches and tools as natural philosophers and natural historians. Scholars interrogations of the natural world were tied up with their efforts to visually represent their findings. This course examines these interactions in three fields of study, 1) Macrocosms - examines artists changing representations of astronomical understandings alongside scientists attempt to visually communicate their ever changing understanding of the heavens; 2) Microcosms - turns the lens around to study the minute and examines how scientists and artists use new instruments to understand the invisible; and 3) Man - turns our focus inward to examine artist and scientific interest in anatomy. Meets the Arts Perspective and Western History Perspective. AST 186/PSC 186 LM Japanese Politics - This course will explore and analyze the domestic political system of Japan as well as its regional and international politics. Beginning with a historical foundation in post-wwii democratic reconstruction, the course will cover topics such as governmental structure and elections, civil society, women s roles in politics, international political economy, and foreign policy. Meets the Social Sciences Perspective and the International Non-Western Perspective.
15 AST 286/SOC 286/WGS 286 GG Kinship & Gender in Southeast Asia - Southeast Asia is perhaps one of the most fascinating, yet often misunderstood, areas of the world. For instance, during the 1970s, US academics and policymakers predicted that the area would be one of the world s trouble spots. Southeast Asia, it was predicted, would be wracked with strife between its constituent countries. While there has been much internal strife (Burma/Myanmar, Cambodia/Kampuchea, Indonesia, the Philippines,...), there have been few international incidents. Much of the basis for the aforementioned prediction is the array of peoples, religions, economies, and lifestyles that are located in Southeast Asia. This course seeks to introduce the students to this diversity through the issues that make up the title. Southeast Asia has certain social and cultural bonds that unify the area, and these too will be analyzed in this course. To do this, the course is organized in two parallel sessions, a general area-wide discussion of the topics through seminars on Tuesdays, and more specific analyses of particular countries or issues via student-led workshops on Thursdays. At the beginning of term student groups will choose a country to conduct independent research - based on the seminar topics their findings will be discussed in the workshops. Assessment will be based upon 3 term time essays, a presentation, and a final essay. Meets the International Non-Western Perspective. BIO 386 PM Comparative Animal Physiology - This course examines the major physiological systems (nervous, endocrine, metabolic, respiratory, circulatory, and renal) of the major animal groups. Emphasis will be placed on the physiological adaptations of these systems to environmental challenges (e.g. temperature, oxygen availability, water balance) faced by different animals. Three class periods and one three-hour laboratory each week. COM 186 JD Digital Editing COM 286 JD Radio Broadcasting COM 386 VM Business & Professional Communication - This course prepares students to understand and develop useful and effective communication strategies and skills for use in a variety of business and professional settings. The course is writing- and speaking-intensive. CSC 386 JP Computational Complexity- A study of study a variety of types of interdisciplinary computational problems, including decision, search, counting, optimization, and verification. In our search to understand the fundamental limitations and capabilities of efficient computation, we will explore extremely important, but inherently challenging, computational problems which require a huge run time to solve no matter how clever an algorithm one designs. We will consider not only run time, but also space/memory, non-determinism, randomness, parallelism, communication, algebraic operations, and even a small amount of quantum mechanics. This course counts in the Foundations area of the Computer and Information Science Major. ECO 286 VG Labor Economics - This course focuses on the analysis and description of labor markets. Key topics include the determination of employment, unemployment, hours of work and wages. We will look at the impact of welfare program and labor market policy on wages and work effort in the United States and other countries. Additional topics are wage differentials by schooling, experience, gender, and race, income inequality, employment contracts, labor unions, and bargaining.
16 ECO 386 VG Methods in Labor Economics - This course focuses on the analysis and description of labor markets. Key topics include the determination of employment, unemployment, hours of work and wages. We will look at the impact of welfare program and labor market policy on wages and work effort in the United States and other countries. Additional topics are wage differentials by schooling, experience, gender, and race, income inequality, employment contracts, labor unions, and bargaining. Includes completion of a substantive research paper. ENG 186 KE War Stories - We will examine works of British and American war literature from the Great War onward. On the battlefield and on the home front, in poetry and prose, on the page and on the screen, and through the voices of men and women alike, our aim is not to glorify the acts of war, but to understand how war shaped the past century s literary voices and literary forms. Meets the Western History Perspective. GST 186 DH Civilizations, Leadership & Paradigms - In this new century, humanity faces the question of whether we are moving toward a single, unified "human race" or whether we are becoming a collection of conflicting human factions separated by cultural boundaries reflected in allegiances to competing civilizations. While considering the arguments for and against these propositions, the competing components of culture -- such as religion, geography, and historiography -- that structure the major contemporary human civilizations become the necessary framework within which to engage that debate. In particular, questions arise of how leaders should lead within these various civilizational paradigms, and how leadership initiatives persist within and among those civilizations? This survey course attempts to bring together in one place the various disciplinary pieces from across the larger liberal arts curriculum that impact these issues of leadership. Meets the International Non-Western Perspective. GST 186 IN- Financial Literacy: Don t be Dumb with your Money, Be Fool ish- This course will introduce fundamental concepts associated with basic money management, including time value of money concepts, household budgeting, financial decision-making with respect to job salary and benefits, mortgages, and investing. GST 286 LM STEM Education Seminar - This course examines effective methods of college teaching and strategies to promote success and increase both conceptual and quantitative understanding among first-year STEM students. Focus will be on understanding the role of a peer educator and effective instructional strategies. Discussions will center on teaching techniques that enhance cooperative learning and differentiated classroom instruction. One, two-hour discussion section per week. HHP 186D MM Teaching Danish Gymnastics This course offers a practical learning experience with Danish Gymnastics. The main objective for this course is to learn how to build a gymnastics lesson including warm-ups, spotting, games, tumbling and rhythmic gymnastics to children ages 2-13 years old. Two weekly class meeting are designated for teaching and leading activities in a local community program and one is for discussion. Discussion days will include some information about the theory and history of teaching gymnastics and preparation for teaching. This class would be beneficial for students interested in teaching pre-school through upperelementary age children and student s motor behavior and human development.
17 HHP 286 AM-Focus on Fitness- This course will expose the student to the fundamentals and knowledge of fitness development and physical conditioning. Students will learn the fundamentals of goal setting, and exercise programming in the following modes: strength training, cardiovascular training, and flexibility. Meets the ¼ credit PE Requirement. HHP 286P SD Pilates - In this course, students will be introduced to basic vocabulary, technique, and theory of the Pilates Method. Meets the ¼ credit PE Requirement. HIS 186 Wondrous Strange: A History of Unusual Occurrences and Obscure Individuals- Witches and heretics, religious prophets and confidence men, Indian captives and murdering mothers, cat massacres and slave conspiracies: these are the subjects of microhistory, a distinctive approach to the study of the past that seeks to reveal broader forces of historical change through detailed stories of obscure individuals and seemingly bizarre events. In this seminar, students will read and analyze a diverse and challenging array of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century primary texts letters and sermons, court records and tax lists while also learning how scholars research and write these gripping historical narratives. LAT 186 JC Sport & Spectacle in Greece and Rome - Survey of sport and spectacle in the classical world with special attention to those topics the Olympic Games of ancient Greece and the circuses and arenas of imperial Rome that continue to capture the imaginations of modern athletes, entrepreneurs, entertainers, and their audiences. Meets the Western History Perspective. PHI 186 EP Language and Reality - A philosophical look at how language functions. Topics will include questions about whether nonhuman animals have language, to what extent language shapes perception, and how representation and reference are relevant to linguistic usage. PHI 286/AST 286 JB-The Nature of Reality, East & West- This course explores metaphysics from a comparative perspective. Drawing on resources from classical Western philosophy and Indian and Buddhist debates, it explores questions such as What is the fundamental nature of reality?, What is the nature of causation?, Do selves exist? and What are qualities? Attention will be given to careful, critical reading of a variety of texts, reconstruction of arguments, and developing the skills needed to make responsible philosophical comparisons. Meets the International Perspective-pending COGE approval.
18 PSY 386 AW Careers In Psychology - A course covering subfields of psychology with an emphasis on jobs and graduate school opportunities within the subfields. The course will cover topics such as career goals, getting the most out of the undergraduate program, resume building, orientation to key organizations in the field, developing research skills, and applying to jobs and graduate schools. PSY 386 WM Cases in Clinical Neuropsychology - Course will consist of readings and discussions about various higher order human capacities and abilities (such as spatial reasoning, body awareness, language, artistic expression, etc.), that are affected by brain trauma and disease. Examination of case studies (as recounted by Sacks in The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat, Ramachandran in Phantoms in the Brain, Doidge in The Brain that Changes Itself, and others) will be supplemented by textbook readings more clearly delineating the neural systems involved. Also included will be some discussion and first-hand exposure to assessment procedures used in clinical neuropsychology (such as the Wisconsin Card-Sort Task, etc.). WGS 286 CK-Childbearing: A Global Perspective-This course is intended to help students develop an understanding and appreciation of the diversity among women around the world through an examination of the social, political, geographic, and familial influences that impact on a woman s child bearing practices. Students will research a non-western country of interest to them, and explore the childbearing practices of women in that geographical area through library research and an oral interview with an international student. These activities will culminate in a written paper, oral presentation and contributions to a group Wiki page. Meets the International Non-Western Perspective and the Appalachians, African Americans, and Women s Perspective
19 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 1 African & African Amer Studies AFR 132 Intro to Race in America (SOC) 1.00 MWF TBA Burnside J Completion or waiver of MAT 010 (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) AFR 138 Black Music Ensemble(MUS 135).25 MW pm P 128 Bullock K Permission of instructor (Course Fee: $15) AFR 141 African-American Lit (ENG) 1.00 MW TBA Wilkinson C (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective; Arts Perspective) AFR 165 Intro to Afr-Amer History(HIS) 1.00 MWF TBA Mack D (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective; Western History Perspective) AFR 186 JB Readings in "Black(Afr) Psy" 1.00 TR TBA Pimienta-Bey AFR 222, HIS 260, HIS 256, or permission (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) AFR 222 Intro to African-Amer Studies 1.00 TR TBA Baskin A GSTR 110 (or waiver) (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) AFR 230 African Amer-Appalachia(APS) 1.00 TR TBA Turley A GSTR 110 (or waiver) (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) AFR 231 African Amer Rel Traditions 1.00 MW TBA Pimienta-Bey GSTR 110 (or waiver) (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective; Religion Perspective) AFR 286 AB Feminist Solo Perf. (THR/WGS) 1.00 TR JD MUSS Barton A (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective; Arts Perspective) AFR 286 DM Black Urban History (HIS) 1.00 MWF TBA Mack D AFR 286 MP Food & Ag/Afr & Afr Ppl (ANR) 1.00 MWF TBA Parr M GSTR 210 (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective; International Non-Western) AFR 286 QM Black & White Sexualities(WGS) 1.00 TR TBA Mason Q GSTR 110 (or waiver) AFR 286 QRM Black Feminism (WGS) 1.00 MW TBA Mason Q GSTR AFR 356 Sem-African-Amer History (HIS) 1.00 TR TBA Mack D HIS 161 and 162; or AFR/HIS 165; or permission of the instructor Agriculture & Natural Resource ANR 100 Intr to Agr & Natural Resource.50 T TBA Hall S ANR 110 A Animal Science 1.00 MWF AG Baptiste Q (Natural Science Lab) R AG Baptiste Q ANR 110 B Animal Science 1.00 MWF AG Baptiste Q (Natural Science Lab) R AG Baptiste Q
20 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 2 Agriculture & Natural Resource ANR 240 Soil Science 1.00 MWF TBA Parr M ANR 130 or BIO ANR 265 Bees and Beekeeping 1.00 MW AG 203 Clark S Any ANR or BIO course; or permission of instructor ANR 286 MP Food & Ag/Afr & Afr Ppl (AFR) 1.00 MWF TBA Parr M GSTR 210 (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective; International Non-Western) ANR 312 Advanced Livestock Systems 1.00 MWF TBA Baptiste Q ANR 110 or permission of instructor T TBA Baptiste Q ANR 375 Farm Resource Management 1.00 MWF TBA Clark S ECO ANR 386 NG Ecological Weed Managmnt(SENS) 1.00 TR TBA Gift N SENS 100, ANR 130, or BIO ANR 386 SH Appalachian Plants & Ppl(APS) 1.00 MW TBA Hall S GSTR 210 and Any ANR, APS, or BIO course (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) F TBA Hall S Appalachian Studies APS 113 Appalachian Weaving 1.00 TR AB 115 Kriner L (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) (Course Fee: $15) APS 121 Appalachian Cultures 1.00 MWF TBA Green C (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) APS 140 Appalachian Literature (ENG) 1.00 MWF TBA Egerton K (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) APS 209 Appalachian Foodways (CFS) 1.00 MW EM 202 Dotson M GSTR 210 or Permission of Instructor (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) (Course Fee: $40) APS 210 Health in Appalachia (HLT) 1.00 MWF S SCL Lasslo J PEH 100 or permission; and GSTR 110 (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) (or waiver) APS 215 Sustainable Appal Comm (SENS) 1.00 MWF TBA Olson R GSTR 210 (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) APS 224 Appalachian Music (MUS) 1.00 MWF P 223 Hammond A (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective; Arts Perspective) APS 230 African Americans-Appal (AFR) 1.00 TR TBA Turley A GSTR 110 (or waiver) (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) APS 386 SH Appalachian Plants & Ppl(ANR) 1.00 MW TBA Hall S GSTR 210 and any ANR, APS, or BIO course (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) F TBA Hall S
21 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 3 Art ARH 121 Survey of Western Art I 1.00 MWF AB 210 McKiernan-Gonzalez ARH 186 AE Arts of East Asia (AST) 1.00 MWF AB 210 Elston A (International Non-Western) ARH 234 Intro to Archaeological Method 1.00 TR AB Anderson C GSTR 210 (Social Science Perspective) (Course Fee: $15, plus cost of materials) ARH 239 Native Nrth Amer Art&Archaelog 1.00 MW AB 211 Anderson C GSTR 210 (International Non-Western) ARH th & 21st Century Art 1.00 MWF AB 210 McKiernan-Gonzalez GSTR 210 (Western History Perspective) ARH 262 Italian Renaissance Art & Arc TR AB 210 Elston A (Arts Perspective; Western History Perspective) ARH 286 MD Visual Cultures of Science 1.00 TR AB 210 Doherty M GSTR 210 (Arts Perspective; Western History Perspective) ART 110 Design 1.00 TR AB 303 Wiggs P (Course Fee: $15, plus cost of materials) ART 115 Drawing Fundamentals 1.00 TR AB 301 Gardner K (Arts Perspective) (Course Fee: $15, plus cost of materials) ART 116 Painting I 1.00 MW AB 302 Gardner K (Arts Perspective) (Course Fee: $15, plus cost of materials) ART 123 Ceramics I 1.00 TR DT B30 Gonzalez R (Arts Perspective) (Course Fee: $15, plus cost of materials) ART 130 Sculpture I 1.00 TR SH SCUL Feinberg D (Arts Perspective) (Course Fee: $15, plus cost of materials) ART 211 Printmaking II 1.00 MW AB 200 Kriner L ART 110, with a grade of C or higher (Course Fee: $15, plus cost of materials) and ART 111; or permission of instructor ART 225 Fibers II 1.00 MW AB 115 Kriner L ART 110 and ART 125 with grades of C (Course Fee: $15, plus cost of materials) or higher; or permission of instructor ART 311 Printmaking III 1.00 MW AB 200 Kriner L ART 211 or permission of instructor (Course Fee: $15, plus cost of materials)
22 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 4 Art ART 316 Painting III 1.00 MW AB 302 Gardner K ART 216 or permission of instructor. (Course Fee: $15, plus cost of materials) ART 325 Fibers III 1.00 MW AB 115 Kriner L ART 225 or permission of instructor (Course Fee: $15, plus cost of materials) ART 330 Sculpture III 1.00 TR SH SCUL Feinberg D Permission of instructor (Course Fee: $15, plus cost of materials) ART 411 Printmaking IV 1.00 MW AB 200 Kriner L ART 311 or permission of instructor (Course Fee: $15, plus cost of materials) ART 416 Painting IV 1.00 MW AB 302 Gardner K ART 316 or permission of instructor. (Course Fee: $15, plus cost of materials) ART 423 Ceramics IV 1.00 TR DT B30 Gonzalez R ART 323 or permission of instructor (Course Fee: $15, plus cost of materials) ART 425 Fibers IV 1.00 MW AB 115 Kriner L ART 325 or permission of instructor (Course Fee: $15, plus cost of materials) ART 430 Sculpture IV 1.00 TR SH SCUL Feinberg D ART 330 or permission of instructor (Course Fee: $15, plus cost of materials) ART 493 Senior Seminar R AB 211 Gardner K Senior standing Asian Studies AST 101 A Intro to Japanese I (JPN) 1.00 MWF TBA Patton N AST 101 B Intro to Japanese I (JPN) 1.00 MWF TBA Patton N AST 103 Intro to Japanese III (JPN) 1.00 MWF TBA Patton N AST/JPN 102 with a grade of C or higher or permission of instructor AST 122 History of China (HIS) 1.00 MWF TBA Foster R (International Non-Western) AST 135 A Religions of Japan (REL) 1.00 MW TBA Richey J (International Non-Western; Religion Perspective) AST 135 B Religions of Japan (REL) 1.00 TR TBA Richey J (International Non-Western; Religion Perspective) AST 186 AE Arts of East Asia (ARH) 1.00 MWF AB 210 Elston A (International Non-Western) AST 186 LM Japanese Politics(PSC) 1.00 MW TBA McKee L (International Non-Western; Social Science Perspective) AST 204 Yoga (HHP).25 TR S DA S Woodie S HLT 100 (Formerly PEH 100) or (PE) permission of instructor
23 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 5 Asian Studies AST 286 GG Kin & Gen in SE. Asia(SOC/WGS) 1.00 MW TBA Gray G GSTR 210 (International Non-Western) AST 286 JB Nature of Reality, East & West 1.00 TR TBA Brown J GSTR 210 or sophomore standing AST 323 Sem in Japanese History (HIS) 1.00 TR TBA Foster R AST/HIS 122 or123; OR junior standing (International Non-Western) AST 401 Senior Sem-Asian Studies 1.00 MW TBA Richey J Senior standing or permission of instructor Biology ***BIO 101 students must sign up for one lecture/lab section (101) AND one PAL (101P) section.*** BIO 101 A1 Human Anatomy & Phys I 1.00 MWF SC 106 Blank S Completion or waiver of MAT 010, or (Natural Science Lab) M SC 104 Blank S permission of instructor BIO 101 A2 Human Anatomy & Phys I 1.00 MWF SC 106 Blank S Completion or waiver of MAT 010, or (Natural Science Lab) T SC 104 Blank S permission of instructor BIO 101 A3 Human Anatomy & Phys I 1.00 MWF SC 106 Blank S Completion or waiver of MAT 010, or (Natural Science Lab) T SC 104 Blank S permission of instructor BIO 101 B1 Human Anatomy & Phys I 1.00 MWF SC 106 Blank S Completion or waiver of MAT 010, or (Natural Science Lab) M SC 104 Blank S permission of instructor BIO 101 B2 Human Anatomy & Phys I 1.00 MWF SC 106 Blank S Completion or waiver of MAT 010, or (Natural Science Lab) T SC 104 Blank S permission of instructor BIO 101 B3 Human Anatomy & Phys I 1.00 MWF SC 106 Blank S Completion or waiver of MAT 010, or (Natural Science Lab) T SC 104 Blank S permission of instructor BIO 101P A A & P Peer-Assisted Learning MW TBA Blank S BIO 101P B A & P Peer-Assisted Learning MW pm N 127 Blank S BIO 101P C A & P Peer-Assisted Learning MW pm N 127 Blank S BIO 101P D A & P Peer-Assisted Learning TR pm N 127 Blank S BIO 101P E A & P Peer-Assisted Learning TR pm TBA Blank S BIO 101P F A & P Peer-Assisted Learning T TBA Blank S SUN TBA Blank S ***BIO 101 students must sign up for one lecture/lab section (101) AND one PAL (101P) section.***
24 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 6 Biology BIO 110 A Modern Biology 1.00 MWF SC 101 Hoffman M Completion or waiver of MAT 012, or (Natural Science Lab) W SC 104 Hoffman M permission of instructor; a freshman-level majors course BIO 110 B Modern Biology 1.00 MWF SC 401 Mineo P Completion or waiver of MAT 012, or (Natural Science Lab) R SC 104 Mineo P permission of instructor; a freshman-level majors course BIO 110 C Modern Biology 1.00 MWF SC 401 Douglas N Completion or waiver of MAT 012, or (Natural Science Lab) R SC 104 Douglas N permission of instructor; a freshman-level majors course BIO 113 Experimental Zoology 1.00 MWF SC 401 Rosen R BIO 110 with a grade of C- or higher, T SC 203 Rosen R or permission of instructor; a freshman-level course BIO 114 Botany 1.00 MWF SC 17 Adams C BIO 110 with a grade of C- or higher; R SC 212 Adams C OR permission of instructor; a freshman-level course BIO 207 Pathophysiology:Altered Health 1.00 MW N 128 Villaran T EITHER 1) BIO 102, plus CHM 113 or CHM 131 OR 2) BIO 220, BIO 323, and CHM BIO 220 Comparative Vertebrate Anatomy 1.00 MWF SC 17 Scudder-Davis BIO 110 and BIO 113 or permission of instructor; a sophomore-level course BIO 222 Microbiology 1.00 MWF SC 17 Anderson D BIO 102 & CHM 113 OR BIO 110 & CHM T SC 204 Anderson D 221 or permission of instructor; a sophomore-level course BIO 324 Parasitology 1.00 MWF SC 306 Rosen R BIO 113 or permission of instructor; R SC 203 Rosen R a sophomore-, junior-, or seniorlevel course BIO 330 Genetics 1.00 MWF SC 106 Anderson D BIO 113 & 114 AND CHM 222; or R SC 204 Anderson D permission of instructor; a junior or senior-level course
25 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 7 Biology BIO 332 Mammalogy 1.00 MWF SC 306 Douglas N BIO 113 or permission of instructor T SC 212 Douglas N BIO 344 Dendrology & Forest Ecology 1.00 MWF SC 106 Adams C BIO 114 or permission of instructor; a junior- or senior-level course T SC 212 Adams C BIO 386 PM Comparative Animal Physiology 1.00 MWF SC 27 Mineo P BIO 110, 113, and 114; CHM 221 or T SC 203 Mineo P permission BIO 494 Evolution 1.00 MWF SC 401 Scudder-Davis Senior standing or permission of instructor Business BUS 120 A Accounting I 1.00 TR TBA Caldwell A Completion or waiver of MAT 012; (Practical Reasoning) first-year or sophomore standing preferred BUS 120 B Accounting I 1.00 MWF TBA McCormack G Completion or waiver of MAT 012; (Practical Reasoning) first-year or sophomore standing preferred BUS 130 Accounting II 1.00 MWF TBA McCormack G BUS 120 with a grade of C or higher; first-year or sophomore standing p referred BUS 240 Business Law 1.00 TR TBA Caldwell A GSTR 210; sophomore or junior standing preferred BUS 315 A Management 1.00 TR TBA Elbert N BUS 120 or ECO 102; or permission of instructor BUS 315 B Management 1.00 MW TBA Reid M BUS 120 or ECO 102; or permission of instructor BUS 326 Intermediate Accounting I 1.00 MW TBA Caldwell A BUS BUS 345 Human Resource Management 1.00 TR TBA Reid M Junior or senior standing preferred BUS 346 Investment Analysis 1.00 TR TBA Lumpkin M BUS 130 and ECO 250; junior or senior standing preferred BUS 363 Marketing 1.00 TR TBA Norris I GSTR 210 AND ECO 102, or permission of instructor; sophomore or junior standing preferred
26 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 8 Business BUS 366 Financial Management 1.00 MWF TBA Lumpkin M BUS 130 and ECO 250; junior (preferred) or senior standing BUS 367 Marketing Research 1.00 MW TBA Norris I BUS 363 and ECO 250 or MAT BUS 437 Introduction to Auditing 1.00 TR TBA McCormack G BUS BUS 475 Strategic Management 1.00 TR TBA Reid M BUS 315, 363, and 366 Child & Family Studies CFS 115 Principles of Food Preparation 1.00 W EM 103 Blythe J Completion or waiver of MAT 012; CFS F EM 202 Blythe J 103; or permission of instructor CFS 130 Lifespan Human Development 1.00 MWF EM 102 Burke E CFS 145 Consumer Decision Making 1.00 TR EM 102 Burke E (Practical Reasoning) CFS 207 Family Relations (WGS) 1.00 MWF EM 102 Burke E GSTR 110 (or waiver) (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective; Social Science Perspective) CFS 209 Appalachian Foodways (APS) 1.00 MW EM 202 Dotson M GSTR 210 or Permission of Instructor (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) (Course Fee: $40) CFS 221 Fundamentals of Nutrition 1.00 TR EM 102 Blythe J GSTR 210 (Active Learning Experience; Service Learning) CFS 237 Human Environments I 1.00 TR EM 203 Rivers Thompson Sophomore standing or above CFS 317 Parent Child Relations 1.00 TR EM 202 Dotson M GSTR 210 and sophomore standing or above or permission of instructor CFS 353 Childhood Guidance 1.00 MWF EM 103 Burke E CFS 130 and GSTR 210; or permission of instructor CFS 380 Methds of Instructnl Delivery 1.00 TR EM 202 Dotson M A CFS Course and GSTR 210 or (Course Fee: $10) permission of instructor instructor CFS 441 Family Resource Management 1.00 MWF EM 203 Rivers Thompson CFS 130, 145, 207 (also WGS), and (Active Learning Experience) CFS 221, or concurrent enrollment and (Course Fee: $15) senior standing CFS 480 Senior Research Seminar 1.00 TR EM 203 Rivers Thompson CFS 130, 145, 207 (also WGS), CFS 221, and CFS 441, or concurrent enrollment and senior standing
27 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 9 Chemistry CHM 101 A Foundations of Chemistry 1.00 MWF SC 101 Garrett M Completion or waiver of MAT 010 or concurrent enrollment in MAT CHM 101 B Foundations of Chemistry 1.00 MWF SC 306 Saderholm M Completion or waiver of MAT 010 or concurrent enrollment in MAT CHM 101 C Foundations of Chemistry 1.00 MWF SC 101 Senetar M Completion or waiver of MAT 010 or concurrent enrollment in MAT CHM 131 A Accelerated General Chemistry 1.00 MWF SC 306 Baltisberger Permission of instructor or complete. (Natural Science Lab; Pract Reasoning-Quantitative) R SC 306 Baltisberger or waiver of both MAT 012 and CHM 101 R SC 313 Baltisberger CHM 131 B Accelerated General Chemistry 1.00 MWF SC 27 Marshall N Permission of instructor or complete. (Natural Science Lab; Pract Reasoning-Quantitative) W SC 306 Marshall N or waiver of both MAT 012 and CHM 101 W SC 313 Marshall N CHM 221 A Organic Chemistry I 1.00 MWF SC 106 Kovacevic A CHM 131 or 134 T SC 306 Kovacevic A T SC 313 Kovacevic A CHM 221 B Organic Chemistry I 1.00 MWF SC 101 Marshall N CHM 131 or 134 F SC 306 Marshall N F SC 313 Marshall N CHM 222 A Organic Chemistry II 1.00 MWF SC 306 Garrett M CHM 221 M SC 306 Garrett M M SC 313 Garrett M CHM 222 B Organic Chemistry II 1.00 MWF SC 306 Garrett M CHM 221 T SC 306 Garrett M T SC 313 Garrett M CHM 311 Analytical Chemistry 1.00 MWF SC 106 Smithson P CHM 131 or 134, and completion or R SC 306 Smithson P waiver of MAT 135 or concurrent R SC 313 Smithson P enrollment CHM 362 Quantum Chemistry 1.00 MWF SC 209 Baltisberger CHM 311 (formerly 341), MAT 225, PHY 218 or PHY 315, OR permission of instructor CHM 370 Adv Lab - Chromatography.50 T SC 209 Smithson P CHM 311 OR permission of instructor CHM 470 Adv Lab - Nuclear Magnetic Res.50 R SC 401 Baltisberger CHM 370 (or concurrent enrollment) and one additional CHM course at the 345-or-higher level; OR permission of instructor
28 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 10 Communication COM 100 A Intro to Communication 1.00 MWF TBA McDonald V COM 100 B Intro to Communication 1.00 MWF TBA STAFF COM 103 Competitive Debate Practicum.25 TR pm TBA Wooten B Permission of the Director of Forensics COM 113 Mediation & Negotiation (PSJ) 1.00 MWF TBA Brown K COM 186 JD Digital Editing 1.00 TR TBA STAFF COM 220 Theories of Communication 1.00 MWF TBA Brown K GSTR 210 and COM 100 (Social Science Perspective) COM 286 JD Radio Broadcasting 1.00 MWF TBA STAFF COM 310 Communication and Gender (WGS) 1.00 TR TBA McDonald V GSTR 210 or permission of instructor (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) COM 312 Mass Communication 1.00 MW TBA Brown K GSTR 110 or permission of instructor COM 315 Public Relations 1.00 MW TBA Wooten B GSTR 210 or permission of instructor (Active Learning Experience; Service Learning) COM 386 VM Business & Professional Com MWF TBA McDonald V GSTR 210 or permission COM 410 Senior Seminar-Communication 1.00 TR TBA Wooten B COM 220 (formerly 300) and senior standing Computer Science CSC 111 A Storytelling-Comp Animation 1.00 MWF DT 104 Heggen S Completion or waiver of MAT 012 (Arts Perspective; Practical Reasoning) CSC 111 B Storytelling-Comp Animation 1.00 MWF DT 104 Heggen S Completion or waiver of MAT 012 (Arts Perspective; Practical Reasoning) CSC 126 A Intro to Robotics 1.00 TR DT 108A Pearce J Completion or waiver of MAT 012 (Practical Reasoning) CSC 126 B Intro to Robotics 1.00 TR DT 108A Pearce J Completion or waiver of MAT 012 (Practical Reasoning)
29 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 11 Computer Science CSC 236 A Data Structures 1.00 MWF DT 108A Nakazawa M CSC 226 with a grade of C or higher CSC 236 B Data Structures 1.00 MWF DT 108A Nakazawa M CSC 226 with a grade of C or higher CSC 330 Database Systems 1.00 MWF DT 111 Nakazawa M CSC 226 with a grade of C or higher (Active Learning Experience; Service Learning) CSC 335 Computer Organization 1.00 TR DT 104 Jadud M CSC CSC 386 JP Computational Complexity 1.00 MWF DT 108A Pearce J CSC CSC 493 Senior Projects.50 MWF DT 111 Jadud M Senior standing Economics ECO 101 Principles of Macroeconomics 1.00 MWF TBA Vazzana C Completion or waiver of MAT 012; (Social Science Perspective) first-year or sophomore standing preferred ECO 102 A Principles of Microeconomics 1.00 MWF TBA Lumpkin M Completion or waiver of MAT 012; (Social Science Perspective) first-year or sophomore standing preferred ECO 102 B Principles of Microeconomics 1.00 MWF TBA Vazzana C Completion or waiver of MAT 012; (Social Science Perspective) first-year or sophomore standing preferred ECO 250 Applied Statistics 1.00 TR TBA Grzimek V MAT 115 (or waiver); requirement met (Pract Reasoning-Quantitative) OR permission of instructor; soph. or junior standing preferred ECO 286 VG Labor Economics 1.00 MW TBA Grzimek V ECO 102 and PRQ ECO 301 Intermediate Macroeconomics 1.00 MWF TBA Cupidon J ECO 101 or permission of instructor; (Social Science Perspective) and MAT 135 (or waiver) ECO 332 Money and Banking 1.00 MWF TBA Cupidon J ECO 101 or 102; sophomore or junior standing preferred ECO 386 VG Methods in Labor Economics 1.00 MW TBA Grzimek V ECO 102 and ECO 250 Education Studies EDS 150 Int-Ed:Think About Lrng,Tchg 1.00 TR KH 004 Carter Y GSTR 110 (or waiver) and criminal re cords clearance completed prior to registration
30 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 12 Education Studies EDS 227 Child Dev & School Structure 1.00 TR KH 206 Webb A EDS 150, or permission of instructor EDS 228 Adolescent Dev & School Struct 1.00 TR KH 202 Wong P EDS 150 or permission of instructor. (Active Learning Experience; Service Learning) EDS 325 Curr I: General Methods 1.00 TR KH 202 Wong P EDS EDS 335 Integrated Curr I 1.00 TR KH 006 Starnes B EDS 227 (Course Fee: $25) W TBA Starnes B EDS 340 Stdts with Spec Needs P-5 & Mi 1.00 MW KH 206 Richardson C EDS 227 or EDS 346 Literacy:Intermed & Midl Grade 1.00 MF KH 202 STAFF EDS 227 or 228 or permission of instructor EDS 349 Education and Culture 1.00 TR KH 206 Webb A permission of instructor EDS 471 Midl Grades Student Tchg Sem 1.00 TBA TBA TBA Saderholm J Permission of instructor (Active Learning Experience) EDS 472 Midl Grades Student Teaching 3.00 TBA TBA TBA Saderholm J EDS 479 (Active Learning Experience) EDS 481 A Secondary Student Tchg Seminar 1.00 TBA TBA TBA Saderholm J Permission of instructor EDS 481 B Secondary Student Tchg Seminar 1.00 TBA TBA TBA Wong P Permission of instructor EDS 482 A Scnd Stdnt Tchg:P-12,5-12, TBA TBA TBA DiSavino E EDS 479 (Active Learning Experience) EDS 482 B Scnd Stdnt Tchg:P-12,5-12, TBA TBA TBA Saderholm J EDS 479 (Active Learning Experience) EDS 482 C Scnd Stdnt Tchg:P-12,5-12, TBA TBA TBA Wong P EDS 479 (Active Learning Experience) EDS 482 D Scnd Stdnt Tchg:P-12,5-12, TBA TBA TBA Ambrose T EDS 479 (Active Learning Experience) EDS 485 Content Teach Meth Prac III.25 TBA TBA TBA Saderholm J EDS EDS 487 Elementary Student Teaching 3.00 TBA TBA TBA STAFF EDS 440 (Active Learning Experience) EDS 488 Elem Student Teaching Seminar 1.00 TBA TBA TBA STAFF Permission of instructor
31 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 13 English ENG 103 ESL and American Culture 1.00 MWF TBA STAFF Permission of instructor (International Perspective) ENG 110 A Intro to Literature in English 1.00 TR TBA Cohen J ENG 110 B Intro to Literature in English 1.00 MWF TBA Crachiolo B ENG 124 A Intro to Creative Writing 1.00 MW TBA Wilkinson C (Arts Perspective) ENG 124 B Intro to Creative Writing 1.00 MWF TBA Roberts R (Arts Perspective) ENG 124 C Intro to Creative Writing 1.00 TR TBA Jones L (Arts Perspective) ENG 140 Appalachian Literature (APS) 1.00 MWF TBA Egerton K (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) ENG 141 African-American Lit (AFR) 1.00 MW TBA Wilkinson C (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective; Arts Perspective) ENG 186 KE War Stories 1.00 MWF TBA Egerton K (Western History Perspective) ENG 225 Film: Out West/Outback 1.00 TR TBA Ortquist-Ahrens (International Perspective) ENG 237 Women And Literature (WGS) 1.00 MWF TBA Crachiolo B Sophomore standing or above (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) ENG 240 Intro to Lit & Film Theory 1.00 MW TBA Pulsford S ENG 280 Feature Writing 1.00 MW TBA Howard J GSTR 210 or permission of instructor ENG 282 A Workshop in CW: Poetry 1.00 MW TBA Jones L GSTR 210 or Permission of Instructor (Arts Perspective) ENG 282 B Workshop in CW: Prose 1.00 TR TBA House S GSTR 210 or Permission of Instructor (Arts Perspective) ENG 310 Renegades and Romance 1.00 MW TBA Cohen J ENG 110 or 124 (International Non-Western; Western History Perspective) ENG 382 Advanced CW: Poetry 1.00 MW TBA Jones L ENG 124 or 282 OR permission of instructor
32 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 14 English ENG 485 Seminar in English 1.00 TR TBA Pulsford S Senior standing only & permission of the Program Chair French FRN 101 A Intro to Frn Lang & Culture I 1.00 MWF TBA Meadows R FRN 101 B Intro to Frn Lang & Culture I 1.00 MWF TBA Watkins M FRN 103 Intermediate French III 1.00 MWF TBA Watkins M FRN 102 with a grade of C or higher, or permission of instructor FRN 340 Twentieth Century French Lit 1.00 MWF TBA Meadows R FRN 321 with a grade of C or higher, (Arts Perspective) or permission of instructor German GER 101 A Introduction to German I 1.00 MWF TBA Hoch J GER 101 B Introduction to German I 1.00 MWF TBA Hoch J GER 103 Intermediate German III 1.00 MWF TBA Jones D GER 102 with a grade of C or higher, or permission of instructor GER 140 German Civilization 1.00 MWF TBA Jones D (International Perspective; Western History Perspective) GER 310 Advanced German I 1.00 TR TBA Hoch J GER 103 with a grade of C or higher, or permission of instructor General Studies GST 150 A College Composition 1.00 TR TBA Strange J GST 150 B College Composition 1.00 TBA TBA TBA STAFF GST 186 DH Civilizations and Leadership 1.00 TR TBA Huck D (International Non-Western) GST 186 IN Financial Literacy TBA Norris I GST 286 LM STEM Education Seminar.25 M TBA Mataka L Permission of Instructor ***Please visit: for GSTR descriptions*** GSTR 110 A Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MWF TBA Baskin A GSTR 110 AA Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MWF TBA Gowler R GSTR 110 B Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MWF TBA Bates R
33 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 15 General Studies GSTR 110 BB Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MWF TBA Woodward A GSTR 110 C Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MWF TBA Broadhead E GSTR 110 CC Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MW KH 006 Starnes B GSTR 110 D Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MWF TBA Bruder A GSTR 110 DD Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MW pm KH 006 Starnes B GSTR 110 F Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MWF TBA Butler J GSTR 110 G Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MWF TBA Butler J GSTR 110 H Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MWF TBA Carlevale J GSTR 110 I Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 TR TBA Cohen J GSTR 110 J Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MWF TBA Crachiolo B GSTR 110 K Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MWF TBA Egerton K GSTR 110 L Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MWF TBA Foster R GSTR 110 M Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MW pm AB 211 Gardner K GSTR 110 N Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MW AB 211 Gonzalez R GSTR 110 O Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MWF TBA Guthman J GSTR 110 P Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MWF TBA Hoffman M GSTR 110 Q Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MW TBA Huck D GSTR 110 R Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MW TBA Huck D GSTR 110 S Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 TR TBA Turner L GSTR 110 T Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MWF TBA Meadows R GSTR 110 U Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MWF TBA Mendel-Reyes GSTR 110 V Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MWF DT Mills A GSTR 110 W Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 TR TBA Mortara A GSTR 110 X Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MWF TBA Parr M GSTR 110 Y Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 MW TBA Porter D
34 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 16 General Studies GSTR 110 Z Writing Sem I:Critical Think 1.00 TR TBA Pulsford S GSTR 210 A Writing Sem II:Ident&Diversity 1.00 TR TBA Roberts R GSTR 110 (or waiver) GSTR 210 B Writing Sem II:Ident&Diversity 1.00 MWF TBA Gowler R GSTR 110 (or waiver) GSTR 210 C Writing Sem II:Ident&Diversity 1.00 TR TBA Sergent T GSTR 110 (or waiver) GSTR 210 D Writing Sem II:Ident&Diversity 1.00 MW pm KH 206 Webb A GSTR 110 (or waiver) GSTR 210 E Writing Sem II:Ident&Diversity 1.00 MWF TBA Strange GSTR 110 (or waiver) GSTR 210 F Writing Sem II:Ident&Diversity 1.00 MWF TBA Mack F GSTR 110 (or waiver) GSTR 310 A Understandings of Christianity 1.00 TR TBA Broadhead E GSTR 210 and sophomore standing GSTR 310 B Understandings of Christianity 1.00 TR TBA Broadhead E GSTR 210 and sophomore standing GSTR 310 C Understandings of Christianity 1.00 TR AB 211 Elston A GSTR 210 and sophomore standing GSTR 310 D Understandings of Christianity 1.00 TR TBA Pimienta-Bey GSTR 210 and sophomore standing GSTR 310 F Understandings of Christianity 1.00 MW TBA Pool J GSTR 210 and sophomore standing GSTR 310 G Understandings of Christianity 1.00 TR TBA Pool J GSTR 210 and sophomore standing GSTR 310 H Understandings of Christianity 1.00 TR TBA Pool J GSTR 210 and sophomore standing GSTR 310 I Understandings of Christianity 1.00 TR TBA Sergent T GSTR 210 and sophomore standing GSTR 310 J Understandings of Christianity 1.00 MW TBA Smith D GSTR 210 and sophomore standing GSTR 310 K Understandings of Christianity 1.00 MW pm TBA Reynolds L GSTR 210 and sophomore standing GSTR 332 A Scientific Knowledge& Inquiry 1.00 TR TBA Berheide M Practical Reasoning with Quantitative Emphasis (PRQ) and sophomore standing GSTR 332 B Scientific Knowledge& Inquiry 1.00 MW TBA Kovacevic/Mataka Practical Reasoning with Quantitative Emphasis (PRQ) and sophomore standing GSTR 332 C Scientific Knowledge& Inquiry 1.00 MWF TBA Adams C Practical Reasoning with Quantitative Emphasis (PRQ) and sophomore standing GSTR 410 A Sem-Contemporary Global Issues 1.00 MW AB 210 Anderson C PEH 100: Wellness, Practical Reasoning, GSTR 310, GSTR 332, International Perspective, 2 of the 5 remaining General Education Perspectives GSTR 410 B Sem-Contemporary Global Issues 1.00 MW S SCL Beagle M PEH 100: Wellness, Practical Reasoning, GSTR 310, GSTR 332, International Perspective, 2 of the 5 remaining General Education Perspectives
35 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 17 General Studies GSTR 410 C Sem-Contemporary Global Issues 1.00 TR TBA Gray G PEH 100: Wellness, Practical Reasoning, GSTR 310, GSTR 332, International Perspective, 2 of the 5 remaining General Education Perspectives GSTR 410 D Sem-Contemporary Global Issues 1.00 TR TBA McKee L PEH 100: Wellness, Practical Reasoning, GSTR 310, GSTR 332, International Perspective, 2 of the 5 remaining General Education Perspectives GSTR 410 E Sem-Contemporary Global Issues 1.00 TR TBA Norris J PEH 100: Wellness, Practical Reasoning, GSTR 310, GSTR 332, International Perspective, 2 of the 5 remaining General Education Perspectives GSTR 410 G Sem-Contemporary Global Issues 1.00 MW TBA Roberts R PEH 100: Wellness, Practical Reasoning, GSTR 310, GSTR 332, International Perspective, 2 of the 5 remaining General Education Perspectives GSTR 410 H Sem-Contemporary Global Issues 1.00 TR TBA Vazzana C PEH 100: Wellness, Practical Reasoning, GSTR 310, GSTR 332, International Perspective, 2 of the 5 remaining General Education Perspectives GSTR 410 I Sem-Contemporary Global Issues 1.00 MW TBA Mason Q PEH 100: Wellness, Practical Reasoning, GSTR 310, GSTR 332, International Perspective, 2 of the 5 remaining General Education Perspectives ***Please visit: for GSTR descriptions*** Health and Human Performance HHP 125 Foundations of Physical Educ 1.00 TR S LCL Beagle M HHP 186D MM Teaching Danish Gymnastics 1.00 MWF S OG Moesgaard M HHP 200 A Survival Swimming.25 MWF S POOL Srsic M HLT 100 (Formerly PEH 100) or (PE) permission of instructor HHP 200 B Survival Swimming.25 TR S POOL Srsic M HLT 100 (Formerly PEH 100) or (PE) permission of instructor HHP 200 C Survival Swimming.25 MWF S POOL Johnson M HLT 100 (Formerly PEH 100) or (PE) permission of instructor HHP 200 D Survival Swimming.25 MWF S POOL Johnson M HLT 100 (Formerly PEH 100) or (PE) permission of instructor
36 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 18 Health and Human Performance HHP 204 Yoga (AST).25 TR S DA S Woodie S HLT 100 (Formerly PEH 100) or (PE) permission of instructor HHP 206P Middle Eastern Dance Ensemble.25 TR pm S DA S Cahill N Permission of instructor (PE) HHP 206Y Modern Dance Troupe.25 MW pm S DA S Downs S Permission of instructor (PE) HHP 206Z Country Dancers.25 TBA TBA TBA Thompson D One full year of previous membership (PE) in Country Dancers and Permission of instructor HHP 213 Golf.25 TR S OG Williams S HLT 100 (Formerly PEH 100) or (PE) permission of instructor (Course Fee: $5) HHP 214 Badminton - Tennis.25 TR S OG Johnson M HLT 100 (Formerly PEH 100) or (PE) permission of instructor HHP 215 Aerobic Dance.25 MWF S DA S Downs S HLT 100 (Formerly PEH 100) or (PE) permission of instructor HHP 218 Weight Training.25 MWF S WGHT Dalessio M HLT 100 (Formerly PEH 100) or (PE) permission of instructor HHP 221 Weight Management.25 TR S PRFL Lasslo J HLT 100 (Formerly PEH 100) or (PE) permission of instructor HHP 222 Water Fitness.25 MWF S POOL Srsic M HLT 100 (Formerly PEH 100) or (PE) permission of instructor HHP 224 Modern Dance I.25 MWF S DA S Woodie S HLT 100 (Formerly PEH 100) or (PE) permission of instructor (Course Fee: $5) HHP 226 Racquetball.25 TR S RB C Ambrose T HLT 100 (Formerly PEH 100) or (PE) permission of instructor HHP 228 Social and Folk Dance.25 MWF S DA S Pearce J HLT 100 (Formerly PEH 100) or (PE) permission of instructor HHP 235 Middle Eastern Dance & Culture.25 TR S DA S Cahill N HLT 100 or permission of instructor (PE) HHP 237 Hiking & Campcraft.25 MW S LCL Ambrose T HLT 100 (Formerly PEH 100) or (PE) F S LCL Ambrose T permission of instructor
37 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 19 Health and Human Performance HHP 242 Scuba.25 TR S POOL Mahoney G Medical clearance (PADI) and pass the (PE) swim test (swim 200 yards and tread (Course Fee: $160) water for 10 minutes), HLT 100 or permission of instructor HHP 247 Individual & Team Sports II 1.00 MWF S OG Ambrose T HLT 100 (Formerly PEH 100) or permission of instructor HHP 249 Dancing Through Space & Time 1.00 TR S DA S Woodie S GSTR 110 (or waiver) (Arts Perspective) (Course Fee: $5) HHP 286 AM Focus on Fitness.25 MWF S PRFL Mortara A HLT 100 or permission of instructor (PE) HHP 286P SD Special Topics: Pilates.25 MWF S DA S Downs S HLT 100 (PE) HHP 305 Improvisation & Choreography 1.00 MWF S DA S Downs S Previous dance experience at the beginning/intermediate level is preferred, but not required HHP 335 Integ Biomech & Exercise Phy I 1.00 MWF S PRFL Mortara A Completion or waiver of MAT 012; and R S PRFL Mortara A BIO HHP 492 Physical Education Seminar 1.00 TR S SCL Beagle M BIO 101; either HHP 335 (Formerly PED 335) OR 340 (or PED 343, 353, or 364, no longer offered at Berea); and one additional HHP major course; junior or senior standing (junior preferred) History HIS 101 Western Civilization I 1.00 MWF TBA Christensen K (Western History Perspective) HIS 122 History of China (AST) 1.00 MWF TBA Foster R (International Non-Western) HIS 140 History of Spain (SPN) 1.00 MWF TBA de Rosset F (International Perspective; Western History Perspective) HIS 161 American History to MWF TBA Guthman J (Western History Perspective) HIS 165 Intro to Afr Amer His(AFR) 1.00 MWF TBA Mack D (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective; Western History Perspective)
38 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 20 History HIS 175 His & Pol of Arab-Isr (PSC) 1.00 TR TBA Cahill R (International Non-Western) HIS 186 JG Wonderous Strange 1.00 TR TBA Guthman J HIS 200 Intro to Historical Study 1.00 MWF TBA Christensen K (Social Science Perspective) HIS 201 Amer Political Thought(PSC) 1.00 MWF TBA Berheide M HIS 215 Christianity to 1600 (REL) 1.00 TR TBA Christensen K GSTR 210 (Religion Perspective; Western History Perspective) HIS th Century World History 1.00 TR TBA Bates R GSTR 110 (or waiver) (International Perspective) HIS 286 DM Black Urban History(AFR) 1.00 MWF TBA Mack D HIS 323 Sem in Japanese History (AST) 1.00 TR TBA Foster R HIS/AST 122 or 123; OR junior (International Non-Western) standing HIS 356 Sem: African-Amer History(AFR) 1.00 TR TBA Mack D HIS 161 and 162; or HIS/AFR 165; or permission of the instructor HIS 406 Senior Seminar in History 1.00 MW TBA Bates R HIS 200, completion of a 300-level H IS course, and senior standing, or junior standing with permission of instructor Health HLT 100 A Int to Lifetime Hlt & Wellness.50 MWF S LCL Woodie S HLT 100 B Int to Lifetime Hlt & Wellness.50 MWF S LCL Srsic M HLT 100 C Int to Lifetime Hlt & Wellness.50 MWF S LCL Mortara A HLT 100 D Int to Lifetime Hlt & Wellness.50 MWF S LCL Lasslo J HLT 100 E Int to Lifetime Hlt & Wellness.50 MWF S LCL Johnson M HLT 100 F Int to Lifetime Hlt & Wellness.50 MWF S SCL Moesgaard M HLT 100 G Int to Lifetime Hlt & Wellness.50 TR S LCL Dalessio M HLT 100 H Int to Lifetime Hlt & Wellness.50 TR S LCL Dalessio M HLT 109 Comprehensive First Aid 1.00 MWF S PRFL Williams S (Course Fee: $25)
39 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 21 Health HLT 210 Health in Appalachia (APS) 1.00 MWF S SCL Lasslo J PEH 100 or permission; and GSTR 110 (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) (or waiver) HLT 236 Women and Health (WGS) 1.00 MWF S SCL Lasslo J HLT 215 OR a college course in Women s (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) Studies OR permission of instructor Japanese JPN 101 A Intro to Japanese I (AST) 1.00 MWF TBA Patton N JPN 101 B Intro to Japanese I (AST) 1.00 MWF TBA Patton J JPN 103 Intro to Japanese III (AST) 1.00 MWF TBA Patton N JPN/AST 102 with a grade of C or higher or permission of instructor Latin LAT 101 Introduction to Latin I 1.00 MWF TBA Watkins M LAT 117 Classical Etymology 1.00 MWF TBA Carlevale J (International Perspective) LAT 186 JC Sport & Spectacle Greece/Rome 1.00 MWF TBA Carlevale J (Western History Perspective) Mathematics MAT 010 Pre-Algebra 1.00 MWF TBA Thesing T MAT 011 A Elementary Algebra I 1.00 MWF TBA STAFF Completion or waiver of MAT MAT 011 B Elementary Algebra I 1.00 MWF TBA Bolster S Completion or waiver of MAT MAT 011 C Elementary Algebra I 1.00 MWF TBA Bolster S Completion or waiver of MAT MAT 011 D Elementary Algebra I 1.00 MWF TBA STAFF Completion or waiver of MAT MAT 011 E Elementary Algebra I 1.00 MWF TBA STAFF Completion or waiver of MAT 010 ***MAT 012 students must sign up for one lecture(012) AND one Supplemental Section (012A) section.*** MAT 012 A Elementary Algebra II 1.00 MWF TBA Thesing T Completion or waiver of MAT MAT 012 B Elementary Algebra II 1.00 MWF TBA Thesing T Completion or waiver of MAT MAT 012A A MAT 012-Supplemental Course M TBA Bolster/Thesing MAT 012A B MAT 012-Supplemental Course T TBA Bolster/Thesing ***MAT 012 students must sign up for one lecture(012) AND one Supplemental Section (012A) section.***
40 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 22 Mathematics MAT 104 A Introduction to Statistics 1.00 MW TBA Grzimek V Completion or waiver of MAT 012 (Pract Reasoning-Quantitative) MAT 104 B Introduction to Statistics 1.00 MWF TBA Cupidon J Completion or waiver of MAT 012 (Pract Reasoning-Quantitative) MAT 105 A Intro to Discrete Math 1.00 MWF TBA Barnard K Completion or waiver of MAT 012 (Pract Reasoning-Quantitative) MAT 105 B Intro to Discrete Math 1.00 MWF TBA Barnard K Completion or waiver of MAT 012 (Pract Reasoning-Quantitative) MAT 108 Environ Issue:Math Model Appr 1.00 MWF TBA Gift N Completion or waiver of MAT 012 (Pract Reasoning-Quantitative) MAT 115 A College Algebra with Modeling 1.00 MWF TBA Rector J Completion or waiver of MAT 012 (Pract Reasoning-Quantitative) MAT 115 B College Algebra with Modeling 1.00 MWF TBA STAFF Completion or waiver of MAT 012 (Pract Reasoning-Quantitative) MAT 115 C College Algebra with Modeling 1.00 MWF TBA STAFF Completion or waiver of MAT 012 (Pract Reasoning-Quantitative) MAT 125 A Trigonometry with Applications 1.00 TR TBA Blackburn-Lynch Completion or waiver of MAT 115 (Pract Reasoning-Quantitative) MAT 125 B Trigonometry with Applications 1.00 MWF TBA STAFF Completion or waiver of MAT 115 (Pract Reasoning-Quantitative) MAT 135 A Calculus I 1.00 MWF TBA STAFF A knowledge of trigonometry and MAT (Pract Reasoning-Quantitative) 110, 112, or 125 with a grade of C or higher, or waiver of same based on placement test MAT 135 B Calculus I 1.00 MWF TBA STAFF A knowledge of trigonometry and MAT (Pract Reasoning-Quantitative) 110, 112, or 125 with a grade of C or higher, or waiver of same based on placement test MAT 201 Found/Tchg Elementary Math I 1.00 MWF TBA Rector J Completion or waiver of MAT MAT 202 Found/Tchg of Elem Math II 1.00 MWF TBA Rector J Completion or waiver of MAT 012; MAT 201 with a grade of C or higher MAT 225 Calculus II 1.00 MWF TBA Gratton L MAT 135 with a grade of C or higher (Pract Reasoning-Quantitative) MAT 312 Operations Research 1.00 MWF TBA Barnard K MAT 135 or permission of instructor (Pract Reasoning-Quantitative)
41 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 23 Mathematics MAT 315 Fundamental Concepts of Math 1.00 MWF TBA Blackburn-Lynch MAT 135 (Practical Reasoning) MAT 426 Math Lit: Rdg & Communication 1.00 TR TBA Gratton L Senior standing and permission of instructor MAT 434 Real Analysis 1.00 MWF TBA Blackburn-Lynch MAT 315 and 330, or permission of instructor MAT 437 Differential Equations 1.00 MWF TBA Gratton L MAT 330 (Pract Reasoning-Quantitative) Music MUA 105A A Appalachian Instruments.25 TBA TBA TBA White A MUA 105A B Appalachian Instruments.25 TBA TBA TBA White A MUA 105A C Appalachian Instruments.25 TBA TBA TBA White A MUA 105A D Appalachian Instruments.25 TBA TBA TBA White A MUA 105B Baritone Horn/Euphonium.25 TBA TBA TBA Talbert M MUA 105C Clarinet.25 TBA TBA TBA Sutherland A MUA 105F Flute.25 TBA TBA TBA Stevens D MUA 105G Guitar: Classical/Electric.25 TBA TBA TBA Hedger J MUA 105K Carillon.25 TBA TBA TBA Clavere J MUA 105O Organ.25 TBA TBA TBA Clavere J MUA 105P A Piano.25 TBA TBA TBA Clavere J MUA 105P B Piano.25 TBA TBA TBA Clavere L
42 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 24 Music MUA 105P C Piano.25 TBA TBA TBA DiSavino E MUA 105Q French Horn.25 TBA TBA TBA DiSavino E MUA 105R Recorder.25 TBA TBA TBA Sutherland A MUA 105S Saxophone.25 TBA TBA TBA Hammond A MUA 105T Trombone.25 TBA TBA TBA Talbert M MUA 105U Tuba.25 TBA TBA TBA Talbert M MUA 105V A Voice.25 TBA TBA TBA Bolster S MUA 105V B Voice.25 TBA TBA TBA Calkins M MUA 105V C Voice.25 TBA TBA TBA Gunther S MUA 105X Trumpet.25 TBA TBA TBA Talbert M MUA 105Y Percussion.25 TBA TBA TBA Bratton W MUA 105Z Other Music Instruments.25 TBA TBA TBA STAFF MUS 100 A Class Piano.25 TR P 302 Clavere L (Course Fee: $10) MUS 100 B Class Piano.25 TR P 302 Clavere L (Course Fee: $10) MUS 103 Class Voice.25 TR P 128 Calkins M Permission of instructor (Course Fee: $10) MUS 106 World Music 1.00 TR P 223 Bullock K (Arts Perspective; International Non-Western)
43 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 25 Music MUS 118A Fundamentals of Music, Part I.50 MW P 223 Talbert M MUS 130A Chamber Singers.25 MW P 128 Bolster S Permission of instructor * MUS 130B Jazz Ensemble.25 MW P GRAY Talbert M Permission of instructor * MUS 130C Women's Chorus.25 MWF P 128 Calkins M Permission of instructor * MUS 130F Bluegrass Music Ensemble.25 T pm P 126 White A Permission of instructor * MUS 130H African-Latin Percussion Ensmb.25 W pm P 126 Bratton W Permission of instructor * MUS 130I Contemp Percussion Ensemble.25 W pm P 126 Bratton W Permission of instructor * MUS 130K Folk Roots Ensemble.25 M pm P 126 DiSavino E MUS 130L Flute Ensemble.25 TBA TBA TBA Stevens D MUS 130M Mariachi Ensemble.25 TBA TBA TBA White A MUS 130N Clarinet Ensemble.25 TBA TBA TBA Sutherland A MUS 131 Concert Choir.25 MTR P 128 Bolster S Permission of instructor * MUS 132 Wind Ensemble.25 MW P GRAY Talbert M Permission of instructor * MUS 135 Black Music Ensemble (AFR 138).25 MW pm P 128 Bullock K Permission of instructor * (Course Fee: $15) MUS 220 Materials of Music I.50 MWF P 402 Clavere J MUS 118B or waiver MUS 221 Aural Harmony I.50 TR P 407 Clavere J MUS 118B or waiver MUS 224 Appalachian Music (APS) 1.00 MWF P 223 Hammond A (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective; Arts Perspective) MUS 320 Materials of Music III.50 MWF P 407 Bullock K MUS MUS 321 Aural & Keyboard Harmony III.50 T P Bullock K MUS 223 R P Bullock K MUS 335 Mat & Meth of Elem Music 1.00 TR P 128 DiSavino E Admission for the Music or Music T P DiSavino E Education major; or permission of the instructor.
44 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 26 Music MUS 337 Conducting 1.00 MWF TBA Bolster S MUS MUS 340P Piano Pedagogy.50 T P 402 Clavere J MUA 221p (piano) or permission of instructor Nursing NUR 110 Certified Nurse Aide Prep MW N 103 Ponder J S TBA Ponder J NUR 341 A Essential-Hlt Assess & Nurs I 1.00 MW N 128 Vickous S BIO 102 with a C or better (Active Learning Experience) T N 103 Vickous/Kennison (Course Fee: $787) NUR 341 B Essential-Hlt Assess & Nurs I 1.00 MW N 128 Vickous S BIO 102 with a C or better (Active Learning Experience) T N 103 Vickous S (Course Fee: $787) NUR 341 C Essential-Hlt Assess & Nurs I 1.00 MW N 128 Vickous S BIO 102 with a C or better (Active Learning Experience) R N 103 Vickous/Ponder (Course Fee: $787) NUR 341 D Essential-Hlt Assess & Nurs I 1.00 MW N 128 Vickous S BIO 102 with a C or better (Active Learning Experience) R N 103 Vickous/Ponder (Course Fee: $787) NUR 350 A Nursing of Children & Adults I 1.50 MW N 104 STAFF NUR 342, BIO 222, and CFS 221 with C (Course Fee: $290) R TBA STAFF or better NUR 350 B Nursing of Children & Adults I 1.50 MW N 104 Villaran T NUR 342, BIO 222, and CFS 221 with C (Course Fee: $290) SAT TBA Madden D or better NUR 351 Nur Child/Adult-Psy/Mntl Hlt 1.00 T TBA STAFF NUR 342, BIO 207, BIO 222, CFS 221, (Course Fee: $46) W N 104 Abner/Ponder CHM 113, and PSY 100 with C or Better W N 104 Abner/Ponder
45 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 27 Nursing NUR 447 Nurs Women & Childbearing Fam 1.50 MW N 127 Kirby C NUR 350 & 353; BIO 207; BIO 222; CFS (Course Fee: $255) SAT TBA Kirby C 221; CHM 113; and PSY 100 with C or better NUR 448 Community Health Nursing 1.00 MW N 127 Turner L NUR 350 & 353 with C or better. (Course Fee: $51) F Turner L Philosophy PHI 100 Introduction to Philosophy 1.00 TR TBA STAFF PHI 104 Morality, Law & Philosophy 1.00 MWF TBA STAFF (Practical Reasoning) PHI 106 Introductory Reasoning 1.00 MWF TBA STAFF (Practical Reasoning) PHI 186 EP Language and Reality 1.00 MWF TBA Pearson E PHI 218 Symbolic Logic 1.00 MWF TBA Pearson E Completion or waiver of MAT 012 (Practical Reasoning) PHI 224 Free Will/Moral Responsibility 1.00 TR TBA Pearson E GSTR PHI 286 JB Nature of Reality, East & West 1.00 TR TBA Brown J GSTR 210 or sophomore standing PHI 305 Classical Philosophy 1.00 MWF TBA Butler J One PHI course (Western History Perspective) Physics PHY 111 Introduction to Astronomy 1.00 MWF SC 401 Hodge T Completion or waiver of MAT 012 (Natural Science Lab; Practical Reasoning) W SC 27 Hodge T PHY 127 General Physics I with Algebra 1.00 MWF SC 101 Messina T Completion or waiver of MAT 115 (or (Natural Science Lab) T SC 27 Messina T concurrent enrollment) PHY 128 Gen. Physics II with Algebra 1.00 MWF SC 27 Veillette M PHY 217; completion or waiver of MAT R SC 27 Veillette M 125 or concurrent enrollment; OR permission of Instructor
46 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 28 Physics PHY 130 Applied Mah for Physics & Eng MWF SC 27 Veillette M MAT 125 (or waiver), or concurrent (Pract Reasoning-Quantitative) enrollment OR permission of instructor PHY 222 Intro Physics II with Calculus 1.00 MWF SC 101 Hodge T PHY 221(formerly PHY 315) and MAT 225 R SC 27 Hodge T or concurrent enrollment PHY 341 Advanced General Laboratory.50 T SC 27 Messina T PHY PHY 365 Thermal Physics 1.00 MWF SC 27 Messina T PHY 221 (formerly 315) and MAT 225; Or permission of instructor PHY 481 Classical Mechanics 1.00 MWF SC 27 Veillette M PHY 221 (formerly 315) and MAT PHY 492 Physics Seminar.50 TBA TBA TBA Hodge T Senior standing or permission of instructor Political Science PSC 100 Intro to Study of Politics 1.00 MWF TBA Berheide M Completion or waiver of MAT 010 (Social Science Perspective) PSC 110 American Government 1.00 MWF TBA Heyrman J Completion or waiver of MAT 010 (Social Science Perspective) PSC 175 His & Pol of Arab-Isr (HIS) 1.00 TR TBA Cahill R (International Non-Western) PSC 186 LM Japanese Politics (AST) 1.00 MW TBA McKee L (International Non-Western; Social Science Perspective) PSC 201 Amer Political Thought(HIS) 1.00 MWF TBA Berheide M PSC 250 International Relations 1.00 TR TBA Rifai A PSC 100 or permission of instructor PSC 317 The Judicial Process 1.00 TR TBA Heyrman J PSC 110 or permission of instructor PSC 355 Foreign Policy Analysis 1.00 TR TBA McKee L PSC PSC 480 Senior Research Seminar 1.00 M TBA Heyrman J Prerequisites for Political Science majors - Senior standing; PSC 235; and one PSC 300-level course in research area
47 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 29 Peace & Social Justice PSJ 100 Fnd of Peace & Social Justice 1.00 TR TBA Strange J PSJ 113 Mediation & Negotiation (COM) 1.00 MWF TBA Brown K PSJ 210 Diversity and Social Justice 1.00 MWF TBA Mendel-Reyes GSTR 110 (Active Learning Experience; AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective; Service Learning) Psychology PSY 100 A General Psychology 1.00 TR TBA Williams W Completion or waiver of MAT 012 (Practical Reasoning; Social Science Perspective) PSY 100 B General Psychology 1.00 TR TBA Williams W Completion or waiver of MAT 012 (Practical Reasoning; Social Science Perspective) PSY 100 C General Psychology 1.00 MWF TBA Jones S Completion or waiver of MAT 012 (Practical Reasoning; Social Science Perspective) PSY 100 D General Psychology 1.00 MWF TBA Wyrick A Completion or waiver of MAT 012 (Practical Reasoning; Social Science Perspective) PSY 186 JB Readings in Blk(Afr)Psy (AFR) 1.00 TR TBA Pimienta-Bey J AFR 222, HIS 260, HIS 256, or permission (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) PSY 208 A Cognitive Psychology with Lab 1.00 TR TBA Porter D PSY PSY 208 B Cognitive Psychology with Lab 1.00 TR TBA Porter D PSY PSY 211 Abnormal Psychology 1.00 MWF TBA Wyrick A Any course that meets the Social (Active Learning Experience; Service Learning) Science Perspective (including PSY 100) PSY 225 A Stats & Rsrch Meth-Behav Sci 1.00 TR TBA Jones S Completion or waiver of MAT 012 AND sophomore standing; GSTR 110 (or waiver); PSY 100 or SOC 100; or permission of instructor PSY 225 B Stats & Rsrch Meth-Behav Sci 1.00 TR TBA Jones S Completion or waiver of MAT 012 AND sophomore standing; GSTR 110 (or waiver); PSY 100 or SOC 100; or permission of instructor PSY 323 Clinical/Counseling Methods 1.00 TR TBA Wyrick A PSY PSY 386 AW Careers In Psychology.50 F TBA Wyrick A PSY PSY 386 WM Clinical Neuropsychology Cases 1.00 MWF TBA Messer W PSY 100 and PSY 212 or PSY 208 or BIO PSY 420 His & Systems of Psychology 1.00 MWF TBA Messer W PSY 100 and two other PSY courses (Western History Perspective)
48 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 30 Psychology PSY 424 Senior Research 1.00 MW TBA Williams W PSY 325 Religion REL 105 Intro to Old Testament 1.00 TR TBA Smith D GSTR 110 (or waiver) (Religion Perspective) REL 135 A Religions of Japan (AST) 1.00 MW TBA Richey J (International Non-Western; Religion Perspective) REL 135 B Religions of Japan (AST) 1.00 TR TBA Richey J (International Non-Western; Religion Perspective) REL 215 Christianity to 1600 (HIS) 1.00 TR TBA Christensen K GSTR 210 (Religion Perspective; Western History Perspective) REL 228 The Bible, His., & Archeology 1.00 TR TBA Smith D GSTR 110 (Religion Perspective) REL 480 Seminar in Religion 1.00 TBA TBA TBA Pool J Senior standing or permission of instructor Sustainability & Env Studies SENS 100 Intro-Sustainability & Environ 1.00 MWF TBA Gift N Completion or waiver of MAT 012 (Practical Reasoning) SENS 215 Sustainable Appal Comm (APS) 1.00 MWF TBA Olson R GSTR 210 (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) SENS 320 Intro-Geographical Info System 1.00 MWF TBA Smithson P Completion or waiver of MAT 115 or, (Pract Reasoning-Quantitative) 125; OR permission of instructor SENS 345 Ecological Architecture (TAD) 1.00 TR DT 112 STAFF One of the following courses - SENS 340, ART 246, TEC 111 or TAD (formerly TEC) 130
49 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 31 Sustainability & Env Studies SENS 386 NG Ecological Weed Managmnt(ANR) 1.00 TR TBA Gift N SENS 100, ANR 130, or BIO 114 Sociology SOC 100 A Sociology of Everyday Life 1.00 MWF TBA Burnside J (Social Science Perspective) SOC 100 B Sociology of Everyday Life 1.00 MWF F 216 Woodward A (Social Science Perspective) SOC 110 Prob of American Institutions 1.00 MWF TBA Bouma J (Social Science Perspective) SOC 132 Intro to Race in America (AFR) 1.00 MWF TBA Burnside J Completion or waiver of MAT 010 (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) SOC 220 Cultural Anthropology 1.00 TR F 216 Burnside J GSTR 110 (or waiver) (Social Science Perspective) SOC 286 GG Kin & Gen in SE. Asia(AST/WGS) 1.00 MW TBA Gray G GSTR 210 (International Non-Western) SOC 325 Gender and Sex Roles (WGS) 1.00 MWF F 216 Bouma J SOC 100 or PSY 100 or CFS 130 AND GS (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) TR SOC 335 Methods of Social Research 1.00 TR F 216 Bouma J Completion or waiver of MAT 012; and (Practical Reasoning) SOC 100; or permission of instructor SOC 360 Soc Policy Study & Eval Resrch 1.00 MW TBA Woodward A One 100-level course that meets the (Active Learning Experience; Service Learning) Social Science requirement AND Junior or Senior Standing OR Permission of instructor Spanish SPN 101 A Introduction to Spanish I 1.00 MWF TBA de Rosset F Permission of Program SPN 101 B Introduction to Spanish I 1.00 MWF TBA de Rosset C Permission of Program SPN 101 C Introduction to Spanish I 1.00 MWF TBA Marte I Permission of Program SPN 102 A Introduction to Spanish II 1.00 MWF TBA de Rosset C SPN 101 with a grade of C or higher OR permission of instructor SPN 102 B Introduction to Spanish II 1.00 MWF TBA Marte I SPN 101 with a grade of C or higher OR permission of instructor
50 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 32 Spanish SPN 102 C Introduction to Spanish II 1.00 MWF TBA de Rosset C SPN 101 with a grade of C or higher OR permission of instructor SPN 103 A Introduction to Spanish III 1.00 MWF TBA Graetzer M SPN 102 with a grade of C or higher OR permission of instructor SPN 103 B Introduction to Spanish III 1.00 MWF TBA Marte I SPN 102 with a grade of C or higher OR permission of instructor SPN 140 History of Spain (HIS) 1.00 MWF TBA de Rosset F (International Perspective; Western History Perspective) SPN 310 Advanced Grammar & Composition 1.00 MWF TBA de Rosset F SPN 103 with a grade of C or higher (Active Learning Experience; Service Learning) OR permission of instructor SPN 312 Conversation 1.00 MWF TBA Graetzer M SPN 310 with C or higher or permission of Instructor SPN 331 Spanish American Literature II 1.00 MWF TBA Graetzer M SPN 310 and 315 with a grade of C or (Arts Perspective) higher in each; OR permission of instructor Technology and Applied Design TAD 100 Intro to Tec and App Design 1.00 TR DT 111 Mahoney G TAD 130 Design and Documentation 1.00 MW DT 112 STAFF (Course Fee: $15) TAD 140 Design Prod. in Woods 1.00 MWF DT 112 Mahoney G (Active Learning Experience; Service Learning) (Course Fee: $15) TAD 180 Graphic Com and Design 1.00 TR DT B10 Feinberg D (Arts Perspective) (Course Fee: $15) TAD 202 Photography 1.00 TR DT B10 Mills A GSTR 110 (or waiver) (Arts Perspective) (Course Fee: $15) TAD 245 Materials/Processing/Testing 1.00 MWF DT B16 Mahoney M (Course Fee: $15) TAD 345 Ecological Architecture (SENS) 1.00 TR DT 112 STAFF One of the following SENS 340, ART 246, (Course Fee: $15) TAD 111 or TAD (formerly TEC) 130
51 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 33 / Technology and Applied Design TAD 382 Advanced Graphics 1.00 MW DT B10 Feinberg D TAD 180 or permission of instructor (Course Fee: $15) TAD 460 Digital Electronics 1.00 TR DT 104 Jadud M TAD 265 or permission of instructor (Course Fee: $15) TAD 470 Advanced Power and Energy 1.00 MWF DT B16 Mahoney M TAD 275 or permission of Instructor (Course Fee: $15) Theatre THR 105 Script Analysis 1.00 MWF JD MUSS Barton A THR 115 Principles of Acting 1.00 TR JD MUSS Barton A THR 124 Visual Concepts for the Stage 1.00 MWF JD MUSS Shupe A THR 135 Film Production 1.00 MW TBA Gray G THR 213 First Theatre in Human Culture 1.00 MWF JD MUSS Martin D THR THR 220 Seminar in Design & Production 1.00 MWF JD MUSS Ayers S THR 286 AD Feminist Solo Perf.(AFR/WGS) 1.00 TR JD MUSS Barton A (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective; Arts Perspective) THR 308 Seminar in Theatre History 1.00 MW TBA Martin D THR THR 481 Senior Theatre Project 1.00 MWF TBA Ayers S Senior standing only Women's & Gender Studies WGS 124 A Intro to Women's & Gender Stds 1.00 MW TBA Rivage-Seul M (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) WGS 124 B Intro to Women's & Gender Stds 1.00 TR TBA Rivage-Seul M (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) WGS 207 Family Relations (CFS) 1.00 MWF EM 102 Burke E GSTR 110 (or waiver) (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective; Social Science Perspective) WGS 236 Women & Health (HLT) 1.00 MWF S SCL Lasslo J HLT 215 OR a college course in Women s (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) and Gender Studies OR permission of instructor WGS 237 Women and Literature (ENG) 1.00 MWF TBA Crachiolo B Sophomore standing or above
52 Berea College Class Schedule Page: 34 Women's & Gender Studies WGS 286 AB Feminist Solo Perf. (AFR/THR) 1.00 TR JD MUSS Barton A (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective; Arts Perspective) WGS 286 CK Childbearing: A Global Persp MWF TBA Kirby C GSTR 110 (or waiver) with C or better and (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective; International Non-Western) GSTR 210 with a C or better WGS 286 GG Kin & Gen in SE. Asia(AST/SOC) 1.00 MW TBA Gray G GSTR 210 (International Non-Western) WGS 286 QM Black & White Sexualities(AFR) 1.00 TR TBA STAFF GSTR 110 (or waiver) WGS 286 QRM Black Feminism(AFR) 1.00 MW TBA STAFF GSTR WGS 310 Communication and Gender (COM) 1.00 TR TBA McDonald V GSTR 210or permission of instructor (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) WGS 325 Gender and Sex Roles (SOC) 1.00 MWF F 216 Bouma J SOC 100 or PSY 100 or CFS 130 AND (AfrAmer, Appl, Wmn Perspective) GSTR WGS 350 Seminar I 1.00 MW TBA Rivage-Seul M WGS 124 and junior standing WGS 450 Seminar II 1.00 MW TBA Rivage-Seul M WGS 124 and senior standing
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