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Complete the following: (CAL students must take GNED100)
GNED | 199 | New Student Seminar | 1 |
Complete the following 3 requirement(s):
Complete the following 1 course: (Honors Program students must complete HONP 100.)
ENWR | 105 | College Writing I: Intellectual Prose | 3 |
Complete the following 1 course:. (Honors Program students must complete HONP 101.)
ENWR | 106 | College Writing II: Writing and Literary Study | 3 |
Complete the following 1 course:
D. FINE & PERFORMING ARTS not applicable to BFA and BMus majors.
Complete the following 2 requirement(s):
Complete 1 course from the following:
ENLT | 206 | World Literature: The Coming of Age Theme | 3 |
ENLT | 207 | World Literature: Voices of Tradition and Challenge | 3 |
GNHU | 115 | Troy and the Trojan War | 3 |
GNHU | 201 | General Humanities I (to 1400) | 3 |
GNHU | 202 | General Humanities II (from 1400) | 3 |
GNHU | 285 | Mythology | 3 |
GNHU | 294 | Russian Prose and Drama | 3 |
RUIN | 294 | Russian Prose & Drama | 3 |
Complete 1 course from the following:
EDFD | 220 | Philosophical Orientation to Education | 3 |
PHIL | 100 | Introduction to Philosophy | 3 |
PHIL | 102 | Ethics | 3 |
PHIL | 106 | Logic | 3 |
RELG | 100 | Religions of the World | 3 |
RELG | 101 | Introduction to Religion | 3 |
RELG | 102 | Ethics | 3 |
RELG | 221 | Religion and Culture | 3 |
Complete 1 course from the following:. (HONP 112 is for honors program students only.)
CMPT | 109 | Introduction to Computer Applications: Being Fluent with Information Technology | 3 |
CMPT | 112 | Honors Seminar in Computing | 3 |
H. MATHEMATICS not applicable to BFA and BMus majors.
I. NATURAL/PHYSICAL SCI LAB not applicable to BFA and BMus majors.
J. PHYSICAL EDUCATION not applicable to BFA and BMus majors.
Complete the following 1 requirement:
Complete 1 course from the following:. (Honors Program students must take HONP 102.)
EDFD | 221 | Historical Foundations of American Education | 3 |
GNHU | 281 | Greek Civilization | 3 |
GNHU | 282 | Roman Civilization | 3 |
HIST | 103 | Foundations of Western Civilization | 3 |
HIST | 105 | Emergence of European Civilization, 1500-1914 | 3 |
HIST | 106 | Contemporary Europe, 1914 to the Present | 3 |
HIST | 110 | Introduction to American Civilization | 3 |
HIST | 117 | History of the United States to 1876 | 3 |
HIST | 118 | History of the United States Since 1876 | 3 |
K2 AND K3. SOCIAL SCIENCE NON-WESTERN CULTURES AND SOCIAL SCIENCE not applicable to BFA and BMus majors.
L. GENERAL EDUCATION ELECTIVE not applicable to BFA and BMUS majors.
An introduction to the skills, concepts, and capabilities necessary to effectively use information technology across the curriculum through computer applications. Not for mathematics major elective credit or computer science elective credit. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Computer Science. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
Prerequisites: MATH 051 or MATH 061 or satisfactory score on both of the mathematical components of the MSUPT.
Introduction to the theory, discipline, philosophy and applications of computing. The effect of computing upon the individual, the society, and the environment. Use of application tools including word processing, spreadsheets, data bases, and communications. Cross listed with the Honors Program, HONP 112. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Computer Science. (3 hours seminar.) 3 sh.
Prerequisites: Departmental approval; MATH 051 or MATH 061 or satisfactory score on both the mathematical components of the MSUPT.
Western philosophical heritage as related to the issues and responsibilities of American education. Comparative analysis of past and current ideological movements that influence moral, social, and educational decisions of parents, political leaders, and professional educators. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Humanities, Philosophy or Religion. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
Prerequisites: ENWR 105 or HONP 100.
This course offers students the crucial sequence of ideas that constitute one of the central themes in American society and culture. Since its beginnings, American thinkers have seen education as the key to an informed citizenry. Major themes in American education will be looked at through the reading of primary and secondary sources. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Social Science, American or European History. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
Prerequisites: ENWR 105 or HONP 100.
This course combines Western with non-Western works to approximate an approach to a "global perspective" on literature. It is designed to introduce the student to major works of world literature; to foster an international literary sensibility; to present a variety of cultural perspectives in a context which demonstrates how they are interrelated: to present students with assignments that will direct them toward developing skills of literary analysis and interpretation; and to guide students in deepening their awareness of the connections between national literatures and their cultural contexts. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Humanities, World Literature or General Humanities. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
Prerequisites: ENWR 106 or HONP 101.
Organized around the premise that writers have two fundamental ways of responding to the challenge of their culture, conformity or dissent, this course will present literary works in pairs that represent opposing ways of responding to the same subject. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Humanities, World Literature or General Humanities. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
Prerequisites: ENWR 106 or HONP 101.
Expository writing. A workshop course to develop thinking and writing abilities through frequent writing assignments based on critical response to intellectually challenging questions. Emphasis is on the writing process--prewriting, drafting, revising, using peer and teacher critique, editing, and proofreading. A minimum of five essays is required, including an extensive documented essay that requires research. Evaluation is partly based on a portfolio of revised writing. With ENWR 106, meets Gen Ed 2002 - Communication, Writing/Literature. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
Prerequisites: Passing score on the MSU Basic Skills Test or successful completion of ENWR 100.
The second semester of the intensive first-year writing sequence. Emphasis on the writing process continues as students study works of fiction, poetry, and drama in order to improve their writing and their understanding and appreciation of complex literary texts. Required: approximately 6,000 words of formal writing, including at least one documented essay. With ENWR 105, meets two-semester Gen Ed 2002 - Communication, Writing/Literature. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
Prerequisites: ENWR 105 or HONP 100.
This course prepares first-year students for college-level work and campus life. It acquaints students with university expectations and resources and provides them with the academic skills and strategies to allow them to succeed as college students. It addresses the social and personal issues that students face as well as helping them to appreciate and grow from campus diversity. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - New Student Seminar. (1 hour seminar.) 1 sh.
For more than 3,000 years the story of the Trojan War has fascinated and attracted people throughout the world. Is the war completely "mythical?" How can different disciplines such as archaeology, linguistics, and literature be combined to shed light on the historical reality that may lie behind the story as it first appears in Homer? How have the art and literature of other cultures, such as the Romans, the European Middle Ages, or the modern culture of television and movies interpreted and reused the story of Troy, and what can this adaptation tell us about these cultures. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Humanities, World Literature or General Humanities. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
A broadly historical introduction to important themes and topics in the humanities as seen through literature, philosophy, and the arts from the ancient world to the Middle Ages. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Humanities, World Literature or General Humanities. Meets the University Writing Requirement for majors in General Humanities. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
A broadly historical introduction to important themes and topics in the humanities as seen through literature, philosophy, and the arts from Renaissance to the present. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Humanities, World Literature or General Humanities. Meets the University Writing Requirement for majors in General Humanities. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
The political, social, economic, and cultural history of the Greek world from the Bronze Age to the Roman conquest as seen through literary, documentary and archaeological sources. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Social Science, American or European History. Meets the University Writing Requirement for majors in Classics. Cross listed with History, HIST 281. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
Prerequisites: Not for History Majors/Minors.
The political, social, economic, and cultural history of the Roman world from the Regal period to Justinian as seen through literary, documentary, and archaeological sources. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Social Science, American or European History. Cross listed with History, HIST 282. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
Prerequisites: Not for History Majors/Minors.
The nature and interpretation of mythology, primarily as seen through the myths of Greece and Rome. Selected comparative study of myths of the Near East, Iran, India and other cultures. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Humanities, World Literature or General Humanities. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
Russian prose and drama from the 18th century to the present day. Representative works of Gogol, Turgenev, Dostoeski, Tolstoi, and Gorki. No knowledge of Russian is required (Taught in English). Cross listed with Modern Languages and Literatures, GRIN 294. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Humanities, World Literature or General Humanities. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
Origins and development of Western civilization to about 1350: Egyptian, Judaic, Greek, Roman, Islamic and Medieval European contributions. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Social Science, American or European History. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
The emergence of Europe as a distinctive world civilization. The development of ideas, institutions and technologies from medieval times to World War I. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Social Science, American or European History. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
European society in transition since World War I. The role of two world wars in shaping contemporary times. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Social Science, American or European History. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
The mainstreams of development in American civilization. Political, intellectual, social, economic and cultural forces and achievements which have made the U.S. distinctive. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Social Science, American or European History. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
Issues and problems in the development of the American nation from discovery and exploration to the Civil War and Reconstruction. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Social Science, American or European History. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
American development from an agrarian power after the Civil War into an urban-industrial society with the liberal institutions that accompanied it. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Social Science, American or European History. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
The nature, scope, methods, basic problems and major types of philosophy. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Humanities, Philosophy or Religion. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
The nature of ethical judgments, the meaning of moral concepts, the conditions of moral responsibility and the methodological presuppositions of ethical theories in philosophy and religion. Meets the 2002 General Education Requirement - Humanities, Philolosphy/Religion. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
The forms of deductive and inductive argument in traditional logic, the fundamentals of modern formal logic. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Humanities, Philosophy or Religion. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
The major religious traditions, with emphasis on basic beliefs and on the nature and diversity of religious awareness. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Humanities, Philosophy or Religion. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
An inquiry into man's religious questions and expressions, their implications, and their critical appreciation and assessment. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Humanities, Philosophy or Religion. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
The nature of ethical judgments, the meaning of moral concepts, the conditions of moral responsibility and the methodological presuppositions of ethical theories in philosophy and religion. Meets the 2002 GenEd requirement - Humanities, Philosophy/Religion. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
The interrelation of religion and culture in the formulation of human values and views, life-styles and institutions. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Humanities, Philosophy or Religion. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.
Russian prose and drama from the 18th century to the present day. Representative works: Pushkin, Gogol, Turgenev, Dostoevski, Tolstoi and Gorki. No knowledge of Russian is required. Taught in English. Cross listed with Classics and General Humanities, GNHU 294. Meets Gen Ed 2002 - Humanities, World Literature or General Humanities. (3 hours lecture.) 3 sh.