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Gerontology |
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GERO 596 - Advanced Special Topics in Gerontology Units: 1-4
Advanced selected topics in gerontology. May be repeated with new content. Maximum Credits: six units of 596 applicable to a bachelor’s degree.
Note: See Class Schedule for specific content. Limit of nine units of any combination of 296, 496, 596 courses applicable to a bachelor’s degree. Credit for 596 and 696 applicable to a master’s degree with approval of the graduate adviser.
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GERO 605 - Long-Term Care Units: 3
Prerequisite(s): Consent of instructor.
Issues and problems in a changing long-term care delivery system for older people in a multi-cultural society. Emphasis on frailty of the elderly, demand for affordable long-term care, and analysis of federal and state policies shaping the industry.
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GERO 690 - Seminar in Research Methods for Social Work and Gerontology Units: 3
Same As: SWORK 690 . Research development, design, and methodology. Application to social work and gerontology in testing theories, advancing practice knowledge, and decision-making.
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GERO 696 - Contemporary Topics in Gerontology and Geriatrics Seminar Units: 3
Prerequisite(s): A graduate level course in gerontology.
Areas of gerontology and geriatrics that make an immediate impact on the quality of life and lifestyles of the elderly. To include diverse life situations of older people. May be repeated with new content.
Note: See Class Schedule for specific content. Credit for 596 and 696 applicable to a master’s degree with approval of the graduate adviser.
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GERO 700A - Practicum Units: 3
Grading Method: Cr/NC
Prerequisite(s): Consent of adviser.
Supervised field placement in public or private setting. Application of gerontological theory, policy, objectives, principles, and skills in service to individuals, families, groups, organizations, and communities.
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GERO 700B - Practicum Units: 3
Grading Method: Cr/NC
Prerequisite(s): Consent of adviser.
Supervised field placement in public or private setting. Application of gerontological theory, policy, objectives, principles, and skills in service to individuals, families, groups, organizations, and communities.
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GERO 740 - Advanced Seminar in Administration and Community Development in Social Work and Gerontology Units: 3
Same As: SWORK 740 . Prerequisite(s): SWORK 632 and concurrent registration in GERO 700A or SWORK 755 .
Human services program design, strategic planning, marketing, organizational performance management, human resource management, and development of grant proposals.
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GERO 797 - Research Units: 1-3
Grading Method: Cr/NC/RP
Prerequisite(s): Consent of instructor.
Research in an area of gerontology. Maximum Credits: six units applicable to a master’s degree.
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GERO 798 - Special Study Units: 1-3
Grading Method: Cr/NC/RP
Prerequisite(s): Consent of adviser.
Individual study. Maximum Credits: six units applicable to a master’s degree.
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GERO 799A - Thesis Units: 3
Grading Method: Cr/NC/RP
Prerequisite(s): An officially appointed thesis committee and advancement to candidacy.
Preparation of a thesis for the master’s degree.
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GERO 799B - Thesis Extension Units: 0
Grading Method: Cr/NC
Prerequisite(s): Prior registration in Thesis 799A with an assigned grade symbol of RP.
Registration required in any semester or term following assignment of RP in Course 799A in which the student expects to use the facilities and resources of the university; also student must be registered in the course when the completed thesis is granted final approval.
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GERO 799C - Comprehensive Examination Extension Units: 0
Grading Method: Cr/NC
Prerequisite(s): Completion or concurrent enrollment in degree program courses.
Registration required of students whose only requirement is completion of the comprehensive examination for the master’s degree. Registration in 799C limited to two semesters.
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Health and Human Services |
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HHS 290 - International Experience Units: 1
Practical work experience in a health-related field under direction of activity sponsor and instructor. Approved international internships, research, or volunteer programs may count toward international experience requirement for majors in the College of Health and Human Services only.
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HHS 296 - Experimental Topics Units: 1-4
Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley
Selected topics. May be repeated with new content.
Note: See Class Schedule for specific content. Limit of nine units of any combination of 296, 496, 596 courses applicable to a bachelor’s degree.
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HHS 350 - Applied International Health and Human Services Units: 3 GE
Prerequisite(s): See Class Schedule for prerequisite(s).
Selected themes in health and human services to include participation in an approved international program. Course taught at SDSU.
Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.
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Hebrew |
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HEBRW 100 - Hebrew Alphabet Units: 1
Study of Hebrew alphabet; practice with reading and comprehending whole texts (without vowels), as well as pronouncing.
Note: Intended for students of HEBRW 101 who have not previously studied the alphabet. May also be taken without HEBRW 101 . Does not satisfy language requirement. Taught in Hebrew.
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HEBRW 101 - Elementary Hebrew I Units: 4 GE
Four lectures and one hour of laboratory.
Beginning reading, writing, and conversational skills. Essentials of grammar. First course in Hebrew, intended for those without prior knowledge of Hebrew. Students who speak some Hebrew should consult with the faculty for correct placement before classes begin.
Note: Taught in Hebrew. No credit will be given for Hebrew 101, HEBRW 102 , HEBRW 201 taken out of sequence.
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HEBRW 102 - Elementary Hebrew II Units: 4 GE
Four lectures and one hour of laboratory.
Prerequisite(s): HEBRW 101 .
Continuation of HEBRW 101 .
Note: Taught in Hebrew. No credit will be given for HEBRW 101 , 102, HEBRW 201 taken out of sequence.
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HEBRW 201 - Intermediate Hebrew Units: 4 GE
Four lectures and one hour of laboratory.
Prerequisite(s): HEBRW 102 .
Continuation of HEBRW 102 . Applications of grammar and reading skills. Additional practice in conversation.
Note: Taught in Hebrew. No credit will be given for HEBRW 102 , 201 taken out of sequence.
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HEBRW 296 - Experimental Topics Units: 1-4
Selected topics. May be repeated with new content.
Note: See Class Schedule for specific content. Limit of nine units of any combination of 296, 496, 596 courses applicable to a bachelor’s degree. Taught in Hebrew.
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HEBRW 496 - Topics in Hebraic Studies Units: 1-4
Topics in Hebraic language, literature, culture, and linguistics. May be repeated with new content. Maximum Credits: eight units.
Note: See Class Schedule for specific content. Limit of nine units of any combination of 296, 496, 596 courses applicable to a bachelor’s degree. May be taught in English.
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HEBRW 499 - Special Study Units: 1-3
Prerequisite(s): Consent of instructor.
Individual study. Maximum Credits: six units.
Note: May be taught in English.
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History |
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HIST 100 - World History Units: 3 GE
Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley
Growth of civilizations and interrelationships of peoples of Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas to 1500.
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HIST 101 - World History Units: 3 GE
Modern history from a global perspective, 1500 to present.
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HIST 102 - World History Through Science and Technology Units: 3 GE
Hunter-gatherers and the rise of agriculture to modern globalization of industry and global warming. Interrelationships between cultural changes, scientific theories, and technological advances.
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HIST 105 - Western Civilization to the Seventeenth Century Units: 3 GE
Development of Mediterranean and European cultures, thought, and institutions from ancient times to the seventeenth century.
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HIST 106 - Western Civilization Since the Sixteenth Century Units: 3 GE
Development of European cultures, thought, and institutions from sixteenth century to present.
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HIST 109 - American History to Reconstruction Units: 3 GE-AI
Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley
United States history from pre-colonial societies to Reconstruction. Contact of cultures, patterns of settlement, contests over racial, ethnic, religious, class, gender, regional, and national identities and institutions. Satisfies the American Institutions requirement in American history and United States Constitution.
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HIST 110 - American History Since the Civil War Units: 3 GE-AI
United States history since the Civil War. Development of U.S. economy, urbanization, social and cultural change, emergence of U.S. as a world power, struggles over American identities and institutions. Satisfies the American Institutions requirement in American history and California government.
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HIST 114 - Sports in American History Units: 3 GE
Prerequisite(s): United States history through the lens of sports over time. Multiple relationships between historical sports and cultural, economic, physical, political, psychological, and social factors.
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HIST 125 - Sexuality, Past and Present Units: 3 GE
How the past shapes the modern physiological, psychological, and sociological sexual self. Censorship and sex, influence of capitalism, religion, and science on sexuality; modern romance, nonconformity, personal sexual identities, gender and sexual roles, the sexual body, sexual liberation, and sexual norms.
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HIST 135 - Film as the Past Units: 3 GE
Critical analysis of films about history as an art form. Accuracy, aesthetics, authenticity, authorial intentions, collective memory, controversial and uncomfortable topics, empathy, national myths, point of view, popular and critical reception, and revisionism in films about history.
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HIST 150 - Why History Matters Units: 3 GE
Historically-informed behaviors, contexts, and frameworks through the lenses of contemporary social issues, marking memory through monuments, museum and cultural experiences, politics, and pop-culture.
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HIST 157 - Comics and History Units: 3 GE
Same As: ENGL 157 . Aesthetics, interplay of texts and images, visual communication, and changes over time.
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HIST 296 - Experimental Topics Units: 1-4
Selected topics. May be repeated with new content.
Note: See Class Schedule for specific content. Limit of nine units of any combination of 296, 496, 596 courses applicable to a bachelor’s degree.
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HIST 299 - Special Study Units: 3
Prerequisite(s): Consent of department chair and instructor.
Individual study.
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HIST 390W - Writing in History Units: 3
Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley
Prerequisite(s): HIST 100 , HIST 101 , and six units selected from HIST 105 , HIST 106 , HIST 109 , HIST 110 . Limited to history majors. Satisfies Graduation Writing Assessment Requirement for students who have completed 60 units; completed Writing Placement Assessment with a score of 8 or higher (or earned a grade of C (2.0) or better in RWS 280 , RWS 281 [or LING 281 ] if score on WPA was 6 or lower); and completed General Education requirements in Communication and Critical Thinking. Proof of completion of prerequisite(s) required: Test scores or verification of exemption; copy of transcript.
Practice of different genres of historical writing in one field of history (chosen by instructor), mastery of library skills, citations, academic integrity, source evaluation, pre-writing, and drafting, critiquing, and revising.
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HIST 400 - Junior Seminar in Methods and Historiography Units: 3
Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley
Prerequisite(s): HIST 100 , HIST 101 , and six units selected from HIST 105 , HIST 106 , HIST 109 , HIST 110 . Must be a declared history major. Completion of Writing Placement Assessment with a score of 10, or completion of HIST 390W or another approved upper division writing course (W) with a grade of C (2.0) or better; completion of General Education requirements in Communication and Critical Thinking. Proof of completion of prerequisite(s) required: Test scores or verification of exemption; copy of transcript.
Study and practice of historical methods and historiography through writing and discussion. Historical methods, argumentation, interpretation in one field of history (chosen by instructor). Production of a substantial historiographical essay.
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HIST 402 - History of Childhood Units: 3 GE
Prerequisite(s): Upper division standing.
Comparative perspective on the history of infancy and early childhood; childrearing theories and practices; adolescence; education; play; work in slavery, servitude, apprenticeship, and families; immigration and migration; domestic violence and family law; and construction of gender and identity.
Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.
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HIST 404 - History of Human Rights Units: 3 GE
Prerequisite(s): Upper division standing.
Struggles that contributed to wide range of rights in today’s international human rights regime in practice and thought and as an institution following the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.
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HIST 406 - History of Sexuality Units: 3 GE
Prerequisite(s): Upper division standing.
Comparative and historical approach to changing conceptions of the body, regulation of sexual practices, and emergence of sexual identities. Historical perspectives on body parts, sexual practices, and sexual celebrities invested with social and political significance.
Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.
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HIST 407 - Early Modern Europe Units: 3 GE
Early modern Europe from Renaissance to French Revolution. Social, cultural, economic, political, and intellectual trends, development of nation-states, and sources of continental conflict.
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HIST 408 - Modern Europe Units: 3 GE
Modern Europe from French Revolution to present. Social, cultural, economic, political, and intellectual trends, development of nation-states, and sources of continental conflict.
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HIST 410 - United States History for Teachers Units: 3 GE-AI
Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley
Prerequisite(s): Upper division standing and Writing Placement Assessment with a score of 8 or above or grade of C (2.0) or better in RWS 280 , RWS 281 [or LING 281 ].
United States history from colonial period to present with emphasis on historiography, bibliography, and relationship between philosophy of history and teaching. Satisfies the American Institutions requirement in American history and California government.
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HIST 411 - World History for Teachers Units: 3
Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley
Prerequisite(s): Upper division standing, Writing Placement Assessment with a score of 8 or above or grade of C (2.0) or better in RWS 280 , RWS 281 [or LING 281 ], and at least three units selected from HIST 100 , HIST 101 , HIST 105 , HIST 106 .
Topics in world history from paleolithic times to sixteenth century emphasizing comparative analysis, interrelations among societies, and large-scale patterns of change. Various approaches to conceptualizing and teaching world history. Intended primarily for students in teacher preparation programs.
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HIST 412 - Modern World History for Teachers Units: 3
Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley
Prerequisite(s): Upper division standing, Writing Placement Assessment with a score of 8 or above, or grade of C (2.0) or better in RWS 280 , RWS 281 [or LING 281 ], and at least three units selected from HIST 100 , HIST 101 , HIST 105 , HIST 106 .
Topics in world history from the beginning of the sixteenth century to the present emphasizing world-scale patterns of change and cross-cultural comparisons. Various approaches to conceptualizing and teaching world history. Intended primarily for students preparing to teach history in secondary schools.
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HIST 413 - United States History for Teachers for Liberal Studies Majors Units: 3 GE-AI
Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley
Prerequisite(s): Upper division standing and Writing Placement Assessment with a score of 8 or above or grade of C (2.0) or better in RWS 280 , RWS 281 [or LING 281 ]. Limited to liberal studies majors.
United States history from pre-colonial period to World War I, incorporating California with emphasis on historiography and relationship between philosophy of history and teaching. Satisfies the American Institutions requirement in American history and United States Constitution. Required of liberal studies majors.
Note: Not open to students with credit in History 409.
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HIST 415 - Pre-Contact and Colonial Latin America Units: 3 GE
Same As: Latin American Studies 415 Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley
Indigenous and colonial history of Latin America, pre-contact through early national period.
Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.
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HIST 416 - Modern Latin America Units: 3 GE
Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley
History of Latin America, early national period to present.
Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.
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HIST 418 - History of Modern Britain Units: 3
Prerequisite(s): Upper division standing.
History of Britain from seventeenth century to contemporary age. Emphasis on political institutions, religion, society, economy, the arts.
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HIST 420 - Asian History to 1600 Units: 3 GE
Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley
Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism in Asian family relations, governance, art, and literature. Comparative development of social structure, gender roles, state formation in India, China, and Japan. Interactions among Asian societies via Silk Route and maritime trade.
Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.
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HIST 421 - Asian History Since 1600 Units: 3 GE
Same As: ASIAN 421 Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley
China, Japan, and India, with case studies on Philippines and Vietnam. Comparative Asian responses to Western imperialism, nationalism, revolution, and war. Diverse Cold War paths; contemporary problems and prospects.
Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.
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HIST 422 - Asian American Experiences Units: 3 GE
Same As: ASIAN 422 Prerequisite(s): Upper division standing.
Experiences of Asian/Pacific Islander Americans to include immigration, colonialism, imperialism, exclusion, citizenship, labor, family, community, gender, popular culture, refugees, multi-racial tensions, globalization, and resistance.
Note: This course satisfies the ethnic studies [ES] requirement.
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HIST 425 - The Vietnam War Units: 3 GE
Same As: ASIAN 425 The Vietnam War from a global perspective. The war’s evolution in Vietnam and Indochina as well as its implications on socialist nations, the Third World, and the West.
Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.
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HIST 435 - History Through Film Units: 3
Critical analysis of selected historical problems, eras, and events, using film as the principal historical document. Maximum Credits: six units.
Note: See Class Schedule for specific content.
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HIST 436 - Modern Jewish History in Feature Films Units: 3 GE
Two lectures and two hours of activity.
Representations of twentieth century Jewish history in feature films. Topics include persecutions of Jews in Czarist Russia and Nazi occupied Europe, social mobility in the United States and national sovereignty in Israel.
Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.
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HIST 440 - The Holocaust and Western Civilization Units: 3 GE
Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley
Prerequisite(s): Upper division standing.
German campaign to eliminate Jews during World War II. Anti-semitic background, both Christian and racial; rise of Adolf Hitler and implementation of “the final solution”; responses by Jews and non- Jews in the Western world.
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HIST 441 - Unnatural Disasters: History of Current Environmental Problems Units: 3 GE
Prerequisite(s): Upper division standing.
Comparative and historical study of current environmental problems in San Diego and the world. Considers the role of religious beliefs, social values, economic practices, and political systems in shaping past attitudes, policies, and behavior toward the environment. International in scope.
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HIST 442 - People From Our Past Units: 3 GE
Biographical approach to history through lives of prominent and ordinary individuals. Topics may include war, community, dissent, individualism, leadership, politics, culture, religion, gender, race, and ethnic identities. Specific content may vary.
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HIST 445 - California History Units: 3 GE-AI
Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley
California history from pre-colonial societies to present. Emphasis on early colonial societies, economy, environment, politics, race, gender, and California’s place in popular culture.
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HIST 450 - Senior Seminar in Historical Research Units: 3
Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley
Prerequisite(s): HIST 400 with a grade of C (2.0) or better and a minimum of 15 upper division units in history. Proof of completion of prerequisite(s) required: Copy of transcript.
Capstone seminar on historical research. Application of historical theory and methods to original research in a selected field of history. Includes a major research paper based on primary sources.
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HIST 451 - Historians and the Public Units: 3
Prerequisite(s): HIST 400 with a Grade of C (2.0) or better and a minimum of 15 upper division units in history.
Analysis and practice of ways historians preserve, research, and interpret the past for public audiences. Topics include historic preservation projects, parks, museums, archives, and living history programs. Includes a major analytical essay or public history project.
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HIST 452 - Advanced Internship in Applied History Units: 3
Prerequisite(s): HIST 400 with a Grade of C (2.0) or better and a minimum of 15 upper division units in history.
Campus and community archives, museums, government, and other historical agencies. Emphasis on critical analysis, writing, and historiography.
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HIST 455 - Digital History Units: 3 GE
Tools and practices used by historians to conduct research and present findings and results through a technology lens. Challenges, issues, theories, and uses of digital history.
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HIST 473 - Middle Eastern History from the Advent of Islam to 1500 Units: 3 GE
Middle Eastern history, 600 C.E. to 1500 C.E.; spread of Islam through rise of Ottoman Empire.
Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.
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HIST 474 - The Middle East Since 1500 Units: 3 GE
Middle Eastern history since 1500 C.E.; Islamic empires, European colonialism, nationalism, and modernization.
Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.
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HIST 486 - World War II Units: 3
Causes of World War II, its course, and its legacy for today’s world.
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HIST 488 - Modern Jewish History Units: 3 GE
Prerequisite(s): Upper division standing.
Social, religious, and intellectual life of European Jewry from Middle Ages to present; political struggle for emancipation; anti-Semitism, the Holocaust, and establishment of state of Israel.
Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.
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HIST 490 - Senior Honors Thesis Units: 3
Prerequisite(s): HIST 400 ; open to history majors with senior standing and permission of the honors thesis adviser.
Directed research on a historical topic chosen in consultation with the honors thesis adviser, and completion of a senior honors thesis. Required of students wishing to graduate with a certificate of recognition in history.
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HIST 495 - Internship in Applied History Units: 3
Prerequisite(s): Nine units in history. HIST 451 for some students (see instructor).
Supervised field placement of students in campus and community archives, historical museums, and other historical agencies. Practical experiences related to studies within history curriculum.
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HIST 496 - Issues in History Units: 1-4
Examination of selected problems and current issues in history. May be repeated with change of content. Maximum Credits: six units with change of content.
Note: See Class Schedule for specific content. Limit of nine units of any combination of 296, 496, 596 courses applicable to a bachelor’s degree.
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HIST 499 - Special Study Units: 1-3
Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley
Prerequisite(s): Consent of department chair and instructor.
Individual study. Maximum Credits: six units.
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HIST 500 - Topics in Ancient History Units: 3
Prerequisite(s): Upper division or graduate standing.
Variable topics in ancient history throughout the world may include: Women in Greek and Roman societies, magic in the Greco-Roman World, Silk Roads, and pre-contact Mesoamerica. May be repeated with new content. Maximum Credits: six units.
Note: See Class Schedule for specific topic.
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HIST 501 - History of Ancient Near Eastern Civilizations Units: 3
Major civilizations of Near East from the origin of civilization to Roman Conquest, including Egyptians, Babylonians, Hebrews, and Persians. Social, political, and religious problems.
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HIST 502 - Ancient Greece Units: 3
Greek history from prehistoric period through Age of Alexander the Great. Emphasis on political, social, cultural and institutional developments, and historiography. Secondary attention to military, economic, and religious topics.
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HIST 503 - Ancient Rome Units: 3
Roman history from origins of Rome to fall of the Empire. Emphasis on political, social, cultural and institutional developments, and historiography. Secondary attention to military, economic, and religious topics.
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HIST 504 - The Dark Ages Units: 3
Same As: HUM 504 Europe and the Mediterranean, sixth to eleventh centuries C.E. through various approaches: political, economic, social, and cultural. Topics include the barbarians and Vikings, the Byzantine, Arab, and Holy Roman Empires, the Norman Conquest, Charlemagne, Beowulf, feudalism, and serfdom.
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HIST 505 - The Later Middle Ages Units: 3
Europe and the Mediterranean 1100-1450 C.E. through various approaches: political, economic, social, and cultural. Development of kingdoms of western Europe and relationship to Byzantine empire and other states.
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HIST 506 - The Renaissance Units: 3
Same As: HUM 506 Intellectual, artistic, social, and economic transformation in Europe from fourteenth to seventeenth centuries.
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HIST 507 - The Reformation Units: 3
Same As: REL S 507 Continental Europe, 1500-1648. Split of Christendom; political and intellectual dissent; social fabric of family life; relationship between gender, class, and power; cultural stratification of European society.
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HIST 508 - The Fall of the Roman Empire Units: 3
Prerequisite(s): Upper division or graduate standing.
History of Mediterranean region between third and sixth centuries C.E. Changes in society, politics, economics, the military, gender, sexuality, religion, literature, art, archaeology, and law. Competing perceptions of the period as one of “fall” versus one of “transformation.”
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HIST 509 - British Century: Waterloo to World War I Units: 3
Prerequisite(s): Upper division or graduate standing.
History of England, 1815-1914, to include industrial supremacy; struggles over urban problems, reform, democratization, labor organization, national self-image; interplay of liberalism and collectivism; sources of social stability and instability; women’s rights; jingoism; coming of World War I.
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HIST 512A - The Great War: A Turning Point in European History Units: 3
Forces and events that shaped Europe in period prior to and during World War I, 1890-1919.
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HIST 512B - The Age of Dictators and Contemporary Europe Units: 3
Europe in the age of dictatorship, world war, decline, and recovery.
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HIST 514 - History of Science: From Revolution to Evolution Units: 3
Prerequisite(s): Upper division or graduate standing.
Development of early modern European science. Origins of Western concept of “science,” Greco-Roman and Arabic roots of science, impact of Renaissance humanism and voyages of exploration on Scientific Revolution, and imperial context of evolutionary theories and scientific racism.
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HIST 516 - Imperialism and the Colonial Experience Units: 3
Prerequisite(s): Upper division or graduate standing.
Imperialism and colonialism as these transformed both colonizing and colonized peoples, e.g., modernization, racism, Orientalism, multi-ethnic, Great Power competition, anti-colonial resistance, and nationalism.
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HIST 527 - The Holocaust in Feature Films Units: 3
Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley
Two lectures and two hours of activity.
Prerequisite(s): Upper division or graduate standing.
Depiction of the Nazi policy of destroying European Jewry and its impact on the perpetrators, bystanders, victims, and the postwar world in feature films.
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HIST 532 - Topics in Early American History Units: 3
Prerequisite(s): Upper division or graduate standing and three units in history at the college level.
Variable topics in history of colonial America and the early republic. Possible topics to include: women and the family; race, class and labor; American Revolution; religion and politics; immigrants’ experiences. May be repeated with new content. Maximum Credits: six units.
Note: See Class Schedule for topic.
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HIST 533 - Antebellum America Units: 3
Prerequisite(s): Upper division or graduate standing.
Westward expansion and movement, market revolution, democratic politics, revivalism, slavery, and women’s rights.
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HIST 534 - Civil War and Reconstruction Units: 3
Prerequisite(s): Upper division or graduate standing.
Civil War and Reconstruction, emphasizing political affairs and role of Abraham Lincoln.
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HIST 535 - The Age of Roosevelt Units: 3
The United States in Depression, War, and Cold War.
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HIST 536 - The United States Since World War II Units: 3
Major foreign and domestic issues confronting the United States, and the government policies and popular movements generated in response.
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HIST 537 - Star Trek, Culture, and History Units: 3
Prerequisite(s): Upper division or graduate standing.
Explores relationship between Star Trek’s several television series, movies, novels, and the larger historical and cultural context of post-World War II America. Themes include race, gender, sexuality, foreign policy, terrorism, religion, and politics.
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HIST 539 - Topics in the History of the American West Units: 3
Prerequisite(s): Upper division or graduate standing and three units of history at the college level.
Selected topics in history of American West such as Westward movement; Southwest borderlands; gender and the frontier; new western history. May be repeated with new content. Maximum Credits: six units.
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HIST 540 - Environmental History of the United States Units: 3
Only offered at: SDSU Imperial Valley
The relationship of Americans to their environment from colonial times to the present with emphasis on how attitudes and values have affected personal behavior and public policy toward the land.
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HIST 544A - Early American Foreign Relations Units: 3
Development of American foreign relations from Colonial Period to the Spanish-American-Filipino War.
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HIST 544B - Modern American Foreign Relations Units: 3
Development of American foreign relations since 1900.
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HIST 548 - Race and Ethnicity in United States History Units: 3
Same As: CCS 548 Prerequisite(s): Upper division or graduate standing.
Race and ethnicity in America from colonial period through twentieth century to include historical construction of identity; colonization, slavery, state formation; labor, immigration, politics of whiteness; applicability of black/white binary of a multiethnic society.
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HIST 550 - Colonial Mexico Units: 3
Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley
Social history of Mexico from pre-contact through early national period using primary and secondary sources. Processes of social and cultural negotiation involving gender, religion, environment, medicine, and urban experience.
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HIST 551 - Modern Mexico Units: 3
Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley
Social history of Mexico since early national period using primary and secondary sources. Processes of social and cultural negotiation involving gender, religion, environment, medicine, and urban experience.
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