Jun 17, 2024  
2020/2021 University Catalog 
    
2020/2021 University Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Descriptions


General Education Courses  

Courses offered at the SDSU Imperial Valley campus.  

Detailed information about course offerings can be found on the Class Schedule website.

 

Africana Studies

  
  • AFRAS 472 - African Enslavement


    Units: 3 GE

    Comparative history of enslavement of Africans in the Americas and Muslim world, African servitude, and modern day enslavement.

    Note: This course satisfies the ethnic studies [ES] requirement.

  
  • AFRAS 473 - Women in Africa


    Units: 3 GE

    Historical and contemporary roles women have occupied in Africa as political leaders, spiritual authoritative figures, and mothers in various African societies, from classical Africa to the present.

    Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.

  
  • AFRAS 476 - History and Culture of Hip Hop


    Units: 3

    Genesis of hip hop as a worldwide culture, with attention to major Africana historical, political, sociological, cultural, and aesthetic precursors.

    Note: This course satisfies the ethnic studies [ES] requirement.

  
  • AFRAS 485 - Blacks in the Arts


    Units: 3

    Academic and artistic perspectives on Black participation in and contributions to the creative and performing arts. May be repeated with new content. Maximum Credits: six units.

    Note: See Class Schedule for specific content.

  
  • AFRAS 490 - Senior Seminar


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): Open only to majors who have completed the first semester of junior year.

    Capstone experience in which mastery of practice, theories, concepts, and issues central to Africana studies is demonstrated.

  
  • AFRAS 496 - 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.

  
  • AFRAS 499 - Special Study


    Units: 1-3

    Prerequisite(s): Consent of instructor.

    Individual study. Maximum Credits: six units.


American Indian Studies

  
  • AMIND 110 - American Indian Heritage


    Units: 3 GE

    Major American Indian themes, beliefs, and practices and their impact on Western civilization through institutions, art, literature, philosophy, and religion.

    Note: This course satisfies the ethnic studies [ES] requirement.

  
  • AMIND 120 - Written Communication


    Units: 3 GE

    Prerequisite(s): Satisfaction of the SDSU Written Communication Assessment requirement. (See “Graduation Requirements ” section of catalog.) Proof of completion of prerequisite(s) required.

    Understanding of rhetoric of written argument from interdisciplinary perspectives, with reference to American Indian content. Designed to develop and enhance composition and reading skills. Focus on writing skills that contribute to academic growth and development.

    Note: Not open to students with credit in a higher-numbered composition course or AFRAS 120  or CCS 111B  or LING 100B  or RWS 100  [or ENGL 100 ] or RWS 105B .

  
  • AMIND 140 - U.S. History from an American Indian Perspective to 1870


    Units: 3 GE-AI

    U.S. history from an indigenous perspective pre-Columbian contact to 1870. Examines Native American societies with attention to white intrusion, U.S. constitution and legislation to remove Indians, control of their land and impact upon indigenous culture and society.

    Note: This course satisfies the American Institutions requirement in American history and United States Constitution. This course satisfies the ethnic studies [ES] requirement.

  
  • AMIND 141 - U.S. History from an American Indian Perspective Since 1870


    Units: 3 GE-AI

    U.S. history from an indigenous perspective from 1870 to the present. Examines Native American societies, political systems, and reservations. Attention given to historical, contemporary, political, socioeconomic issues, the U.S. and California constitutions and their impact on Native Americans.

    Note: This course satisfies the American Institutions requirement in American history and California government. This course satisfies the ethnic studies [ES] requirement.

  
  • AMIND 210 - Indigenous Women and the Arts


    Units: 3 GE

    How indigenous women have used cultural forms to represent political issues and imagine social possibilities. Cultural forms to include contemporary and traditional material arts, fashion, film, literature, multimedia performance, and music.

    Note: This course satisfies the ethnic studies [ES] requirement.

  
  • AMIND 225 - Expository Writing and Research


    Units: 3 GE

    Prerequisite(s): Satisfaction of the SDSU Written Communication Assessment requirement and AFRAS 120  or AMIND 120  or CCS 111B  or LING 100B  or RWS 100  [or ENGL 100 ] or RWS 105B . Proof of completion of prerequisite(s) required: Test scores or verification of exemption; copy of transcript.

    Intermediate writing development to include rhetoric of spoken, written, and visual texts drawn from interdisciplinary sources.

    Note: Not open to students with credit in AFRAS 200 , CCS 200 , LING 200 , or RWS 200  [or ENGL 200 ].

  
  • AMIND 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.

  
  • AMIND 300 - American Indian Oral Tradition


    Units: 3 GE

    Pre-twentieth century American Indian oral and symbolic traditions including creation and origin legends, coyote stories, ceremonial songs, oratory, and memoirs.

    Note: This course satisfies the ethnic studies [ES] requirement.

  
  • AMIND 320 - American Indians in Contemporary Society


    Units: 3 GE

    Sociological understanding of the American Indian groups in contemporary society with emphasis on the relationship to dominant society and why the focus has been on Indians as social problems.

    Note: This course satisfies the ethnic studies [ES] requirement.

  
  • AMIND 331 - The American Indian Political Experience


    Units: 3

    Same As: POL S 331  
    Prerequisite(s): AMIND 110  or POL S 102 .

    Social and political responses to dominant group policies by American Indian as compared to other minority groups.

    Note: This course satisfies the ethnic studies [ES] requirement.

  
  • AMIND 370 - Tribal Gaming: Cultural and Political Context


    Units: 3

    Same As: HTM 370  
    Prerequisite(s): Upper division standing.

    Social and political context of American Indian tribal gaming, political relationships between federal and tribal governments, contemporary examples of tribal gaming, sociocultural and economic forces leading to gaming as strategy for economic development, and responses by non-Indian communities to tribal gaming.

    Note: This course satisfies the ethnic studies [ES] requirement.

  
  • AMIND 420 - Indian Peoples of California


    Units: 3 GE

    Indian peoples of California. Their histories and cultures from oral traditions to contemporary issues. Focus on selected Indian tribes and communities.

    Note: This course satisfies the ethnic studies [ES] requirement.

  
  • AMIND 430 - American Indian Poetry and Fiction


    Units: 3 GE

    Contemporary American Indian poetry and fiction explored in works of Welch, Ortiz, Momaday, Silko, Deloria, Allen, Erdrich, and others.

    Note: This course satisfies the ethnic studies [ES] requirement.

  
  • AMIND 435 - Indians Through Film and Television


    Units: 3 GE

    Ethnographic film-making. Impact of movies and television on popular concepts of Indians. Films viewed in class.

    Note: This course satisfies the ethnic studies [ES] requirement.

  
  • AMIND 440 - American Indian History


    Units: 3 GE

    Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley

    Historical analysis of Indian-White contact. Emphasis on the impact of historical events upon the various cultures.

    Note: This course satisfies the ethnic studies [ES] requirement.

  
  • AMIND 451 - American Indian Identity


    Units: 3 GE

    Same As: ANTH 451  
    Multidisciplinary perspectives on American Indian identity today. Topics include perspectives from political, ethnic, cultural and legal standpoints, both within and outside of indigenous communities, as well as diachronic variation in perspectives.

    Note: This course satisfies the ethnic studies [ES] requirement.

  
  • AMIND 460 - American Indian Languages


    Units: 3 GE

    Same As: ANTH 460  and LING 460  
    Structures of American Indian languages. Language families of North America, history, and present circumstances. Interdependence of language and culture, differences in ways of speaking. Issues of language endangerment, language death, language maintenance, and language revitalization.

    Note: This course satisfies the ethnic studies [ES] requirement.

  
  • AMIND 470 - American Indian Spirituality and Epistemologies


    Units: 3 GE

    Same As: REL S 470  
    Spirits, prophesies, and renewals of the Indian way compared through symbols and ceremony. Religions surveyed as they have been influenced by foreign elements and philosophies. Influences on values and tribalism as reflected through symbols and other measures.

    Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.

  
  • AMIND 480 - Issues in American Indian Education


    Units: 3 GE

    Prerequisite(s): AMIND 110 .

    Cross-cultural differences in learning styles, emphasis on Native American styles. Cross-cultural differences in child socialization related to readiness for school. Literacy-related practices in oral communities. Bilingual education in Native American communities. Local educational empowerment.

    Note: This course satisfies the ethnic studies [ES] requirement.

  
  • AMIND 485 - Federal Indian Law


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): AMIND 110 , AMIND 140 , or AMIND 141 .

    Legal relationship between the United States and Indian people and Indian tribes as field of Indian law was developed and has changed over the years until the present.

    Note: This course satisfies the ethnic studies [ES] requirement.

  
  • AMIND 496 - Topics in American Indian Studies


    Units: 1-3

    An undergraduate seminar. Maximum Credits: six 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.

  
  • AMIND 498 - American Indian Community Service Experience


    Units: 1

    Grading Method: Cr/NC

    Service learning experience in local American Indian community, mentoring, tutoring, or interning at Indian Education Center, Indian Health Center, or similar experience. Minimum of 35 contact hours. Service experience coordinated by supervising American Indian studies faculty with target community organization.

  
  • AMIND 499 - Special Study


    Units: 1-4

    Prerequisite(s): Consent of instructor.

    Individual study. Maximum Credits: six units.


Anthropology

  
  • ANTH 101 - Human Biocultural Origins


    Units: 3 GE

    Humankind’s place in nature; fossil evidence for hominid evolution; evolutionary theory; racial, clinal and genetic variability; relationship of physical and cultural adaptations; the rise of civilization.

  
  • ANTH 102 - Introduction to Socio-Cultural Anthropology


    Units: 3 GE

    Cross-cultural survey of systems of social, political, and economic organization, language, gender, kinship, religion, and subsistence; culture change and intercultural connections; ethnographic field methods and theories of culture; contemporary applications.

  
  • ANTH 103 - Introduction to Archaeology and World Prehistory


    Units: 3 GE

    Archaeology emphasizing the modern relevance of understanding the past. Beginning six to seven million years ago in Africa, highlighting the physical and cultural evolution of our human lineage.

  
  • ANTH 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.

  
  • ANTH 301 - Principles of Biological Anthropology


    Units: 3

    Two lectures and three hours of laboratory.

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 101 .

    Theory and method in biological anthropology. Hands-on collection and interpretation of data in primate comparative anatomy, human evolution, human skeletal biology, human adaptability, and primate behavioral observation.

  
  • ANTH 302 - Principles of Archaeology


    Units: 3

    Two lectures and three hours of laboratory.

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 103 .

    History, method, and theory of archaeological data acquisition and interpretation. Methods of data recovery and analysis suitable to resolution of historical and processual questions. Archaeological examples from a worldwide sample of prehistoric and historic societies.

  
  • ANTH 303 - Principles of Socio-Cultural Anthropology


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 102 .

    Development of theories which explain nature of culture and cultural variation. Applications of theory of culture to field methods in ethnography and interpretation of ethnographic findings.

  
  • ANTH 304 - Principles of Anthropological Linguistics


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 102 .

    Structural nature of language. How languages differ, change and influence each other. Language families of the world. Significance of language for human social life in a variety of cultures.

  
  • ANTH 312 - Archaeological Field Techniques


    Units: 3

    Six hours of activity.

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 302 .

    Archaeological excavation of significant sites in San Diego. Techniques of excavation, recording, and surveying.

  
  • ANTH 333 - Race, Ethnicity, and Identity in the Americas


    Units: 3 GE

    Same As: LATAM 333 
    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 102  or LATAM 101 .

    History and contemporary forms of identity to include ethnicity, gender, nationality, race, and sexuality in Canada, Latin America, and United States.

  
  • ANTH 348 - Historical Archaeology


    Units: 3 GE

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 102 .

    How historical texts and archaeological artifacts are used to understand colonial expansion and indigenous response across the globe over last half millennium. Incorporates native and European worldviews in investigation of archaeological sites from historical times.

  
  • ANTH 349 - Roots of Civilizations


    Units: 3 GE

    Prerequisite(s): Upper division standing.

    Origins and major attributes common to civilizations. Form and function of fundamental characteristics in different civilizations. Examples taken from Africa, Asia, the Near East and the New World.

    Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.

  
  • ANTH 350 - Cultures Around the Globe


    Units: 3 GE

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 102 .

    Cultural patterns of representative peoples. Industries, arts, social organization and supernaturalism considered with view to environmental adjustment, historical development and functional interrelation. Ethnological theories reviewed and applied in interpreting illustrative societies.

    Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.

  
  • ANTH 353 - Sustainability and Culture


    Units: 3 GE

    Same As: SUSTN 353  
    Examination of efforts of anthropology to understand sustainability and provide solutions to human-environmental problems. Compares and explores sustainability in a variety of contexts and scales, from San Diego region to diverse communities around the world.

    Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.

  
  • ANTH 355 - Exploring Primate Behavior


    Units: 3 GE

    Prerequisite(s): Completion of the General Education requirement in Foundations of Learning II.A. Natural Sciences and Quantitative Reasoning. If a biological sciences course is not taken to satisfy Foundations of Learning II.A. 2. Life Sciences, a college course in biological sciences is required.

    World of our closest living relatives. What it means to be a primate, where primates live, how primates have evolved into different groups and adapted to different environments, and what primates are threatened with extinction and why.

  
  • ANTH 360 - From the Grave: Modern Forensic Anthropology


    Units: 3 GE

    Prerequisite(s): Completion of the General Education requirement in Foundations of Learning II.A. 2. Life Sciences. If a biological sciences course is not taken to satisfy Foundations of Learning II.A. 2. Life Sciences, a college course in biological sciences is required.

    Physical anthropology and skeletal biology within medicolegal context. Methodologies used in science of forensic anthropology, as interdisciplinary nature and authorities in related fields.

    Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.

  
  • ANTH 402 - Dynamics of Biocultural Diversity


    Units: 3 GE

    Offered at: SDSU Main Campus and SDSU Imperial Valley

    Prerequisite(s): Completion of the General Education requirement in Foundations of Learning II.A.2. Life Sciences. If a biological sciences course is not taken to satisfy Foundations of Learning II.A.2. Life Sciences, a college course in biological sciences is required.

    Interaction of biology and culture in human populations. Relating genetic and cultural processes to the changes in human populations over time.

    Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.

  
  • ANTH 404 - Evolution of Human Behavior


    Units: 3 GE

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 101  or BIOL 101 .

    Evolutionary approaches to human behavior to include evolutionary psychology, gene-culture coevolution, and human behavioral ecology. Evolution of cooperation and altruism, human health and survival, human mating, parenting, and violence and warfare.

    Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.

  
  • ANTH 410 - Language in Culture


    Units: 3 GE

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 102 .

    Survey of anthropological interests in the study of language and of linguistic interests in the sociocultural context of language.

  
  • ANTH 422 - Music and Culture


    Units: 3 GE

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 102 .

    How the forms, functions and meanings of music vary crossculturally. Understanding a society’s music historically, holistically and experientially, with emphasis on non-Western music. Universals of music and music use. Ethnological theories of music and music change.

    Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.

  
  • ANTH 424 - The Supernatural in Cross-Cultural Perspective


    Units: 3 GE

    Same As: REL S 424  
    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 102 .

    Magic and religion. Conceptions of the supernatural in a cross section of world’s cultures. Anthropological theories relating to supernatural beliefs and practices.

    Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.

  
  • ANTH 439 - Cultural Comparisons Through Film


    Units: 3 GE

    Principles of cultural anthropology to include signs and proxemics, cultural prerequisites, kinship and social organization, and law and values. Feature and documentary films.

    Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.

  
  • ANTH 440 - Mesoamerican Civilization Before the Europeans


    Units: 3 GE

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 102 .

    Pre-European cultures and civilizations of Mexico and upper Central America from 25,000 years ago to arrival of Spanish in 1517. Regional histories, economies, social organizations, ideologies, and political systems, settlement patterns, architecture, and art.

    Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.

  
  • ANTH 442 - Cultures of South America


    Units: 3 GE

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 102 .

    Indian cultures in terms of origins, migration, relation to habitat, cultural variation and relevance to contemporary trends. Development of Inca civilization, the effects of the Spanish conquest and its aftermath.

    Note: This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.

  
  • ANTH 443 - Anthropology of Violence


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 102 .

    Individual and collective acts of armed violence in variety of historical and cultural settings. Structural violence with attention to how poverty and inequality are related to violence and suffering. Warfare and aggression on the part of colonial powers and the modern state.

  
  • ANTH 445 - Culture, Gender, and Race in Sports


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 102 .

    Intersection of culture, gender, and race through sports in Europe, Latin America, and North America at amateur, community-based, and professional levels. Consideration of sports’ participation and fandom and how gender, nationality, and race affect those processes.

  
  • ANTH 451 - American Indian Identity


    Units: 3 GE

    Same As: AMIND 451  
    Multidisciplinary perspectives on American Indian identity today. Topics include perspectives from political, ethnic, cultural and legal standpoints, both within and outside of indigenous communities, as well as diachronic variation in perspectives.

    Note: This course satisfies the ethnic studies [ES] requirement.

  
  • ANTH 460 - American Indian Languages


    Units: 3 GE

    Same As: AMIND 460  and LING 460  
    Structures of American Indian languages. Language families of North America, history, and present circumstances. Interdependence of language and culture, differences in ways of speaking. Issues of language endangerment, language death, language maintenance, and language revitalization.

    Note: This course satisfies the ethnic studies [ES] requirement.

  
  • ANTH 471 - Archaeology of North America


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 101  or ANTH 102 .

    Origins of the American Indian and survey of the main prehistoric cultures of the North American continent.

  
  • ANTH 483 - Topics in Anthropology


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 101  or ANTH 102  and upper division standing.

    Archeological, biological, linguistic, or sociocultural dimensions of anthropology. May be repeated with new content. Maximum Credits: six units.

    Note: See Class Schedule for specific content.

  
  • ANTH 495 - Internship in Applied Anthropology


    Units: 1-3

    Grading Method: Cr/NC

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 301 , ANTH 302 , ANTH 303 , ANTH 304 .

    Supervised field placement of students in campus or community organization, museums, cultural resource management firms, social service and development agencies, forensic laboratories and other offices including business firms where concepts and principles of anthropology can be put into practice. May be repeated for maximum credit three units.

  
  • ANTH 496 - 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.

  
  • ANTH 499 - Special Study


    Units: 1-3

    Prerequisite(s): Consent of instructor.

    Individual study. Maximum Credits: six units.

  
  • ANTH 501 - Primate Behavioral Ecology


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 301 .

    Ecology and behavior of nonhuman primates to include history of primate ecological research, feeding ecology, predation, demography and dispersal, reproduction, conflict and cooperation, conservation as well as contemporary primatology.

  
  • ANTH 505 - Human Osteology


    Units: 3

    Two lectures and three hours of laboratory.

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 301 .

    Identification of individual bones and teeth; sex, age, and racial variation; stature reconstruction; continuous and discontinuous morphological variations; paleopathology. Training in observations, measurements, and analyses.

  
  • ANTH 508 - Medical Anthropology


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 303 .

    Socio-cultural ecology of disease, medical health beliefs and practices in cultural context, and complexities of health care delivery in pluralistic societies.

  
  • ANTH 510 - Environmental and Ecological Anthropology


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 303 .

    Ecological thinking in anthropology with focus on relationships between human environmental and ecological systems in tribal, peasant, and industrial societies. Cultural aspects of how and why human societies have maintained or undermined their ecosystems.

  
  • ANTH 520 - Ethnographic Field Methods


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 303 .

    Problems and techniques of field work in ethnographic and social anthropological research; field work projects conducted using various qualitative and quantitative research techniques. Students work with informants in various settings.

  
  • ANTH 529 - Urban Anthropology


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 303 .

    Urban adaptations of past and present societies. Descriptive topics and applied concerns regarding urban origins, migrations, kinship, ethnicity, stratification, and change. Ethnographic examples drawn from Western and non-Western societies.

  
  • ANTH 531 - Methods in Applied Anthropology


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 303 .

    Anthropological concepts and methodologies to solve human problems in both western and non-western societies through intervention, community development, impact assessment, and cultural communication.

  
  • ANTH 532 - Anthropology of Development and Conservation


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 303 .

    Anthropological perspectives on design, implementation, and assessment of development projects and conservation initiatives in “Third World.” Interlinkages between resource exploitation, underdevelopment, and local autonomy; and political and ethical dilemmas faced by anthropologists involved in projects.

  
  • ANTH 533 - Race, Ethnicity, and Identity


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 303 .

    Theories and practices of race, ethnicity, and identity from a cross-cultural and anthropological perspective. History of race in US and other regions, focusing on how identities are constructed around concepts of difference.

  
  • ANTH 536 - Gender and Human Sexuality


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 303 .

    Constructions of gender and sexuality from anthropological perspective. Social constructions of body, norms, deviance, and medicalization of sexuality.

  
  • ANTH 537 - Anthropology of Childhood


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 303 .

    Childhood in diverse cultural settings; evolutionary, biosocial, and health-related aspects of childhood; social and cultural uses of idea of childhood; enculturation and children’s relationship to material culture.

  
  • ANTH 560 - Advanced Archaeological Field Techniques


    Units: 3

    Six hours of activity.

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 312 .

    Advanced projects in excavation and stabilization of ruins, archaeological surveys, laboratory analysis, preparation of reports, and act as unit supervisor. Course may be repeated with consent of instructor. Maximum Credits: six units.

  
  • ANTH 561 - Archaeological Laboratory Methods


    Units: 3

    Two lectures and three hours of laboratory.

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 302 .

    Application of palynology, paleontology, and relevant technologies. Individual laboratory research project required.

  
  • ANTH 562 - Computational Archaeology


    Units: 3

    Two lectures and three hours of laboratory.

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 302  or graduate standing.

    Computational spatial research in anthropology and archaeology to include applications of computer modeling, digital imagery analysis, and geographic information systems.

  
  • ANTH 563 - Anthropogenic Landscapes


    Units: 3

    Two lectures and two hours of activity.

    Prerequisite(s): ANTH 302 .

    Human activity that has shaped the Earth’s surface over time. Past human impacts to include geo-archaeology and laboratory analyses of anthropogenic sediments.

  
  • ANTH 582 - Regional Anthropology


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): Consent of instructor.

    Study of societies in a major geographical region of the world such as Africa, the Arctic, East Asia, Europe, Latin America, the Middle East, North America, Oceania, or South Asia. May be repeated with new content. Maximum Credits: six units.

    Note: See Class Schedule for specific content.

  
  • ANTH 583 - Topical Anthropology


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): Consent of instructor.

    Study of a major subdiscipline such as political anthropology, economic anthropology, social anthropology, psychological anthropology, cultural ecology, applied anthropology, anthropological genetics, or environmental archaeology. May be repeated with new content. Maximum Credits: six units.

    Note: See Class Schedule for specific content.

  
  • ANTH 596 - Topics in Anthropology


    Units: 1-3

    Prerequisite(s): Consent of instructor.

    Advanced topics in anthropology. 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. Credit for 596 and 696 applicable to a master’s degree with approval of the graduate adviser.

  
  • ANTH 600 - Seminar


    Units: 3

    An intensive study in advanced anthropology. Maximum Credits: six units applicable to a master’s degree.

    Note: See Class Schedule for specific content.

  
  • ANTH 601 - Seminar in Biological Anthropology


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): Classified graduate standing.

    History, theory, and current research in biological anthropology. Key literature from core topical areas such as primatology, paleoanthropology, human biology, bioarchaeology, and skeletal biology.

  
  • ANTH 602 - Seminar in Archaeology


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): Classified graduate standing.

    History and theory in archaeological data collection, analysis, and interpretation.

  
  • ANTH 603 - Seminar in Ethnology


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): Classified graduate standing.

    History and theory in ethnology stressing the significant literature on such topics as cross-cultural comparison, structural-functional analysis and description, personality and culture, and sociocultural change.

  
  • ANTH 604 - Seminar in Linguistics


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): Classified graduate standing.

    History and theory of linguistics stressing the significant literature on such topics as cultural cognition, descriptive linguistics, lexicostatistics, and transformational analysis.

  
  • ANTH 605 - Seminar in Applied Anthropology


    Units: 3

    Prerequisite(s): Classified graduate standing.

    Use of anthropological theory and methods in solving contemporary social problems. Contemporary ethnographic examples from differing regions of the world reviewed to understand complexity and locally specific variables that must be addressed in proposing interventions and solutions.

  
  • ANTH 795 - Internship in Anthropology


    Units: 3-9

    Grading Method: Cr/NC

    Prerequisite(s): Classified graduate standing and consent of instructor.

    Students assigned to various government and private agencies in which anthropological theory can be applied. Supervision shared by department supervisor and on-the-job supervisor. Maximum Credits: nine units; three units applicable to a master’s degree.

  
  • ANTH 797 - Research


    Units: 3

    Grading Method: Cr/NC/RP

    Prerequisite(s): Classified graduate standing.

    Independent investigation in the general field of the thesis.

  
  • ANTH 798 - Special Study


    Units: 1-3

    Grading Method: Cr/NC/RP

    Prerequisite(s): Classified graduate standing.

    Individual study directed toward the preparation of a paper on a specific problem. May be repeated with variable content. Maximum Credits: three units applicable to a master’s degree.

  
  • ANTH 799A - Thesis


    Units: 3

    Grading Method: Cr/NC/RP

    Prerequisite(s): An officially appointed thesis committee and advancement to candidacy.

    Preparation of a project or thesis for the master’s degree.

  
  • ANTH 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.


Arabic

  
  • ARAB 101 - Elementary Arabic I


    Units: 4 GE

    Four lectures plus laboratory.

    Introduction to Arabic, with emphasis on language of everyday conversation. Focus on vocabulary and structures needed for elementary speaking, listening, and reading.

    Note: Not open to students with credit in ARAB 102 , ARAB 201 , or ARAB 202 . Taught in Arabic. Native speakers of Arabic will not receive credit for taking lower division courses in Arabic except with advance approval from the department. No credit will be given for lower division courses taken after successfully completing any upper division Arabic course taken in Arabic. No credit will be given for Arabic 101, ARAB 102 , ARAB 201 , ARAB 202  taken out of sequence.

  
  • ARAB 102 - Elementary Arabic II


    Units: 4 GE

    Four lectures plus laboratory.

    Prerequisite(s): ARAB 101  or two years of high school Arabic.

    Continuation of ARAB 101 . Develops vocabulary and structures needed for elementary speaking, listening, and reading, with emphasis on the language of everyday conversation.

    Note: Not open to students with credit in ARAB 201  or ARAB 202 . Taught in Arabic. Native speakers of Arabic will not receive credit for taking lower division courses in Arabic except with advance approval from the department. No credit will be given for lower division courses taken after successfully completing any upper division Arabic course taken in Arabic. No credit will be given for ARAB 101 , 102, ARAB 201 , ARAB 202  taken out of sequence.

  
  • ARAB 201 - Intermediate Arabic I


    Units: 4 GE

    Four lectures plus laboratory.

    Prerequisite(s): ARAB 102 .

    Further development of speaking, listening, reading, and writing skills, with emphasis on the language of everyday conversation.

    Note: Not open to students with credit in ARAB 202 . Taught in Arabic. Native speakers of Arabic will not receive credit for taking lower division courses in Arabic except with advance approval from the department. No credit will be given for lower division courses taken after successfully completing any upper division Arabic course taken in Arabic. No credit will be given for ARAB 101 , ARAB 102 , 201, ARAB 202  taken out of sequence.

  
  • ARAB 202 - Intermediate Arabic II


    Units: 4 GE

    Four lectures plus laboratory.

    Prerequisite(s): ARAB 201 .

    Further development of speaking, listening, reading, and writing skills, with emphasis on the language of everyday conversation.

    Note: Taught in Arabic. Native speakers of Arabic will not receive credit for taking lower division courses in Arabic except with advance approval from the department. No credit will be given for lower division courses taken after successfully completing any upper division Arabic course taken in Arabic. No credit will be given for ARAB 101 , ARAB 102 , ARAB 201 , 202 taken out of sequence.

  
  • ARAB 296 - Topics in Arabic Studies


    Units: 1-4

    Topics in Arabic language, culture, and linguistics. 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 Arabic. Native speakers of Arabic will not receive credit for taking lower division courses in Arabic except with advance approval from the department. No credit will be given for lower division courses taken after successfully completing any upper division Arabic course taken in Arabic.

  
  • ARAB 301 - Advanced Arabic I


    Units: 4 GE

    Four lectures plus laboratory.

    Prerequisite(s): ARAB 202 .

    Advanced facility in oral expression and writing for practical purposes; exposure to various dialects through newspaper and media Arabic; elements of literary and classical language.

    Note: Taught in Arabic. No credit will be given for lower division courses taken after successfully completing any upper division Arabic course taken in Arabic. No credit will be given for Arabic 301, ARAB 302  taken out of sequence.

  
  • ARAB 302 - Advanced Arabic II


    Units: 4 GE

    Four lectures plus laboratory.

    Prerequisite(s): ARAB 301 .

    Continuation of ARAB 301 . More advanced writing and longer expository texts. Reading modern and classical texts.

    Note: Taught in Arabic. No credit will be given for lower division courses taken after successfully completing any upper division Arabic course taken in Arabic. No credit will be given for ARAB 301 , 302 taken out of sequence.

  
  • ARAB 330 - Arabic Culture


    Units: 3 GE

    Prerequisite(s): Upper division standing.

    Cultures of Arabic speaking peoples of the Near East, Middle East, and North Africa, as reflected in literature, the arts, history, political and social institutions.

    Note: Taught in English. No credit will be given for lower division courses taken after successfully completing any upper division Arabic course taken in Arabic. This course satisfies the general education cultural diversity requirement.

 

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