Curricular Items

Curricular Actions

Posted:

From the President
I have approved the following curricular items, which have been recommended by the appropriate dean, the College Senate, and the provost:

New Course:
SLP 625 Advanced Topics and Issues in Communication Sciences and Disorders

Course Revisions:
CIS 400 Visual Basic Programming for the Windows Environment
HIS 355 History of Culture of Argentina
MAT 103 Introduction to Mathematics

New Course and Intellectual Foundations Designation:
WESTERN CIVILIZATION 
PHI 347 Western Thought: Homer to Alexander

Course Revisions and Intellectual Foundations Designations:
ORAL COMMUNICATION
ECO 490 Senior Seminar
HIS 300W Research and Writing in History Seminar

Intellectual Foundations Designation:
DIVERSITY
ANT 301 Indigenous Peoples of Eastern North America

Curricular Items

Curricular Items

Posted:

From the Chair of the Senate Curriculum Committee

Advanced to the President
The following have been approved by the Senate Curriculum Committee and forwarded to the president for review and approval:

Program Revisions:
B.A. Political Science (0722)
B.S. Biology Education (7–12) (0631)
B.S. Biology Education (7–12; 5–6 Extension) (0630)

Postbaccalaureate Teacher Certification Biology Education (7–12) (7013)
Postbaccalaureate Teacher Certification Biology Education (7–12; 5–6 Extension) (7016)

New Courses:
CRJ 350 Advanced Intelligence Analysis
CRJ 450 Terrorism and Criminal Justice
SCI 545 Literacy for Teaching Science

Course Revisions:
ENG 322 Representative Writers
ENG 335 Medieval and Renaissance European Literature

Curricular Items

Curricular Action

Posted:

From the President
I have approved the following curricular item, which has been recommended by the appropriate dean, the College Senate, and the provost:

Course Revision:
ENT 422 Machine Design II

Curricular Items

Curricular Actions

Posted:

From the President
I have approved the following curricular items, which have been recommended by the appropriate dean, the College Senate, and the provost:

Program Revisions:
B.A. Political Science (0722)
B.S. Biology Education (7–12) (0631)
B.S. Biology Education (7–12; 5–6 Extension) (0630)
Postbaccalaureate Teacher Certification Biology Education (7–12) (7013)
Postbaccalaureate Teacher Certification Biology Education (7–12; 5–6 Extension) (7016)

New Courses:
CRJ 350 Advanced Intelligence Analysis
CRJ 450 Terrorism and Criminal Justice
SCI 545 Literacy for Teaching Science

Course Revisions:
ENG 322 Representative Writers
ENG 335 Medieval and Renaissance European Literature

Curricular Items

Curricular Items

Posted:

From the Chair of the Senate Curriculum Committee

Advanced to the Curriculum Committee
The following have been received in the College Senate Office and forwarded to the Senate Curriculum Committee for review and approval:

Program Revisions:
B.S. Applied Sociology (0732)
M.S.Ed. Speech-Language Pathology (6322)

Minor in Coaching (1008)

New Course:
SLP 625 Advanced Topics and Issues in Communication Sciences and Disorders.Prerequisite: Graduate status in speech-language pathology program. In-depth examination of contemporary professional and clinical topics, and new and emerging issues in the field of communication sciences and disorders. Relevant, timely course content will vary to keep pace with current issues that have an impact on the discipline.

New Course and Intellectual Foundations Designation:
WESTERN CIVILIZATION
PHI 347 Western Thought: Homer to Alexander.Prerequisites: CWP 101 and CWP 102. The development of Hellenic and Hellenistic thought and its influence on the modern world. Examination of tensions between naturalistic, conventional, and religious worldviews. Special emphasis on the role such tensions played in the development of philosophy.

Course Revision and Intellectual Foundations Designation:
WESTERN CIVILIZATION
REL 121 Introduction to Jewish Thought.Examination of basic Judaism, major trends in Jewish thought, the Bible, and its influence on Western Civilization; Jewish ideas of God, time, Messiah, and history and their influence on Western Civilization.

Advanced to the President
The following has been approved by the Senate Curriculum Committee and forwarded to the president for review and approval:

New Course:
EDU 500 Practicum in Childhood Education

Curricular Items

Curricular Items

Posted:

From the Chair of the Senate Curriculum Committee

CORRECTION APPENDED

Advanced to the Curriculum Committee
The following have been received in the College Senate Office and forwarded to the Senate Curriculum Committee for review and approval:

New Program:
Advanced Certificate in Public Management

Program Revision:
M.S.Ed. Special Education: Adolescence (6342)

New Courses:
ADE 631 Issues in Adult Literacy Education.Prerequisites: Graduate status; admission to the adult education master’s degree program. Examining the adult literacy education system in the United States from historical and current perspectives. Exploring the research, theory, and professional wisdom of the field. Understanding the differentiation among the various adult literacy education content areas and the diverse contexts in which instruction is delivered. Reflecting upon, discussing, and critiquing the current policy, instructional, philosophical, and social issues that affect the adult literacy education field. Conceptualizing and contrasting the various definitions of literacy.

GEG 409 Industrial Geography. Prerequisites: Upper-division status. The manufacturing sector, firms, and industrial location process and activities that have taken place in the United States; production methods and processes; industrial districts and the principal factors that affect the locations of firms; local and regional development; globalization.

GEG 529 Advanced Topics in GIS. Prerequisites: GEG 425 or GEG 525 and GEG 390 or equivalent statistics course. Builds on topics covered in GEG 525, focusing more on digital representation of the human and physical environment, including location referencing from a human perspective, database design, data quality issues (how to identify and document errors), spatial statistical analysis using GIS, the fourth dimension (time) in GIS, and understanding spatial analysis algorithms and models. Introduces programming in a GIS environment.

Course Revisions:
ANT 321 Primatology. Prerequisite: ANT 100 or instructor permission. Study of living prosimians, monkeys, and apes, including taxonomy, social organization, feeding and ranging, community ecology, and conservation; field studies of natural populations.

ANT 324 The Human Skeleton. Hands-on experience with natural human skeletons to learn all bones, landmarks, and features of the bones; how to determine the side of the body the bone came from, determine if a bone is from a male or female, estimate age at death, and estimate stature of the individual.

BIO 498 Honors Research. Prerequisites: BIO 211, BIO 212, and BIO 213; completion of 70 or more credit hours; minimum GPA of 3.4 in biology major and minimum cumulative GPA of 3.0. Independent investigation of an original scientific problem, completed over two semesters with transition to the second semester dependent upon satisfactory completion of research proposal during the first semester. Submission of a final written report of investigation and an oral presentation of work at a scientific meeting.

CNS 612 Conservation Science: Polarized Light Microscopy, Light and Matter. Prerequisite: CNS 610/611. Corequisite: CNS 613. Introduction to aspects of the elements of light, color, and optics as they pertain to polarized light microscopy in the field of art conservation; principles of optical microscopy; how light interacts with matter, especially as it applies to the appearance of art and cultural objects.

CNS 613 Conservation Science: Polarized Light Microscopy, Light and Matter Laboratory.Prerequisite: CNS 610/611. Corequisite: CNS 612.Expands on lectures in CNS 612 by providing practice of laboratory applications related to treatment and analysis of works of art; focus on the use of polarized light microscopy and microchemical testing of materials found in works of art and cultural artifacts.

CNS 614 Conservation Science: Inorganic Materials in Art and Conservation. Prerequisite: CNS 612/613. Corequisite: CNS 615. Specialized understanding of inorganic materials with an emphasis on alternative scientific techniques used for their investigation (i.e., scanning electron microscopy, x-ray fluorescence analysis, x-ray diffraction). Material is presented at a level that prepares students to use the equipment at a basic level, or to communicate effectively with professional scientists who run the equipment.

CNS 615 Conservation Science: Inorganic Materials in Art and Conservation Laboratory.Prerequisite: CNS 612/613. Corequisite: CNS 614.Expands on lectures in CNS 614 and provides students with practice laboratory applications related to treatment and analysis of works of art. Focus on the use of polarized light microscopy and microchemical testing of materials found in works of art and cultural artifacts.

CNS 630 Technology and Conservation of Works of Art on Paper I. Corequisite: CNS 631. The structure and fabrication of paper and the media commonly found in works of art on paper, photographs, and books; examination and identification of paper and media; causes and effects of deterioration in paper and media; student writes and defends the examination report for a work of art on paper.

CNS 631 Technology and Conservation of Works of Art on Paper I Laboratory. Corequisite: CNS 630.Studio recreations of paper and the media found in art on paper using historical recipes and techniques; identifications of media and sheets found in works of art on paper; rudimentary repairs on a variety of papers.

CNS 632 Technology and Conservation of Works of Art on Paper II. Prerequisites: CNS 630 and CNS 631. Corequisite: CNS 633. History and theory of basic techniques in paper conservation (washing, deacidification/neutralization, tape removal, lining, adhesives, compensation of losses, formats for storage, etc.); hands-on practice of these and other techniques on mock-ups.

CNS 633 Technology and Conservation of Works of Art on Paper II Laboratory. Prerequisites: CNS 630 and CNS 631. Corequisite: CNS 632. Treatment of the first project in paper conservation under the close supervision of the faculty; a second project is assigned for examination and documentation.

CNS 634 Technology and Conservation of Works of Art on Paper III Laboratory. Prerequisites: CNS 630/631 and CNS 632/633. First advanced course in paper conservation allows the student to examine and treat a wider variety of media, paper, and conservation problems. Independent decision making and problem solving is encouraged. Short research projects are also possible.

CNS 636 Technology and Conservation of Works of Art on Paper IV. Prerequisite: CNS 634. Final course in the series of treatment courses for the paper conservation specialist; intended to allow the student to examine and treat a wider variety of media, paper, and conservation problems. Independent decision making and problem solving are required. Short research projects are needed for each treatment.

ENG 444 The American Novel after 1900.Prerequisites: ENG 190 and 3 credit hours of literature, or instructor permission. Representative American novels after 1900. Includes major modes of American fiction and the relationships among them. Historical, social, and artistic developments of the twentieth century.

MAT 127 Applied Calculus II. Prerequisite: MAT 126 with a minimum grade of C, or equivalent. Continuation of MAT 126. Techniques of integration; applications of integration; introduction to differential equations including separation of variables, first order linear equations, and their applications; Taylor polynomials; Newton’s method; partial derivatives; and optimization of functions of two and three variables. Graphical, symbolic, numerical, and verbal representations are used for all topics. Designed for students majoring in disciplines that use calculus as a tool. Credit issued for either MAT 127 or MAT 162 (or equivalents), but not for both.

Course Revisions and Intellectual Foundations Designations:

MATHEMATICS AND QUANTITATIVE REASONING
MAT 124 Functions and Modeling II. Prerequisite: MAT 114 with a minimum grade of C, or equivalent. A precalculus course designed for students who have completed a minimum of three years of New York State Regents high school mathematics or the equivalent. Topics include analysis of polynomial, rational, exponential, logarithmic, and trigonometric functions from graphical, symbolic, numerical, and verbal perspectives with an emphasis on modeling and applications of those functions in real-world contexts. No credit given to students who have previously completed MAT 126 or MAT 161 or equivalent.

ORAL COMMUNICATION
MAT 491 Capstone Research in Mathematics.Prerequisites: MAT 301, MAT 417, and senior status, or instructor permission. Independent research under the direction of the instructor. Composition of a research paper and presentation of results at a seminar for faculty and students.

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Advanced to the President
The following have been approved by the Senate Curriculum Committee and forwarded to the president for review and approval:

New Program:
Minor in International Relations

Program Revision:
B.A. Mathematics (0718)

New Courses:
CRJ 250 Introduction to Intelligence Analysis 
SCI 505 Science Teaching in High Needs Schools(formerly Inquiry and Urban Science Teaching)
SCI 635 Nature of Science

Course Revisions:
MAT 162 Calculus II
PSC 250 Introduction to Law

SCI 664 Teaching Science with Technology

Course Revision and Intellectual Foundation Designation:
NATURAL SCIENCE
PHY 103 Understanding Sound

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Correction: February 26, 2009
The original version of this article, published February 19, incorrectly recorded SCI 505 and SCI 635 as Course Revisions.

Curricular Items

Curricular Items

Posted:

From the Chair of the Senate Curriculum Committee

CORRECTION APPENDED

Correction
SCI 505 and SCI 635, both recorded as Course Revisions in the February 19, 2009, issue of the Bulletin,should have been identified as New Courses.

Advanced to the Senate Curriculum Committee
The following have been received in the College Senate Office and forwarded to the Senate Curriculum Committee for review and approval:

Program Revisions: 
B.A. in Art (0105)
B.F.A. in Painting (0155)
B.F.A. in Photography (0160)
B.F.A. in Printmaking (0165)
B.F.A. in Sculpture (0170)
M.A. English (5610)

New Courses:
CHE 570 Biochemical Principles I. Prerequisites: CHE 202; BIO 211 recommended; not open to students who have taken CHE 470 or equivalent. Molecular structure and function of the four major classes of biomolecules: proteins, nucleic acids, lipids, and carbohydrates. Enzyme kinetics, mechanism, and regulation. Molecular nature of DNA replication; introduction to recombinant DNA technology.

FAR 104 Themes and Issues in the Contemporary Arts. Introduction to important figures, movements, and concepts in recent art, architecture, and design. Develops students’ abilities to visually analyze works of art and to think critically about the role of art and the artist/designer in society. To be taken by all visual arts majors during their first year attending Buffalo State College.

HIS 418 Food and Global History. Prerequisite: Upper-division status. How food has influenced human society from hunter-gatherer societies to the present. Food rituals, famines, food and spice trade, national identity. How cultures from Asia, Africa, Europe, and the Americas understood their relationship to food.

New Courses and Intellectual Foundations Designations:

NATURAL SCIENCE
ANT 220 Case Studies in Physical Anthropology.Introduction to physical anthropology through detailed examination of exemplary case studies covering a broad range of topics in physical anthropology. The process of inquiry in physical anthropology, including initial conception of the research question, methodology, results, and conclusions. Ethics of physical anthropology research.

ORAL COMMUNICATION
PHI 351 Ethics Bowl. Prerequisite: One PHI course or instructor permission. Preparation for a competition in which students are judged on their ability to deploy intricate ethical reasoning in addressing case studies from practical and professional ethics. Students develop well-informed opinions about ethically complex, everyday scenarios, orally present these opinions and supporting arguments, and provide critical oral responses to the opinions and arguments of other students and judges. Some students compete in the regional and/or national Intercollegiate Ethics Bowl, others in the Buffalo State Ethics Bowl.

TECHNOLOGY AND SOCIETY
ANT 400 Ancient Materials. Prerequisite: ANT 329 or instructor permission. The study of technology and production in its broadest sense. Raw materials used to create material culture as defined archaeologically, such as stone, bone, wood, clay, and metal. Datasets from ethnographic and archaeological films and reports; hands-on experimental archaeology projects. How archaeologists use material culture as evidence for past human behavior, e.g., measurement of lithic flakes, creating typologies of ceramic sherds.

WORLD CIVILIZATIONS
HIS 465 Imperialism in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Prerequisites: Upper-division status or instructor permission. Imperialism in Asia and Africa through decolonization. Political and economic motives for acquiring colonies. Historiography of imperialism. Colonial administration and economic exploitation. Role of missionaries. Colonial culture and society. Women and imperialism. Collaboration, complicity, and resistance among indigenous peoples. Colonial nationalism and decolonization.

Course Revision: 
ENG 337 Modern European Literature. Prerequisite: ENG 190 or instructor permission. Selected themes, ideas, and movements of European literature from the Renaissance to postmodernity.

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Correction: March 5, 2009
The original version of this announcement, published February 26, incorrectly recorded ANT 220 and ANT 400 as New Courses only.

Curricular Items

Curricular Actions

Posted:

From the President
I have approved the following curricular items, which have been recommended by the appropriate dean, the College Senate, and the provost: 

New Program:
Minor in International Relations

Program Revision:
B.A. Mathematics (0718) 

New Courses:
CRJ 250 Introduction to Intelligence Analysis
EDU 500 Practicum in Childhood Education
SCI 505 Inquiry and Urban Science Teaching
SCI 635 Nature of Science

Course Revisions:
MAT 162 Calculus II
PSC 250 Introduction to Law
SCI 664 Teaching Science with Technology

Course Revision and Intellectual Foundations Designation:
NATURAL SCIENCE
PHY 103 Understanding Sound

Curricular Items

Curricular Items

Posted:

From the Chair of the Senate Curriculum Committee

Advanced to the Curriculum Committee
The following have been received in the College Senate Office and forwarded to the Senate Curriculum Committee for review and approval:

New Programs:
Minor in International Relations 
Minor in Legal Studies 
Minor in Philosophy 

New Courses:
CRJ 350 Advanced Intelligence Analysis.Prerequisite: CRJ 250. Advanced-level continuation of CRJ 250. Introduces a variety of analytical techniques; provides advanced knowledge, understanding, and application of these techniques; promotes critical thinking and report-writing skills.

CRJ 450 Terrorism and Criminal Justice.Prerequisite: CRJ 101. The phenomenon of terrorism from a criminal justice perspective. The history of the phenomenon and contemporary terrorism in both its domestic and international manifestations; theories about terrorism; analytic methods for investigating and combating it, whether perpetrated by state or non-state actors.

ENT 409 Engineering Sustainability. Prerequisite: ENT 311. Development of guiding principles and concepts for mechanical engineering designs in the areas of energy, transport, material selection, waste, structural change, climate policy, and eco-efficiency; exposure to sustainability problems faced by industry.

MET 605 Early Engineering Internship. Prerequisite: Instructor permission or MET graduate standing.Mechanical engineering internship; ethical manufacturing and design considerations; development of oral and written communication skills; technical/non-technical presentation development; multidisciplinary team environment; techniques for developing and analyzing physical and mathematical models of mechanical and electromechanical systems.

MET 611 Advanced Engineering Modeling.Prerequisite: ENT 314 or instructor permission. Three-dimensional (3-D) parts and assembly creation; mathematical modeling of mechanical and electromechanical systems; parametric modeling; 3-D solid modeling; simulation of prototype behavior; introduction to finite element concepts.

MET 615 Sustainability in Design. Prerequisites: ENT 409 or instructor permission and MET graduate standing.Sustainable manufacturing and its relationship to larger issues of global warming, energy independence, and social impact; sustainable manufacturing practices in for-profit enterprises; continuous improvement using sustainability thinking; techniques and tools for product and manufacturing process design and development; techniques for effective communication about sustainability to internal and external audiences.

MET 620 Managing Engineering. Prerequisite: Instructor permission or MET graduate standing. Cost and time estimating and controlling techniques for projects; evaluation of labor, material, equipment, and subcontract resources; scheduling techniques; earned value concepts; measuring project percent complete; contractual risk allocation; project investment analysis techniques.

MET 630 Lean Manufacturing/Six Sigma.Prerequisite: Instructor permission or MET graduate standing. Students develop a broad understanding of Lean/Six Sigma principles and practices, build capability to implement Lean/Six Sigma initiatives in manufacturing operations, and learn to operate with awareness of Lean/Six Sigma at the enterprise level.

MET 675 Advanced Engineering System Design.Prerequisite: MET 605. Application of design concepts in mechanical engineering; conceptual and detailed design process stages; problem definition; design specifications; categorization of designs; modeling and analysis methods; design optimization; economics; reliability; sustainability; intellectual property; manufacturing considerations in design.

MET 685 Advanced Engineering System Design.Prerequisite: MET 675. Design problem identification and solution development; critical/creative problem solving methods; written/oral presentation and interpersonal communications development; ethical considerations for product design and manufacturing processes; project management strategies.

PHI 601 Ethics in Professional Applied Sciences.Ethical theories and professional ethics in the applied sciences. Ethical reasoning and its application to practical problems. Ethical issues in fields such as computer science, engineering, genetics, and ecology.

SLP 400 Language and Literacy. Prerequisite: SLP 303/329. Connection between language and literacy; similarities and differences between spoken and written language; linguistic components as well as spelling, narratives, and writing as they relate to literacy skills; role of the speech-language pathologist as it pertains to working with children with language-based literacy impairments.

Course Revisions:
ENG 322 Representative Writers. Prerequisite: ENG 190 or instructor permission. Selected works of a single writer or group of related writers. Supplemental readings of other writers of the period.

ENG 335 Medieval and Renaissance European Literature. Prerequisite: ENG 190 or instructor permission. A study of selected themes, ideas, and movements of European literature in the medieval and Renaissance periods.

MAT 103 Introduction to Mathematics. Some of the greatest achievements of mathematical thought, highlighting the beauty and creativity of these ideas. Topics include Fibonacci numbers; the golden rectangle; estimation; comparing infinities; fractals; the Pythagorean Theorem; the five platonic solids; and selected topics from probability and statistics. Designed for liberal arts majors who do not plan to take further math courses.

Course Revisions and Intellectual Foundations Designations:

DIVERSITY
ANT 301 Indigenous Peoples of Eastern North America. Prerequisite: ANT 100 or instructor permission. Way of life of the original inhabitants of Eastern North America. Reconstructing life during the sixteenth, seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries using archaeology, historical documents, and oral tradition (i.e., ethnohistory). Early-seventeenth-century Wendat/Huron, Haudenosaunee/Five Nation Iroquois, and Powhatan confederacies; Cherokee in the mid-nineteenth century; effects of European exploration and colonization; persistence of indigenous Eastern North American peoples in the modern world.

NATURAL SCIENCE
PHY 103 Understanding Sound. The basics of sound, intended for non-science majors. Wave characteristics and behavior, applied to sonic phenomena. Interfaces of sound with humans and society (music, hearing, sound production and recording).

ORAL COMMUNICATION
HIS 300W Research and Writing in History Seminar. Prerequisites: ENG 101 and ENG 102. History and Social Studies Education majors only. Recommended before the completion of 45 credit hours. In-depth instruction on the historical methods of research and writing according to the standards of the history profession. Students research, analyze, and interpret historical materials, provide documentation, and communicate lucidly and effectively in writing. Should be taken before enrolling in other upper-division history courses.

MED 407 Student Teaching of Mathematics in Junior High/Middle School. Prerequisites for 0721 and 7055: Completion of MED 308 with a minimum grade of C; completion of MED 300 with a minimum grade of C; GPA of 2.5 in all mathematics courses applied toward the major; all required mathematics classes completed; two elective mathematics courses completed; all professional courses completed with a minimum GPA of 2.5; senior status; and instructor permission. Prerequisites for 0524: Completion of MED 309 with a minimum grade of C; GPA of 2.5 in all mathematics courses applied toward the major; all professional courses completed with a GPA of 2.5; all required mathematics courses completed; senior status; and instructor permission. Supervised teaching experience five full days a week for approximately eight consecutive weeks in an early secondary mathematics classroom. Effective demonstration of content knowledge, pedagogical preparation, instructional delivery, classroom management, knowledge of student development, collaboration with school professionals, and reflectivity of practice required.

MED 408 Student Teaching of Mathematics in High School. Prerequisites for 0721 and 7055: Completion of MED 308 with a minimum grade of C; completion of MED 300 with a minimum grade of C; GPA of 2.5 in all mathematics courses applied toward the major; all required mathematics classes completed; two elective mathematics courses completed; all professional courses completed with a minimum GPA of 2.5; senior status; and instructor permission. Supervised teaching experience five full days a week for approximately eight consecutive weeks in an early secondary mathematics classroom. Effective demonstration of content knowledge, pedagogical preparation, instructional delivery, classroom management, knowledge of student development, collaboration with school professionals, and reflectivity of practice required.

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Advanced to the President
The following have been approved by the Senate Curriculum Committee and forwarded to the president for review and approval:

Program Revision:
M.S.Ed. Childhood and Early Childhood Education, Including Initial Teaching Certification (6212)(new title)

New Course:
SCI 502 Secondary Science Education Teaching: Theory, Content, and Pedagogy

New Course and Intellectual Foundations Designation:
HUMANITIES
ENG 212 Survey of British Literature III

Course Revision:
CRJ 201 Criminal Law

Course Revisions and Intellectual Foundations Designations:
DIVERSITY and HUMANITIES
ENG 241 African American Literature Since 1940

ORAL COMMUNICATION
CRJ 303 Criminal Justice Theory and Ideology
CRJ 470 Advanced Seminar in Criminal Justice

Correction
ENG 380, appearing in the December 11, 2008, Bulletin,was approved by the president in March 2008.

Curricular Items

Curricular Actions

Posted:

From the President
I have approved the following curricular items, which have been recommended by the appropriate dean, the College Senate, and the provost:

New Course:
HPR 309 Health Sciences for Coaching

Course Revisions and Intellectual Foundations Designations:
ORAL COMMUNICATION
SSE 409 Student Teaching of the Social Studies in the Middle School
SSE 410 Student Teaching of the Social Studies in the High School

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