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Your search for courses for 21/SP and in WCC 233 found 4 courses.

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IDSC 257.00 Sense of Place: Art and Ecology in Tallgrass Prairie 1 credit, S/CR/NC only

Closed: Size: 0, Registered: 12, Waitlist: 0

Weitz Center 233

MTWTHF
1:00pm2:10pm
Synonym: 59955

Daniel Hernandez, Eleanor Jensen

This project is a collaboration between two courses—Grassland Ecology and Field Drawing—that will foster an interdisciplinary dialogue on the Tallgrass Prairie Ecosystem. Students will work together to develop a project that explores how ecological study and artistic expression can deepen their understanding of this landscape. The course will involve field trips in the Carleton Arboretum, guest speakers, directed readings and culminate in a gallery exhibition.

Prerequisite: Requires concurrent registration in Studio Art 113 or Biology 374

Waitlist only

LATN 285.00 Weekly Latin 2 credits, S/CR/NC only

Open: Size: 25, Registered: 4, Waitlist: 0

Weitz Center 233

MTWTHF
10:00am11:10am
Synonym: 59183

Chico Zimmerman

This course is intended for students who have completed Latin 204 (or equivalent) and wish to maintain and deepen their language skills. Students will meet weekly to review prepared passages, as well as reading at sight. Actual reading content will be determined prior to the start of term by the instructor in consultation with the students who have enrolled. There will be brief, periodic assessments of language comprehension throughout the term. 

Prerequisite: Latin 204 or equivalent

POSC 333.00 Global Social Changes and Sustainability* 6 credits

Tun Myint

This course is about the relationship between social changes and ecological changes to understand and to be able to advance analytical concepts, research methods, and theories of society-nature interactions. How do livelihoods of individuals and groups change over time and how do the changes affect ecological sustainability? What are the roles of human institutions in ecological sustainability? What are the roles of ecosystem dynamics in institutional sustainability? Students will learn fundamental theories and concepts that explain linkages between social change and environmental changes and gain methods and skills to measure social changes qualitatively and quantitatively.

Extra Time required.

POSC 352.00 Political Theory of Alexis de Tocqueville* 6 credits

Laurence Cooper

This course will be devoted to close study of Tocqueville's Democracy in America, which has plausibly been described as the best book ever written about democracy and the best book every written about America. Tocqueville uncovers the myriad ways in which equality, including especially the passion for equality, determines the character and the possibilities of modern humanity. Tocqueville thereby provides a political education that is also an education toward self-knowledge.

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Requirements
You must take 6 credits of each of these.
Overlays
You must take 6 credits of each of these,
except Quantitative Reasoning, which requires 3 courses.
Special Interests