Apr 28, 2024  
2018-2019 Catalog 
    
2018-2019 Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Descriptions



 

 

Finance

  
  • FIN 490 - Special Topics


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Description: In-depth analysis of current topics in finance. Topics vary each semester. Repeatable up to 9 units.
    Graded: Letter Grade
  
  • FIN 497 - Directed Study


    Units: 1-3
    Variable hours per week
    Prerequisite: Consent of Instructor
    Individual contracted study on topics or research selected by the student and faculty mentor. Repeatable up to 9 units.
    Graded: Credit/No Credit

Freedom and Justice Studies

  
  • FJS 210 - Ethics for a Free World (Cross-listed as PHIL 210)


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Students will explore concepts and practices of ethics, freedom, and justice by comparing how these have been theorized and practiced in relationship to each other across at least two times periods and cultures. Starting from a foundation in philosophy and developing an interdisciplinary lens, this class examines these foundational concepts and practices especially as engaged across the fields of identity and civil rights-based studies (including religious, ethnic, women’s, gender, sexuality, and disability studies, etc.)
    Same as: PHIL 210 

    GenEd: C2
    CI Mission Category(s): Interdisciplinary Approaches

  
  • FJS 340 - Exploring Freedom and Justice


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Starting from philosophical understandings of identity, community, and democracy, the course focuses on themes such as slavery and emancipation; migration, exile, and diaspora; violence and reconciliation. Using an interdisciplinary lens that engages fields as wide-ranging as economics and literature, students will engage in trans-historical, cross-cultural exploration of freedom and justice and the various ways different peoples have attempted to put them into practice. Students will engage tools to analyze the relationship between these concepts and the structure of identity and its material effects.
    GenEd: UDGE-D
    CI Mission Category(s): Interdisciplinary Approaches, Multicultural Perspectives

  
  • FJS 355 - Literatures of Africa and the Diaspora (Cross-listed as ENGL 355)


    Units: 3
    Three hours of lecture per week
    A concentrated study of selected authors of African descent with attention to their perspectives on freedom, justice, identity, and community. Authors selected change from term to term, therefore, students may take the course for credit more than once. Repeatable by topic. Repeat 2 times up to 6 units.
    Graded: Letter Grade
    Same as: ENGL 355

    GenEd: UDGE-C
    CI Mission Category(s): International Perspectives, Multicultural Perspectives

  
  • FJS 498 - Enacting Freedom and Justice


    Units: 3
    One hour seminar and four hours activity per week
    Prerequisite: FJS 210  / PHIL 210  or equivalent and FJS 340  or Consent of Instructor
    Engages students in work that reflects upon and extends what they have studied to serve community needs. Produce original intellectual and/or creative work in the service of a designated community on issues related to faculty research or service that enables greater freedom and justice for all. Activities will include reading scholarly publications, research, or creative activities both independently and with the faculty member, attending workshops, writing, and preparation of a community and/or conference presentation. Repeatable up to 6 units.

French

  
  • FREN 101 - Elementary French I


    Units: 4
    Four hours lecture per week
    Initial development of basic functional proficiency in the French language. As students develop their listening, speaking, reading, and writing skills, they acquire knowledge and understanding of French and Francophone cultures.
    Graded: Letter Grade
    GenEd: C2, Language
  
  • FREN 102 - Elementary French II


    Units: 4
    Four hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: FREN 101 or equivalent
    Continuation of FREN 101. Continued development of basic functional proficiency in the French language. As students develop their listening, speaking, reading, and writing skills, they acquire knowledge and understanding of French and Francophone cultures.
    Graded: Letter Grade
    GenEd: C2, Language

Gender Studies

  
  • GEND 433 - Gay/Lesbian/Bisexual/Transgender Studies (Cross-listed as ENGL 433)


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: ENGL 103  or ENGL 105  or Equivalent
    Introduction to the field of gay/lesbian/ bisexual/transgender studies through the reading of literature and theory.
    Same as: ENGL 433 

    GenEd: UDGE-C, UDGE-D
    CI Mission Category(s): Interdisciplinary Approaches, Multicultural Perspectives


Geography

  
  • GEOG 105 - Environmental Issues in Geography (Cross-listed as ESRM 105)


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Introduction to basic concepts in geography and related environmental issues. Examines environmental impact on human affairs and human impact on the environment. Spatial awareness including cartographic knowledge, skills with Global Positioning Systems (GPS), as well as hands-on experience using Geographic Information Systems (GIS) is emphasized. This course is not open to ESRM majors.
    Same as: ESRM 105 

    GenEd: D
    CI Mission Category(s): Interdisciplinary Approaches

  
  • GEOG 201 - Cultural and Historical Geography of the World


    Units: 3
    Three hour lecture per week
    A geographic study of the world and the basic relationship between the physical environment (including topography, climate, natural vegetation, soils, drainage patterns, etc.) and the cultural aspects (including political, social, economic, urban and rural life, etc.) of the major realms or regions of the world. Includes a detailed study of selected regions.
    GenEd: D

Geology

  
  • GEOL 121 - Physical Geology


    Units: 4
    Three hours lecture per week and three hours laboratory per week
    Examines the basic composition of the Earth and the dynamic forces which have altered the Earth’s surface through time, including: sedimentation, erosion, volcanism, earthquakes, plate tectonics, and mountain-building. Students will understand the immense processes affecting their environment.
    GenEd: B1, B3
  
  • GEOL 122 - Historical Geology


    Units: 4
    Three hours lecture and three hours lab per week
    Focuses upon the geological history of the Earth and the Solar System from the origin of the cosmos to the present, tracing the evolution of the continents and ocean basins, and the evolution of plants and animals, through time. Surveys events of relevance in Earth’s past to present environmental issues.
    Graded: Letter Grade
    GenEd: B1, B3
  
  • GEOL 300 - Foundations of Earth Science


    Units: 4
    Three hours lecture and three hours laboratory per week
    Prerequisite: PHSC 170 
    Principles of geology, hydrology, oceanography, meteorology, and astronomy for the elementary school teacher.
  
  • GEOL 310 - California Geology


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: GEOL 121 , GEOL 122 
    Focuses on California’s geologic history, provinces, and resources and will feature field trips to a number of the provinces.
  
  • GEOL 321 - Environmental Geology


    Units: 4
    Three hours lecture and three hours laboratory per week
    Interrelationships between human and natural geologic hazards: tsunamis, earthquakes, landslides, subsidence, volcanoes. Explores environmental impact of resource extraction and usage, the importance of understanding the geologic processes and landscape in land use planning, and the means of using geology to minimize conflicts in resource management and disaster preparation.
    GenEd: UDGE-B
    CI Mission Category(s): Interdisciplinary Approaches


Global Studies

  
  • GLST 200 - Introduction to Global Studies


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    An introduction to globalization and its effect on governance, economic success, culture, the environment, and other global issues of human concern.
    GenEd: D
    CI Mission Category(s): International Perspectives

  
  • GLST 435 - Global Cities


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: Minimum two semesters of beginning college-level foreign language or Equivalent proficiency.
    Introduces students to interdisciplinary issues faced by global cities. Offers a range of transnational topics, including but not limited to historic and contemporary issues of migration, racism and xenophobia, environmental degradation, global culture, movement of capital, and national identity. Specific global cities and related content to be designed by the instructor(s). Repeatable up to 6 units.
  
  • GLST 499 - Capstone


    Units: 3
    Three hours seminar per week
    Prerequisite: Consent of Instructor Required for Enrollment
    Description: Integrating and culminating experience for Global Studies majors. Students will apply their experience from living in another culture and their prior coursework in the GLST program to analyze global challenges. Students must complete study abroad requirement (or have approved accommodation) prior to enrolling.
    Graded: Letter Grade

Health Science

  
  • HLTH 100 - Medical Terminology


    Units: 1
    One hour lecture per week
    Provides working knowledge of the terminologies used in the medical field.
  
  • HLTH 101 - Overview of Health Care Industry and Its Delivery


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Covers the conceptual basis for the health care industry, the structure of the US health service systems and their functions, operations and service deliveries to populations and individuals. Discusses the issues with the US health care system and other countries’ health care systems and the efforts in health care reform.
  
  • HLTH 102 - Community Health Organizations and Their Functions


    Units: 2
    Two hours lecture per week
    Applies a holistic wellness perspective to community health and focuses on community strengths and resilience rather than risks and disease. Topics include community health organizations, models, administration, and their services as well as instruction on the basic principles and practical design and management elements that are needed to create effective community-based health organizations through effective coalitions and partnerships for the purposes of community wellness.
  
  • HLTH 200 - Diagnostic and Procedural Coding


    Units: 2
    Two hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: HLTH 100 
    Covers the medical billing and coding system and legal, ethical and regulatory concepts; regulatory concepts including HIPAA compliance requirements, health care industry-specific techniques for filing insurance and performing diagnostic and procedural coding tasks.
  
  • HLTH 300 - Nutrition, Exercise And Wellness


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: CHEM 110  
    Description: Covers fundamental principles of nutrition, human metabolism and exercise physiology and discusses relationship between the necessity and quality of nutrition, muscle movement, exercise, and overall wellness.
    Graded: Letter Grade
  
  • HLTH 301 - Introduction to Public Health Administration


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: HLTH 101  and HLTH 102 
    Examines public health as an organized system, integrating the different areas of study, fields or work, and governmental agencies that facilitate the delivery of public health services on a daily basis. Discusses the essential public health principles in the context of identifying and controlling community health problems, as well as the evaluation of programs; including planning, management, evaluation, and behavior of public and private health care organizations at the local, state, and national levels.
  
  • HLTH 302 - Introduction to Health Care Informatics


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: HLTH 100  and HLTH 101 
    Introduces basic knowledge of health informatics, including data acquisition and management, vocabularies, standards, tools, major technologies, and applications of informatics such as clinical databases, billing, electronic patient records, lab tests, and electronic prescriptions, as applied in support of health care delivery.
  
  • HLTH 303 - Pharmacology and Aging Adults


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: BIOL 305  ,CHEM 110  and HLTH 100 
    Provides comprehensive information on analysis of major drug groups, the disorders they treat, and the age-associated changes in cellular processes that affect drug action to assist health care professionals in diagnosing and managing common geriatric conditions effectively and safely. Topics also include future research problems dealing with the expanding aging population, their drug usage, and the problem of adverse drug reactions.
  
  • HLTH 304 - Aging Policy and Politics (Cross-listed as POLS 304)


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: HLTH 102  and HLTH 301 
    Examines the role of political institutions in policy making related to issues of aging, the political factors that shape policy formulation and implementation, the values and assumptions of different types of policies, and the links between policy and implementation. Analyzes current and pending policies’ effects on older adults as well as businesses and institutions that serve them to illustrate how aging policy reflects American politics.
    Same as: POLS 304

  
  • HLTH 305 - Therapeutic Recreation for Older Adults


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: BIOL 305  ,HLTH 100  andHLTH 102 
    Combining theoretical material and practical applications, presents leadership and program planning principles for therapeutic recreation, valuable recreational activity ideas and program designs for providing appropriate therapeutic recreational services to elders.
  
  • HLTH 306 - Mental Health and Aging


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: PSY 213 
    Examines mental health aspects of aging. Emphasis on examining both normative and non-normative mental health concerns and changes resulting from physiological, psychological, relational, environmental and social processes affecting older adults.
  
  • HLTH 307 - Issues And Ethics In The Helping Profession


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Discussion of major ethical issues confronting the practice of medicine and biomedical science. Examines the sources, fundamental principles, and the application of ethical frameworks that help to analyze contemporary questions in medical ethics. Applies ethics to the issues of confidentiality, truth telling, autonomy, paternalism and informed consent, reproductive issues, biotechnology, euthanasia, and justice in the healthcare system.
    Graded: Letter Grade
  
  • HLTH 308 - Introduction To Health Law


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Introduction to the laws and regulations that apply to the U.S. health care system with a focus on recent changes. Topics include laws and regulations pertaining to individuals and institutions, constitutional protections, cost and access, public programs, and issues of fraud and abuse.
    Graded: Letter Grade
  
  • HLTH 309 - Health Science Research Methods


    Units: 4
    Four hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: MATH 201  or MATH 202  /PSY 202  
    Description: Focuses on research design in the health sciences and the basic data analysis skills to examine both quantitative and qualitative methods of research in areas relevant to the health sciences. Topics may include: experimental research designs, survey research design, hypothesis formulation, questionnaire and interview design, interviewing techniques, community research, generalizability, sampling, data preparation, and analysis of primary and secondary data. Research ethics and related topics are also addressed.
    Graded: Letter Grade
  
  • HLTH 310 - Health Program Planning and Evaluation


    Units: 3
    Three lecture hours per week
    Prerequisite: HLTH 102  , HLTH 301  
    Description: This course introduces skills and techniques to research and develop health programs at the community, state, and national levels. Students are presented with concepts, processes, and techniques used in health program planning, implementation, and evaluation. Students will engage in planning, implementation, and evaluation exercises/demonstrations. This course emphasizes the importance of teams and partnerships in developing successful health promotion programs.
    Graded: Letter Grade
  
  • HLTH 322 - Health Issues in Education


    Units: 2
    Two hours lecture per week
    Survey of school health programs with in-depth study of selected health education curricula and topic areas, including: alcohol, tobacco, drugs, communicable diseases, and nutrition. Development of strategies and methods for teaching controversial areas.
  
  • HLTH 331 - Nutrition and Culture (Cross-listed as NRS 331)


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Cultural issues and considerations in nutrition and health: Analysis, discussion, and evaluation of cultural, physiological, economic, and environmental factors as they apply to food management plans and healthy nutrition choices for individuals, groups, and families.
    Graded: Letter Grade
    Same as: NRS 331  

  
  • HLTH 342 - Reproductive Health and Justice in the Chicana/o Community (Cross-listed as CHS 342)


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Examines the connections between reproduction, public health, and social justice as it relates to the Chicana/o community. Focuses on the sexual and reproductive rights of socially and economically marginalized women, Chicanas, Indigenous women, and women of color in the U.S.
    Graded: Letter Grade
    Same as: CHS 342

    GenEd: UDGE-D
    CI Mission Category(s): Interdisciplinary Approaches, Multicultural Perspectives

  
  • HLTH 343 - Health Issues in the Latina/o Community (Cross-listed as CHS 343, NRS 343, COMM 343)


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: Junior Standing or Consent of Instructor
    Examines the health issues affecting the Latina/o community and considers interventions, public health policies, and health promotion programs used to improve the health status of the Latina/o community.
    Graded: Letter Grade
    Same as: CHS 343  , NRS 343  , COMM 343  

    GenEd: UDGE-D
    CI Mission Category(s): Interdisciplinary Approaches, Multicultural Perspectives

  
  • HLTH 348 - Healthy Aging (Cross-listed as NRS 348)


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: Junior Standing or Consent of Instructor
    Explores physical, cultural, and psychosocial factors influencing health issues during the elderly years of life. Topics include aging stereotypes, cultural and family influences on the elderly, physiology of aging, lifestyles choices associated with healthy aging, and end of life care. Changed from NRS/PSY/SOC 348 effective F17.
    Graded: Letter Grade
    Same as: NRS 348

    GenEd: UDGE-D
    CI Mission Category(s): Interdisciplinary Approaches

  
  • HLTH 400 - Health Assessment and Case Management of Older Adults


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: BIOL 305 , HLTH 100 , HLTH 304  / POLS 304  , and SOC 303  
    It provides essential information to conduct a holistic health assessment across the life span, with an emphasis on older adults. Explores through case studies, the present health care system, how it shapes the health care that older adults receive, and models of collaboration among health disciplines in managing older adults.
  
  • HLTH 401 - Management of Long-Term Care Facilities and Programs


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: HLTH 101  HLTH 102  and HLTH 304  / POLS 304 
    Explores the complex operations of the long-term care facility and offers critical skills to current and future nursing home and other long-term care facility administrators for delivering quality, cost-effective services. Topics include the long-term care industry, long-term care policy, culture change, and supportive case studies that incorporate management and patient care issues.
  
  • HLTH 402 - Disability Services


    Units: 3
    Three hours of lecture a week
    Prerequisite: HLTH 100  , HLTH 101  , HLTH 102  
    Description: Examines policy, theory, and practice methods related to people with various disabilities across the lifespan. Utilizes the Social Model of Disability and Ecological Systems framework, which offer both empowerment and a holistic perspective of disability issues.
    Graded: Letter Grade
  
  • HLTH 404 - Case Management for the Health Science


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: HLTH 100  , HLTH 101  , HLTH 102  
    Description: Introduction to the role of the health science professional as case manager, including the history, responsibilities, standards of case management (process, models of care, functions, and practice settings), as well as legal, ethical, and other practical issues impacting case management.
    Graded: Letter Grade
  
  • HLTH 405 - Fundamentals of Health Education


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: HLTH 100  , HLTH 101  , HLTH 102  
    Description: Introduction to the philosophical, ethical and theoretical foundation of health education in school, community, and work site and hospital settings as well as in health promotion consultant activities.
    Graded: Letter Grade
  
  • HLTH 434 - Introduction to Biomedical Imaging (Cross-listed as BIOL 434, PHYS 434)


    Units: 4
    Three hours lecture and two hours activity per week
    Prerequisite: BIOL 210  or PHYS 200 
    The course will present an overview of biomedical images and imaging systems. The fundamental concepts used in several imaging modalities (such as projection radiography, mammography, DEXA, computed tomography, ultrasonography, and magnetic resonance imaging) will be examined: the emphasis will be on an intuitive and descriptive presentation of the main components of these systems. Image formation and reconstruction will be addressed. The resulting clinical images will be correlated with the underlying structure and function of the organs, and the diagnostic utility and limitations of the images will be considered.
    Same as: BIOL 434, PHYS 434

  
  • HLTH 492 - Service Learning in Health Sciences


    Units: 1-2
    Three to six hours field studies per week
    Prerequisite: HLTH 301 
    Individual or team service-learning project or internship at a health care setting, such as community and public health organizations and the health care industry. A written report is required upon completion of the project.
  
  • HLTH 494 - Independent Research


    Units: 1 - 2
    Three to six hours independent research per week
    Prerequisite: HLTH 100  , HLTH 301   and HLTH 309   and Consent of the Instructor
    Description: Individual research project in selected areas of health science conducted under the direction of a faculty member. A written report is required upon completion of the project. Repeat 3 times up to 6 units.
    Graded: Credit / No Credit
  
  • HLTH 497 - Directed Study


    Units: 1 - 2
    Three to six hours independent study per week
    Prerequisite: HLTH 100  , HLTH 301  , and either MATH 201  or MATH 202  /PSY 202   and Consent of Instructor.
    Description: Individual library research project in selected areas of health science conducted under the direction of a faculty member. A written report is required upon completion of the project.
    Graded: Letter Grade
  
  • HLTH 499 - Senior Capstone Project


    Units: 3
    Three hours seminar per week
    Prerequisite: HLTH 100  , HLTH 301  , HLTH 309  , and either MATH 201   or MATH 202  /PSY 202  and consent of instructor
    Description: Integration of previous coursework, knowledge and skills as applied to specific topics in health science and the impact of health science on society. Emphasis on analysis of professional literature, problem solving, and oral and written communication skills. A written and an oral report are required upon completion of the project.
    Graded: Letter Grade

History

  
  • HIST 211 - World Civilizations: Origins to 1500


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    This survey examines world civilizations from the Neolithic era to the European colonization of the Western Hemisphere. Topics may include, but are not limited to, the development and growth of religions, commerce, and other cultural institutions.
    GenEd: D
    CI Mission Category(s): International Perspectives

  
  • HIST 212 - World Civilizations: Since 1500


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    This survey examines world civilizations from both regional and global perspectives. Topics may include, but are not limited to, the development and growth of religions, commerce, and other cultural institutions.
    GenEd: D
    CI Mission Category(s): International Perspectives

  
  • HIST 250 - World Regions


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Examines the history of one of the major regions of the world. Varies by semester. May be repeated if with a different instructor or a different region of the world. Repeatable up to 6 units
    Graded: Letter Grade
    GenEd: D
    CI Mission Category(s): International Perspectives

  
  • HIST 270 - The United States To 1877


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Description: Survey of the political, social, economic as well as cultural institutions of the United States from the pre-colonial era to reconstruction. Meets Title V U.S. History requirement.
    Graded: Letter Grade
  
  • HIST 271 - The United States Since 1877


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Description: Survey of the political, social, economic as well as cultural institutions of the United States from reconstruction to the present. Meets Title V U.S History requirement.
    Graded: Letter Grade
  
  • HIST 272 - Constitutional History of the U.S.


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Examines the origins of American constitutional thought and practice, the framing and adoption of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, the establishment of the U.S. Supreme Court and of its power of judicial review. Topics include: major decisions by the Supreme Court in history and their impacts on society, and California state constitution and government. Meets Title V U.S. History and constitution requirement.
  
  • HIST 275 - The United States To 1900


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    This course is specially designed for students in the Teaching and Learning Option of the Liberal Studies Program. Examines the history of the United States from the colonial origins to the emergence of a modern industrial system. Emphasis is given to the major social, political, and cultural events during the period from the early 1600s to 1900, such as the encounters between Native Americans and European explorers, the growth of English colonies, the American Revolution, the transformation of American society after Independence, slavery, abolition, the Civil War, and the development of mass immigration and industrialization. Meets Title V U.S. History Requirement.
    Graded: Letter Grade
  
  • HIST 300 - The Historian’s Craft


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Introduces students to the methods and skills necessary for the study of history. Students will learn to distinguish between evidence from primary sources and interpretations from secondary sources. They will use a variety of primary and secondary sources to become familiar with historical analysis, assess interpretations of the past, conduct historical research, and write papers based on that research.
    Graded: Letter Grade
  
  • HIST 301 - Topics in World History


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: HIST 300  or consent of instructor
    Description: This course supports the world history pillar of the history major. It will cover diverse topics in African, Asian, European, Pacific, and/or world histories. Students may repeat the course when a different topic is offered. Repeat 2 times up to 6 units.
    Graded: Letter Grade
  
  • HIST 302 - Topics in North American History


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: HIST 300   or consent of instructor
    Description: This course supports the North American history pillar of the history major. It will cover diverse topics in Canadian, Mexican, US, and/or general North American histories. Students may repeat the course when a different topic is offered. Repeat 2 times up to 6 units.
    Graded: Letter Grade
  
  • HIST 310 - History of the Mediterranean


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Examines the history of the Mediterranean over the last 3000 years. Special attention will be paid to the Greco-Roman heritage, the impact of Christianity and Islam, the rise of Italian merchants, and the tangle between Spain and the Ottoman Empire over the control of the sea.
  
  • HIST 316 - History of Medieval Europe 800-1400


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    A history of Europe from the Carolingian Empire through the high Middle Ages. Investigates the conflict and interaction of Roman, Christian, Islamic, and Germanic cultures, religions, philosophies, and institutions.
  
  • HIST 317 - Renaissance and Reformation Europe 1350-1648


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Examines the Renaissance and Reformations in European history. Topics include the crises of the late medieval church; humanism in art and literature; the religious developments of the Protestant and Catholic Reformations; the age of civil and religious wars.
  
  • HIST 318 - The Age of Revolution in Europe 1648-1871


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    A study of significant issues in European history from 1648 to 1871. The course focuses on developments in political theory, natural science and economics as well as the tensions in the old social order which helped instigate the French Revolution, the Napoleonic Wars, and the revolutions of 1848.
  
  • HIST 319 - European History, 1871-1945


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Examines the development of European history from the unification of Germany to the end of the Second World War. Special attention will be paid to the development of powerful ideologies (e.g., communism, fascism), socio-economic change, and imperial expansion.
  
  • HIST 320 - European History, 1945-present


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Examines the development of European history to the present day. Special attention will be paid to the reconstruction of the continent following the war, the implications of the cold war and the collapse of the Soviet Union, and the emergence of the European Union.
  
  • HIST 322 - Modern Russia: 1855 to Present


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Explores Russia and the USSR from 1855 to the collapse of the Soviet Union and the emergence of post-Soviet Russia. Special attention will be given to how Russia and the Soviet Union were both part of and were at times distinct from the fabric of European political, economic, social and cultural histories.
  
  • HIST 323 - Iberian Global Expansion, 1450-1800


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Chronicles Portuguese and Spanish maritime expansion into the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific oceans. Traces the cultural, economic, and social repercussions of this important wave of maritime ventures. Besides Portuguese and Spaniards, the course will pay special attention to the plight of the indigenous peoples of Africa, Asia, the Americas, and the Pacific Islands affected by the Iberian expansion.
    Graded: Letter Grade
  
  • HIST 330 - The History of Science: Nonwestern Origins and the Western Revolution (Cross-listed as CHEM 330)


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: Junior Standing or Consent of Instructor
    Survey of scientific history from 2000 BCE to the present that considers science as a set of made, lost, and found ideas and technologies. Fields of inquiry are examined by tracing their historical and cultural trajectories through the African, Arab, Babylonian, Chinese, Egyptian, Greek, Incan, Indian, Japanese, Mayan, and Sumerian worlds.
    Same as: CHEM 330  

    GenEd: UDGE-B
    CI Mission Category(s): Interdisciplinary Approaches

  
  • HIST 333 - History of Southern California Chicana/o Art (Cross-listed as ART 333, CHS 333)


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: Junior Standing or Consent of Instructor
    An exploration of the Southern California Chicana/o culture focusing on the genesis, vitality, and diversity represented in the painting, sculpture, and artistic traditions of Mexican-American artists. Historical movements, politics, cultural trends, and Mexican folklore underlying the development of this dynamic style of art will be investigated within a variety of contexts.
    Same as: ART 333 , CHS 333 

    GenEd: UDGE-C, UDGE-D
    CI Mission Category(s): Interdisciplinary Approaches, Multicultural Perspectives

  
  • HIST 334 - Narratives of Southern California (Cross-listed as ENGL 334, CHS 334)


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture/discussion per week
    Prerequisite: Junior Standing or Consent of Instructor
    Ours is a region made up of many cultures, which produce the one we call Southern California. In this course, we will take a historical approach to study of the narratives - oral, written, and filmed - of Southern California. Course work may also include obtaining and compiling oral histories.
    Graded: Letter Grade
    Same as: ENGL 334, CHS 334

    GenEd: UDGE-C, UDGE-D
    CI Mission Category(s): Interdisciplinary Approaches, Multicultural Perspectives

  
  • HIST 338 - Theatre in History (Cross-listed as PATH 338)


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: Junior Standing or Consent of Instructor
    A survey of the history of theatrical productions. Includes formal productions and performances as well as other types of theatre or dramatization, such as political posturing, i.e., a ruler’s rise to power in historical reality as well as performed or recorded later in theatre, music, and history.
    Same as: PATH 338 

    GenEd: UDGE-C
    CI Mission Category(s): Interdisciplinary Approaches

  
  • HIST 339 - Business in China: Heritage and Change (Cross-listed as BUS 339)


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: Junior Standing or Consent of Instructor
    Examines from a broad historical perspective a variety of institutions and modernization processes of the Chinese financial market, economic environment, and business practices.
    Same as: BUS 339 

    GenEd: UDGE-D
    CI Mission Category(s): International Perspectives

  
  • HIST 340 - History and Psychology of Nazi Germany (Cross-listed as PSY 340)


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: Junior Standing or Consent of Instructor
    Examines the historical and psychological roots of the Nazi movement in Germany. Areas covered will include the mass psychology of fascism, the psychopathology of Nazi leaders, and the psychological impact of the holocaust.
    Same as: PSY 340 

    GenEd: UDGE-D
    CI Mission Category(s): Interdisciplinary Approaches

  
  • HIST 342 - Environmental History (Cross-listed as ESRM 342)


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: Junior Standing or Consent of Instructor
    Examines the historical interaction between humans and their environment. Special attention will be paid to the transformations of environments in the Americas and Europe.
    Same as: ESRM 342 

    GenEd: UDGE-D
    CI Mission Category(s): Interdisciplinary Approaches

  
  • HIST 343 - The Long Civil Rights Movement (Cross-listed as SOC 343)


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Prerequisite: Junior Standing or Consent of Instructor
    Examines the Civil Rights Movement as part of a century-long movement for African American equality and liberation, including and linking peak movement activity (1955 to 1965) to antecedent and subsequent mobilization. Compares and contrasts historical and sociological theoretical approaches, modes of inquiry, and analysis of the subject.
    Graded: Letter Grade
    Same as: SOC 343

    GenEd: UDGE-D
    CI Mission Category(s): Multicultural Perspectives

  
  • HIST 349 - History of Business and Economics in North America (Cross-listed as ECON 349, BUS 349)


    Units: 3
    Three hours of lecture per week
    Prerequisite: Junior Standing or Consent of Instructor
    Examines the growth and development of the economies of North America since colonial times. Addresses social, ethical, economic, and management issues during the development of Canada, the United States, and Mexico. Analyzes the business principles underlying the growth and development of the economies.
    Same as: ECON 349 , BUS 349  

    GenEd: UDGE-D
    CI Mission Category(s): Interdisciplinary Approaches, International Perspectives

  
  • HIST 350 - Chicana/O History And Culture (Cross-listed as CHS 350)


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Description: Examines the historical settlement and culture of Chicanas/os in the United States to the present. Particular attention is given to the relationship of the Chicana/o experience to the economic, political, and social institutions of the United States. These institutions are examined in relation to historical movements and developments that span over several centuries. Meets Title V US History requirement.
    Graded: Letter Grade
    Same as: CHS 350

  
  • HIST 351 - History of African Americans


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Examines the experience of Africans and African Americans in America from the colonial period through the twentieth century.
    GenEd: UDGE-D
    CI Mission Category(s): Multicultural Perspectives

  
  • HIST 357 - History of Capitalism


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Description: This is course explores the history of capitalism, from its emergence in the 15th century through the evolution to its present day form.
    Graded: Letter Grade
  
  • HIST 360 - History of Colonial Latin America


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Examines the social, political, economic, and cultural foundations of colonial Latin America, from the Conquest in the fifteenth century to independence in the early nineteenth century.
    Graded: Letter Grade
  
  • HIST 361 - History of Modern Latin America


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Examines the social, political, economic, and cultural foundations of modern Latin America in countries in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
    Graded: Letter Grade
  
  • HIST 365 - Themes in World History


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Explores the major trends in global approaches to history. These include anthropological, diaspora, environmental, and world systems approaches. Topics will vary by semester. Repeatable up to 6 units.
  
  • HIST 366 - Oceans of World History


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Discusses the main approaches to world history through the lens of the Earth’s three major oceans: Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific.
  
  • HIST 369 - California History and Culture


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Examines the cultural and institutional development of California prior to the 16th century and since.
  
  • HIST 370 - United States Colonial History


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Examines the European colonization of the United States from the 1600s to the French and Indian War. The transformation of social, political, and cultural institutions of Europe in North America are studied.
  
  • HIST 371 - The Founding of the United States


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Study of the Revolutionary era and its political and social influence on the constitution.
  
  • HIST 372 - United States Industrialization and Progressivism


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Examines the nation’s geographic and industrial expansion. Social and political problems up to the end of WWI will also be examined.
  
  • HIST 373 - American Labor History


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    This is an in-depth study of the individual, group, and organized experience of the American working people from colonial time to the twentieth century.
  
  • HIST 374 - United States Since 1945


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Examines the cultural, social, and political transformation of the nation after World War II. Among the various topics of the course, specific attention is given to how international affairs influenced domestic life and society.
  
  • HIST 375 - The United States and the World Since 1900


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Explores the historical forces that have shaped U.S. relations with the world, examining ideas of empire and expansion, the role of ideological, economic, and cultural issues in influencing relationships, and the people who shaped U.S. diplomacy (of various kinds). Assesses the interactive relationship of U.S. influence abroad, as well as the influence of the world on life in the U.S.
    Graded: Student Option
  
  • HIST 380 - History of the Pacific Islands


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Examines the history of the Pacific from human settlement to the present. Special attention will be paid to cross- cultural encounters, religious conversion, imperialism, and post-colonial realities in the region. The course employs interdisciplinary methods borrowed from anthropology, archaeology, and linguistics.
  
  • HIST 381 - Traditional East Asia to 1600


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Covers the history of East Asia (China, Korea, and Japan) from prehistoric times to roughly 1600 AD. Focus is placed on cultural, institutional, and social developments in civilizations of this region to provide a historical foundation, from the Asian perspective, for understanding the roots of modern globalization.
    Graded: Student Option
  
  • HIST 382 - Modern East Asia


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Examines the rise of East Asia (China, Japan, and Korea) from 1600 to the present. Provides an East Asian perspective on themes of globalization that have shaped modern nation states around the world, including colonization and imperialism, and industrialization. Topics covered include war, revolutions, and governments, as well as philosophies and cultural trends.
    Graded: Student Option
  
  • HIST 385 - The Modern Middle East


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Offers an introduction to the history and politics of the Middle East and North Africa from the early 20th century to the present. Topics include: the place and role of religion in the region; colonialism; the decline of the Ottoman empire; the emergence of various nationalisms; the creation of modern states; and the ideological, political, and social conflicts and struggles associated with the region. Some attention will be devoted to the rise and fall of political regimes, the dynamics of consent and dissent, and to role of trans-national, trans-regional, and global forums.
    Graded: Student Option
  
  • HIST 390 - Women and Gender in East Asia


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    Examines the history of women and gender in East-Asian history from roughly 1000 CE to the modern era. We will examine social and political institutions, as well as cultural practices to examine the evolution of femininity and masculinity, and identify common and divergent experiences of gender and sexuality through these civilizations. Topics covered include: the family, Confucian norms, love and marriage, wartime gender constructions, and cultural impact of modernization.
    Graded: Student Option
  
  • HIST 391 - Traditional China


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    This course studies the social, political, economic, and cultural traditions in China from ancient times to the end of the Ming Dynasty.
  
  • HIST 392 - Modern China


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    This course explores the social, political, economic, and cultural changes in China from to the rise of the Ch’ing Dynasty to 1949.
  
  • HIST 393 - Contemporary China


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    This course examines the social, political, economic, and cultural developments in China since 1949.
  
  • HIST 394 - Traditional Japan


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    This course studies the social, political, economic, and cultural traditions in Japan from ancient times to the fall of the Tokugawa regime.
  
  • HIST 395 - Modern Japan


    Units: 3
    Three hours lecture per week
    This course studies the social, political, economic, and cultural changes in Japan from the Meiji Restoration to the present.
 

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