General Psychology PSY Spring

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "General Psychology PSY Spring"

Transcription

1 General Psychology PSY Spring Professor: Dr. Christina Brown Office: Shannon Hall 111 Office Phone: (314) Office Hours: Wed and by appointment PSY 101 CRN: Class time: Tues/Thurs 12:45-2:00 pm Location: Lecture Hall KA (Kelley) Teaching assistant: Aaron Shilling, TA Office Hours: Thurs 3:30-5pm, Fri 2-3:30pm, & by appt. in Shannon 011 SI Leader: Tom Scott, Required Readings Gazzaniga, M., Heatherton, T., & Halpern, D. (2010). Psychological science (3 rd ed). New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. ISBN: The textbook can be purchased new or used for around $60 from sellers on Amazon.com, AbeBooks.com, and Half.com. Course Description This course is an introduction to psychology, which is the study of mind, brain and behavior. The focus of this course will be psychological science; that is, scientific research about mind, brain, and behavior. Although we will spend time discussing theories, particular attention will be paid to scientific findings and the scientific process. How does our brain process thought and emotion? How do our genes influence our personal characteristics? Is human behavior today a product of our evolutionary history? What motivates people to socialize? Why does emotional stress affect our physical health? What cognitive changes occur from infancy to childhood? Why did that one incident of bad chili make you nauseous every time you see chili afterwards? Are emotions universal? Why do colors look different depending on whether the room is light or dark? Is there such a thing as personality? Why do some people become depressed while others are paranoid schizophrenic, and what medicines and therapies treat these disorders? What makes people conform to group pressure? Why do we hold stereotypes about groups of people? These are just a few of the issues that psychologists study. My purpose for this course is to introduce you to the various areas of psychology and to the methods of psychological research. As you will see, psychology is a broad field that covers diverse topics, from neurological functioning to the experience and expression of emotion. Each topic we will cover (which will correspond to the chapters of your textbook) represents a distinct area of psychology that is a field in and of itself. Because psychology is so broad, I hope that at the end of the semester you will walk away with an understanding of the basic issues studied in each area of psychology and the awareness that there is more to psychology than therapy and mental disorders. Should you desire to take additional classes in psychology, you can find an entire class on any of the topics we will cover. Course Objectives To increase your understanding of the human mind, brain, and behavior To appreciate the value and necessity of scientific research in psychology To apply psychological concepts to your own life To be able to identify psychological principles when they occur, outside of class To understand the basic concepts of each area of psychology

2 2 COURSE SCHEDULE Date Topic Text Due Tue 1/18 Introduction & syllabus review 1 (quizzes due at 11:45pm) Thur 1/20 Intro & Research Methodology 2 Mon 1/24: Practice quiz (no grade) Tue 1/25 Research Methodology 2 Thur 1/27 Research Methodology 2 Mon 1/31: Chapter 2 quiz Tue 2/1 Biological Foundations 3 In-class quiz on article Thur 2/3 Biological Foundations 3 Tue 2/8 Biological Foundations 3 Wed 2/9: Chapter 3 quiz Thur 2/10 The Mind and Consciousness 4 Mon 2/14: Chapter 4 quiz Tue 2/15 Sensation and Perception 5 Thur 2/17 Sensation and Perception 5 Mon 2/21: Chapter 5 quiz Tue 2/22 Exam 1 Thur 2/24 Learning 6 Tue 3/1 Learning 6 Wed 3/2: Chapter 6 quiz Thur 3/3 Attention and Memory 7 Tue 3/8 Attention and Memory 7 Thur 3/10 Attention and Memory 7 Mon 3/21: Chapter 7 quiz Tues 3/15 NO CLASS Spring Break Thur 3/17 NO CLASS Spring Break Tue 3/22 Motivation and Emotion 9 Thur 3/24 Motivation and Emotion 9 Tue 3/29 Motivation and Emotion 9 Wed 3/30: Chapter 9 quiz Thur 3/31 Human Development 11 Tue 4/5 Human Development 11 Wed 4/6: Chapter 11 quiz Thur 4/7 Exam 2 Tue 4/12 Social Psychology 12 Thur 4/14 Social Psychology 12 Mon 4/18: Chapter 13 quiz Tue 4/19 Personality 13 Wed 4/20: Chapter 13 quiz Thur 4/21 NO CLASS Holy Thursday 13 Tue 4/26 Disorders of the Mind and Body 14 Thur 4/28 Disorders of the Mind and Body 14 Tue 5/3 Disorders of the Mind and Body 14 Wed 5/4: Chapter 14 quiz Thurs 5/5 Thurs 5/12 NO CLASS MPA conference Final Exam 12:00-1:50pm

3 3 METHODS OF EVALUATION EXAMS There will be three exams, consisting of two regular exams and a final exam. The exams will consist of multiple choice questions. The first two exams will test material covered since the previous exam and they are each worth 100 pts. The final exam will mostly test material covered since Exam 2 but will also test material covered earlier in the semester. That is, the final exam is cumulative. It is worth 150 pts. In accordance with SLU policy, students cannot take the final exam early and you should drop the class if you cannot take the final exam during the appointed time (May 12 th at 12:00-1:50pm). QUIZZES There will be an online quiz for each assigned textbook chapter. Students will access the quizzes through the Blackboard course website. (To access: Go to log in, click Tools, click SLU Global, and finally click PSY General Psychology. ) The quizzes can be accessed by clicking on Assessments on the left side of the course website. You will be able to take a practice quiz on Chapter 1 between January 18 th at 3:00pm and January 24 th at 11:45pm. Your score on this practice quiz will not count toward your grade. I recommend taking the practice quiz so you re comfortable with the format of the quizzes before taking the ones that will count toward your grade. There will be one quiz for each assigned textbook chapter starting with Chapter 2, meaning there will be 11 quizzes total. The due dates for the chapter quizzes are on the course schedule (the previous page). Each quiz will consist of 10 questions and each question is worth 1 pt (e.g., answering all of the questions on a quiz correctly will earn you 10 pts in the class). You will have 15 minutes to complete each quiz. The questions will appear on the screen one at a time and you will not be able to return to a question once you submit your answer. You must start the quiz by 11:45pm on the day it is due. If you don t answer all 10 questions before the 15 min time limit, the answers you submitted will be scored (you can receive points for those questions) and you will receive 0 pts for the questions you did not answer. However, you must click Finish for the quiz to be submitted and scored (regardless of whether you finish it before or after the time limit). The correct answers will be available to view on Blackboard 15 min after the deadline (that is, at midnight). All questions on the quizzes will be taken directly from the textbook, so you must read the textbook to do well on the quizzes. Although you can use your textbook during the quiz, a minute and a half per question is not enough time for you to flip through the chapter to find the correct answer if you haven t already read the chapter. However, if you read the chapter carefully and review it before the quiz, you should be able to answer the questions accurately without referring to the textbook. (And if you don t know the answer, you will at least remember where to look in the text because you ve read the chapter and are familiar with the material.) Again, you must read and study the textbook to perform well on the quizzes. Treat the quizzes like exams and prepare accordingly. The quizzes are open-book and open-note. They are not open friend, meaning that you cannot ask for another person s help when taking a quiz. This is considered cheating and you will be charged with academic dishonesty (which will result in an F and a report of academic dishonesty to the college). Although the quizzes you take will each contain 10 questions, these 10 questions will be randomly selected from a pool of over 100 questions. Therefore, it s unlikely that another student in the class will get the same 10 questions as you (in fact, you re unlikely to share any questions). However, if you re caught trying to share the questions from your quiz with another student (or vice versa), you will be charged with academic dishonesty. When taking a quiz: After selecting your answer, click Save and View Next to submit your answer. You will not be able to return to a question once you do this, so be sure you are satisfied with your answer first. Don t click Next Question, because this will take you to the next question without submitting your

4 4 answer. When you have finished the quiz, you must click Finish on the bottom left of the quiz for your answers to be submitted and for you to receive a grade on the quiz. Your grade: There will be 11 quizzes total but only your 6 highest quiz scores will count toward your grade. In other words, you can drop your 5 lowest quiz scores. If you miss a quiz, your score for that quiz will be 0 and that will be one of the 5 that is dropped. Because only 6 of 11 quizzes will count toward your grade, no students will be allowed make-up quizzes for any reason. If you are sick or your computer crashes during the quiz, then that quiz will be one of the 5 dropped. To get the highest quiz scores possible, you should plan to take every quiz and to drop your lowest scores instead of simply choosing not to take a quiz that week. You never know when you will have an emergency that will prevent you from taking a quiz, so you should save the 5 dropped quizzes for emergencies and for quizzes you performed poorly on. Each quiz will be available on Blackboard for one week before the deadline so you will have plenty of time to take each quiz. Take the quiz in a quiet place where you will not be interrupted (e.g., the library). Take the quizzes on a computer connected to the internet with a LAN cable and not a wireless (WiFi) connection because you might lose your wireless signal while taking the quiz. Again, no make-up quizzes will be allowed because you can drop your 5 lowest quiz scores and you have an entire week to take each quiz before the deadline. CLASS ACTIVITIES Throughout the semester there will be class activities that will count toward your grade. The activities will only be announced in class (in some cases, you will complete the activity in class) and they won t be announced in advance so it is important to attend class regularly. (If you don t attend class on the day of an activity, you cannot receive points for that activity.) These activities may include (but are not limited to) participation in demonstrations of an experiment, worksheets completed individually or in groups, participation in group discussions, and brief written activities to complete at home. I will announce how many points a particular activity is worth at the time of the activity. Simply completing an activity does not guarantee that you will receive all possible points. You must earn the points by performing well on the activity (e.g., contributing to a discussion, solving a worksheet, writing a thoughtful answer to a question posed in class). RESEARCH REQUIREMENT Psychology is a science and most of what you will learn in class and in the text is the result of psychological research. Psychologists conduct studies to test hypotheses about behavior, the mind, and the brain. Because research is fundamental to psychology, all students must complete a research requirement established by the Department of Psychology. There are two ways to complete the research requirement: (1) You can participate in psychology experiments conducted at SLU. and/or (2) You can write brief papers in response to research articles. You must complete 14 credits of research. Participating in a 30 minute experiment will give you 1 research credit (a 1 hour experiment is worth 2 credits) and writing a summary of a research article can earn you 2 credits (incomplete or poorly written summaries will not earn the full 2 credits). You can satisfy the research requirement by completing both of these activities (you don t have to choose only experiments or only papers). For example, you can participate in ten 30 minute experiments and write two papers to complete 14 credits. The research requirement is worth 7% of your final grade (35 pts). If you participate in psychology experiments and complete 13 credits without missing any sessions you ve signed up for (without any no-shows, you will get the 14 th credit (1 hour) for free. If you write 6 brief research papers and turn them in by May 3 rd instead of by May 12 th, you will get the last 2 credits (1 hour = 1 paper) free.

5 5 About participating in experiments You can find and sign up for psychology experiments at SLU by using Sona, an online system in which researchers post sessions for experiments that students can sign up for. You will receive a separate handout about how to use Sona. To access Sona, go to: All studies posted on Sona have been approved by the Institutional Review Board (IRB) at SLU. This means they have been reviewed and considered ethical experiments that pose no harm to participants. However, if you feel uncomfortable during an experiment you are free to leave at any time. You will not be penalized if you quit an experiment due to discomfort. If you are completing a questionnaire or survey in an experiment, you can leave any questions blank that you feel uncomfortable answering. Because the experiments have been approved by the IRB it is unlikely that you will feel discomfort, but in the event that you do it is always your right to quit the experiment or to leave questions blank. However, most students enjoy participating in experiments and find them to be fun and interesting. Moreover, participating in experiments gives you firsthand knowledge about how psychological research is conducted. When you sign up for an experiment, you are agreeing to a scheduled appointment and you are obligated to show up at the scheduled time. If you need to cancel an experiment beforehand, you can cancel your session in Sona or you can contact the researcher directly (contact information is provided on Sona). The researcher administering your session is a real human being who will be waiting for you in a laboratory. If you don t show up without canceling your session in advance, this person will unknowingly wait for you and you will waste his or her time. If you find that you can no longer participate in an experiment due to illness, an emergency, or a schedule conflict, please contact the researcher to cancel your session. To reward students who do not miss any of their scheduled sessions (no no-shows ), students who complete 13 credits of experiments without any no-shows will be awarded the 14 th credit for free. Friday May 5 th is the last day to participate in an experiment for research credit. About research papers The research you read about in the textbook and learn in class was first published in psychology journals. When a researcher conducts an experiment that has meaningful results, he or she writes about the research and submits it to a journal. The paper is then critically reviewed by fellow researchers and, if they determine the research to be of high quality, it is ultimately published in a journal. In other words, psychology experiments (which you can participate in) are the first step of the research process, and publication in a journal is the last step. For each article you read and write a brief paper on, you can earn 2 research credits. You will find a folder with articles from the journal Psychological Science on the course Blackboard website in the Research Requirement folder. Your research papers must be on articles from this folder. Instructions for Writing the Paper Each paper on a research article should contain the following sections: (1) A header with the title of the article, the authors names, and the year the article was published. (2) A word summary of the research. (Your summary should not include the title, authors names, authors affiliation, or other extraneous information.) (3) Research components: Identify the independent variable(s), dependent variable(s), and hypothesis (or hypotheses). (4) Ideas for future research. These ideas must be your own ideas, not something proposed by the authors.

6 All article papers should be typed in Times New Roman 12 pt font (the document should be double-spaced with 1-inch margins on all sides). You should describe the research in your own words (paraphrase; do not use more than two direct quotes in your summary). Research papers are due on Thursday May 12 th at the start of the final exam (12:00pm). You can either them to me as attachments (.doc,.docx, or.rtf) or give me hardcopies in class. 6 ACADEMIC INTEGRITY & HONESTY CLASS POLICIES Violations of academic honesty are taken very seriously. Don t cheat. Don t plagiarize. Your academic career could be ruined, and cheating and plagiarizing just aren t worth it. All work you submit should be your own. If you are struggling in the class, please meet with me or the teaching assistant for help. As a student at SLU you are obligated to abide by its policy on academic honesty, which you can read here: The University is a community of learning, whose effectiveness requires an environment of mutual trust and integrity. Academic integrity is violated by any dishonesty such as soliciting, receiving, or providing any unauthorized assistance in the completion of work submitted toward academic credit. While not all forms of academic dishonesty can be listed here, examples include copying from another student, copying from a book or class notes during a closed book exam, submitting materials authored by or revised by another person as the student s own work, copying a passage or text directly from a published source without appropriately citing or recognizing that source, taking a test or doing an assignment or other academic work for another student, securing or supplying in advance a copy of an examination or quiz without the knowledge or consent of the instructor, sharing or receiving the questions from an on-line quiz with another student, taking an on-line quiz with the help of another student, and colluding with another student or students to engage in academic dishonesty. Any clear violation of academic integrity will be met with appropriate sanctions. Possible sanctions for violation of academic integrity may include, but are not limited to, assignment of a failing grade in a course, disciplinary probation, suspension, and dismissal from the University. All acts of academic dishonesty will be met with a minimum sanction of a grade of 0 on the assignment and a report of academic dishonesty sent to the College of Arts and Sciences. Policy on translators for international students: International students who wish to use electronic translators on the exam must speak with me to receive approval. If their request is approved, they can use only their own translator during the exam and cannot share a translator with another student. ACCOMMODATIONS FOR DISABILITIES Students with documented disabilities should meet with me during office hours (or by appointment) to set up disability-related needs or accommodations as soon as possible. Out-of-class tests must be scheduled with the Testing Center at least one week before the exam (it is the student s responsibility to schedule OCTs) and students with attendance accommodations must meet with me during the first two weeks of class to arrange their accommodation. Requests to use accommodations that fall outside of these time frames will not be granted. Such accommodations will be made in conjunction with the Disability Services office. If you have a disability that requires accommodation, you must contact the Disability Services Program Manager, Mark Pousson (poussonj@slu.edu; ; BSC 331), about your disability before you can receive accommodations in class. All inquiries about disability services are confidential. Please see SLU s policy and services for people with disabilities at the following website:

7 7 ATTENDANCE You will not be graded on your attendance, but there will be material on the exams that is only covered in the lectures. In addition, we will occasionally have brief in-class activities for which you can receive points. I will not announce when we will have them in advance, therefore it is important to attend regularly. CLASS CONDUCT During class we will have discussions in which students are encouraged to express their own opinions and views. Respecting other students opinions and values no matter how much they differ from one s own is essential to creating a comfortable environment that fosters intellectual discussion. I respect each of your opinions, and I ask that you do the same for other students. Debate is an excellent way to facilitate critical thinking, but respect for others must be maintained in all discussions. In addition to respecting the opinions and values of others, it is also important that students show respect by not disrupting the learning of others. Examples of such disruptions are arriving late, talking with other students during lecture and when another student has the floor during discussion, letting a cell phone ring, texting during class, and using laptops and cell phones for activities other than note-taking (which can distract other students by drawing their attention to your device). For this reason, I ask that you make every effort to arrive on time and do not chat with other students during class. Furthermore, turn off your cell phone or any electronic device that emits sound. Do not send cell phone text messages in class. If you use a laptop to take notes, refrain from engaging in computer activities unrelated to the course as this is distracting to other students. If you plan to engage in these activities during class, I would rather you not attend class because these behaviors are disruptive to students who are trying to learn. EXAM MAKE-UP POLICY No make-up exams will be allowed after the exam has been given unless you have an extenuating circumstance, which is limited to severe emergencies: death, life-threatening illness, and serious accidents. You must provide proof of the emergency. In the event of a foreseeable schedule conflict (which you must have a good reason for; e.g., you cannot reschedule the exam to attend a baseball game or because you have another exam on the same day), you must submit a request to make up the exam in writing at least five days before the exam. (And we must set a specific date and time for you to make up the exam prior to the exam.) In the case of other emergencies that arise immediately before the exam, please contact me (by or phone) or the Psychology Department (phone: ) as soon as possible before the exam. If you miss an exam without contacting me ahead of time in accordance with this policy, you will receive a 0 on that exam. LATE ASSIGNMENTS Quizzes cannot be taken late. Students can make up missed in-class activities if they have documentation excusing them from class (e.g., physician s note) but they must contact me no later than one day after the missed class and the activity must be completed within one week of missing class. If students who write papers for the research requirement turn those papers in late, 10% will be deducted from each paper for each day it is late (the first 10% will be deducted on May 12 th if the papers are turned in after 12:00pm). GRADES Your final grade in the class will be based on the number of points you earned divided by the total number of points possible (please refer to the page on grading for specific details). If you have an issue with your grade on an assignment (e.g., if you think it was graded in error), you must notify me within a week after

8 8 the assignment is returned to you or after your grade is posted on Blackboard. I will not consider grade disputes raised after this time. It is your responsibility to make sure that your assignments have been turned in. If an assignment is to be submitted to Blackboard, you should verify after uploading that the assignment was indeed submitted. The instructor reserves the right to modify the syllabus at any time during the semester. If this occurs, students will receive a revised syllabus.

9 9 GRADING Each assignment is worth a certain number of points. Your grade in the class will be based on the total number of points you earn. To calculate your grade, sum the points you have earned on all assignments and divide that by the total number of points available (475 pts). The resulting percentage will determine your letter grade based on the following distribution: A A- B+ B B % 90-92% 87-89% 83-86% 80-82% C+ C C- D F 77-79% 73-76% 70-72% 60-69% 0-59% Assignment Total points possible Your score Exam Exam Final Exam 150 Research requirement 35 Class activities 20 Article quiz on 2/1 10 Quiz 1 10 Quiz 2 10 Quiz 3 10 Quiz 4 10 Quiz 5 10 Quiz 6 10 TOTAL 475 You can use the table above to keep track of your grade in the class. To calculate your current grade at any point in the semester, sum your current points and divide that by the total number of points possible up to that point (i.e., all completed assignments). You can record your quiz scores in the table below. Your 6 highest quiz scores will count toward your grade. Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Chapter 7 Chapter 9 Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Chapter 13 Chapter 14 You can record the points you earned on class activities in the box below.

PSYCHOLOGY 353: SOCIAL AND PERSONALITY DEVELOPMENT IN CHILDREN SPRING 2006

PSYCHOLOGY 353: SOCIAL AND PERSONALITY DEVELOPMENT IN CHILDREN SPRING 2006 PSYCHOLOGY 353: SOCIAL AND PERSONALITY DEVELOPMENT IN CHILDREN SPRING 2006 INSTRUCTOR: OFFICE: Dr. Elaine Blakemore Neff 388A TELEPHONE: 481-6400 E-MAIL: OFFICE HOURS: TEXTBOOK: READINGS: WEB PAGE: blakemor@ipfw.edu

More information

Accounting 312: Fundamentals of Managerial Accounting Syllabus Spring Brown

Accounting 312: Fundamentals of Managerial Accounting Syllabus Spring Brown Class Hours: MW 3:30-5:00 (Unique #: 02247) UTC 3.102 Professor: Patti Brown, CPA E-mail: patti.brown@mccombs.utexas.edu Office: GSB 5.124B Office Hours: Mon 2:00 3:00pm Phone: (512) 232-6782 TA: TBD TA

More information

INTRODUCTION TO GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY (PSYC 1101) ONLINE SYLLABUS. Instructor: April Babb Crisp, M.S., LPC

INTRODUCTION TO GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY (PSYC 1101) ONLINE SYLLABUS. Instructor: April Babb Crisp, M.S., LPC INTRODUCTION TO GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY (PSYC 1101) ONLINE SYLLABUS Psychology 1101 Instructor: April Babb Crisp, M.S., LPC Intro to General Psychology Fall Semester 2012 (8/20/12 12/04/12) Office Hours (virtual):

More information

MATH 205: Mathematics for K 8 Teachers: Number and Operations Western Kentucky University Spring 2017

MATH 205: Mathematics for K 8 Teachers: Number and Operations Western Kentucky University Spring 2017 MATH 205: Mathematics for K 8 Teachers: Number and Operations Western Kentucky University Spring 2017 INSTRUCTOR: Julie Payne CLASS TIMES: Section 003 TR 11:10 12:30 EMAIL: julie.payne@wku.edu Section

More information

Psychology 101(3cr): Introduction to Psychology (Summer 2016) Monday - Thursday 4:00-5:50pm - Gruening 413

Psychology 101(3cr): Introduction to Psychology (Summer 2016) Monday - Thursday 4:00-5:50pm - Gruening 413 Psychology 101(3cr): Introduction to Psychology (Summer 2016) Monday - Thursday 4:00-5:50pm - Gruening 413 Instructor: Dr. Jen Peterson Office: Gruening 706B Phone: 907-474-5214 Email: jen.peterson@alaska.edu

More information

Office Hours: Day Time Location TR 12:00pm - 2:00pm Main Campus Carl DeSantis Building 5136

Office Hours: Day Time Location TR 12:00pm - 2:00pm Main Campus Carl DeSantis Building 5136 FIN 3110 - Financial Management I. Course Information Course: FIN 3110 - Financial Management Semester Credit Hours: 3.0 Course CRN and Section: 20812 - NW1 Semester and Year: Fall 2017 Course Start and

More information

Introduction to Personality Daily 11:00 11:50am

Introduction to Personality Daily 11:00 11:50am Introduction to Personality Daily 11:00 11:50am Psychology 230 Dr. Thomas Link Spring 2012 tlink@pierce.ctc.edu Office hours: M- F 10-11, 12-1, and by appt. Office: Olympic 311 Late papers accepted with

More information

Financial Accounting Concepts and Research

Financial Accounting Concepts and Research Professor: Financial Accounting Concepts and Research Gretchen Charrier ACC 356 Fall 2012 Office: GSB 5.126D Telephone: 471-6379 E-Mail: Gretchen.Charrier@mccombs.utexas.edu Office Hours: Mondays and Wednesdays

More information

General Microbiology (BIOL ) Course Syllabus

General Microbiology (BIOL ) Course Syllabus General Microbiology (BIOL3401.01) Course Syllabus Spring 2017 INSTRUCTOR Luis A. Materon, Ph.D., Professor Office at SCIE 1.344; phone 956-665-7140; fax 956-665-3657 E-mail: luis.materon@utrgv.edu (anonymous

More information

Human Development: Life Span Spring 2017 Syllabus Psych 220 (Section 002) M/W 4:00-6:30PM, 120 MARB

Human Development: Life Span Spring 2017 Syllabus Psych 220 (Section 002) M/W 4:00-6:30PM, 120 MARB Human Development: Life Span Spring 2017 Syllabus Psych 220 (Section 002) M/W 4:00-6:30PM, 120 MARB Instructor Emily Anderberg, M.S., PhD Candidate Email emily.anderberg@byu.edu Office Hours By Appointment,

More information

INTRODUCTION TO CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY ANT 2410 FALL 2015

INTRODUCTION TO CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY ANT 2410 FALL 2015 INTRODUCTION TO CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY ANT 2410 FALL 2015 Meeting Times: Monday, Wednesday and Friday 1:55-2:45 (Period 7) Turlington, Room L005 Instructor: John Hames Office: Turlington B346 E-mail: johnjhames@ufl.edu

More information

Dr. Zhang Fall 12 Public Speaking 1. Required Text: Hamilton, G. (2010). Public speaking for college and careers (9th Ed.). New York: McGraw- Hill.

Dr. Zhang Fall 12 Public Speaking 1. Required Text: Hamilton, G. (2010). Public speaking for college and careers (9th Ed.). New York: McGraw- Hill. Dr. Zhang Fall 12 Public ing 1 COM 161-02 Public ing (3 Credit Hours) Fall 2012 Location of Class Meeting: CB326 Class Meeting Time: 10:00-10:50am, MWF Instructor: Dr. Shuangyue (Shaun) Zhang Email: shaunzhang@shsu.edu

More information

PSCH 312: Social Psychology

PSCH 312: Social Psychology PSCH 312: Social Psychology Spring 2016 Instructor: Tomas Ståhl CRN/Course Number: 14647 Office: BSB 1054A Lectures: TR 8-9:15 Office phone: 312 413 9407 Classroom: 2LCD D001 E-mail address: tstahl@uic.edu

More information

SYLLABUS. EC 322 Intermediate Macroeconomics Fall 2012

SYLLABUS. EC 322 Intermediate Macroeconomics Fall 2012 SYLLABUS EC 322 Intermediate Macroeconomics Fall 2012 Location: Online Instructor: Christopher Westley Office: 112A Merrill Phone: 782-5392 Office hours: Tues and Thur, 12:30-2:30, Thur 4:00-5:00, or by

More information

Biology 1 General Biology, Lecture Sections: 47231, and Fall 2017

Biology 1 General Biology, Lecture Sections: 47231, and Fall 2017 Instructor: Rana Tayyar, Ph.D. Email: rana.tayyar@rcc.edu Website: http://websites.rcc.edu/tayyar/ Office: MTSC 320 Class Location: MTSC 401 Lecture time: Tuesday and Thursday: 2:00-3:25 PM Biology 1 General

More information

Monday/Wednesday, 9:00 AM 10:30 AM

Monday/Wednesday, 9:00 AM 10:30 AM CDC 155 D01: Dr. Patricia L. Riley, L.C.P.C. Human Services Department Head, Associate Prof of Social Sciences M/W, 9:00 AM 10:30 AM Brunkhorst Hall 206 priley@worwic.edu, 410-334-2885 Office Hours: Other

More information

Psychology 102- Understanding Human Behavior Fall 2011 MWF am 105 Chambliss

Psychology 102- Understanding Human Behavior Fall 2011 MWF am 105 Chambliss Psychology 102- Understanding Human Behavior Fall 2011 MWF 9.00 9.50 am 105 Chambliss Instructor: April K. Dye, Ph.D. E-mail: adye@cn.edu Office: 208 Chambliss; Office phone: 2086 Office Hours: Monday:

More information

Social Media Journalism J336F Unique ID CMA Fall 2012

Social Media Journalism J336F Unique ID CMA Fall 2012 Social Media Journalism J336F Unique ID 07435 CMA 4.308 Fall 2012 Class: T- Th 9:30 to 11 a.m. Professor: Robert Quigley Office hours: 1-2 p.m. Mondays and 10 a.m. to noon on Fridays and by appointment.

More information

CMST 2060 Public Speaking

CMST 2060 Public Speaking CMST 2060 Public Speaking Instructor: Raquel M. Robvais Office: Coates Hall 319 Email: rrobva1@lsu.edu Course Materials: Lucas, Stephen. The Art of Public Speaking. McGraw Hill (11 th Edition). One two

More information

Beginning and Intermediate Algebra, by Elayn Martin-Gay, Second Custom Edition for Los Angeles Mission College. ISBN 13:

Beginning and Intermediate Algebra, by Elayn Martin-Gay, Second Custom Edition for Los Angeles Mission College. ISBN 13: Course: Math 125,, Section: 25065 Time: T Th: 7:00 pm - 9:30 pm Room: CMS 022 Textbook: Beginning and, by Elayn Martin-Gay, Second Custom Edition for Los Angeles Mission College. ISBN 13: 978-1-323-45049-9

More information

ENGLISH 298: Intensive Writing

ENGLISH 298: Intensive Writing Patricia Gillikin, PhD (she, her, hers) Phone: 565-1891 (home--landline), 925-8616 (office) Office: Learning Resource Center 137 A, in the Writing Center e-mail: gillikin@unm.edu Office/Campus Hours: Tuesdays

More information

Course Syllabus Advanced-Intermediate Grammar ESOL 0352

Course Syllabus Advanced-Intermediate Grammar ESOL 0352 Semester with Course Reference Number (CRN) Course Syllabus Advanced-Intermediate Grammar ESOL 0352 Fall 2016 CRN: (10332) Instructor contact information (phone number and email address) Office Location

More information

ARH 390 Survey of Decorative Arts & Design: The Ancient World to Present Online, Sec. 01, 03 Credit Hours Summer 2017

ARH 390 Survey of Decorative Arts & Design: The Ancient World to Present Online, Sec. 01, 03 Credit Hours Summer 2017 ARH 390 Survey of Decorative Arts & Design: The Ancient World to Present Online, Sec. 01, 03 Credit Hours Summer 2017 Catherine Moran Email: cmoran1@umassd.edu Office: N/A Phone: TBD Office hours: By Appointment

More information

SYLLABUS: RURAL SOCIOLOGY 1500 INTRODUCTION TO RURAL SOCIOLOGY SPRING 2017

SYLLABUS: RURAL SOCIOLOGY 1500 INTRODUCTION TO RURAL SOCIOLOGY SPRING 2017 College of Food, Agricultural, and Environmental Science School of Environment and Natural Resources SYLLABUS: RURAL SOCIOLOGY 1500 INTRODUCTION TO RURAL SOCIOLOGY SPRING 2017 Course overview Instructor

More information

Course Content Concepts

Course Content Concepts CS 1371 SYLLABUS, Fall, 2017 Revised 8/6/17 Computing for Engineers Course Content Concepts The students will be expected to be familiar with the following concepts, either by writing code to solve problems,

More information

Syllabus CHEM 2230L (Organic Chemistry I Laboratory) Fall Semester 2017, 1 semester hour (revised August 24, 2017)

Syllabus CHEM 2230L (Organic Chemistry I Laboratory) Fall Semester 2017, 1 semester hour (revised August 24, 2017) Page 1 of 7 Syllabus CHEM 2230L (Organic Chemistry I Laboratory) Fall Semester 2017, 1 semester hour (revised August 24, 2017) Sections, Time. Location and Instructors Section CRN Number Day Time Location

More information

INTRODUCTION TO SOCIOLOGY SOCY 1001, Spring Semester 2013

INTRODUCTION TO SOCIOLOGY SOCY 1001, Spring Semester 2013 INTRODUCTION TO SOCIOLOGY SOCY 1001, Spring Semester 2013 Professor: Lori M. Hunter, Ph.D. Contact: Lori.Hunter@colorado.edu, 303-492-5850 Background: http://www.colorado.edu/ibs/es/hunterl/ Office Hours:

More information

ECON492 Senior Capstone Seminar: Cost-Benefit and Local Economic Policy Analysis Fall 2017 Instructor: Dr. Anita Alves Pena

ECON492 Senior Capstone Seminar: Cost-Benefit and Local Economic Policy Analysis Fall 2017 Instructor: Dr. Anita Alves Pena ECON492 Senior Capstone Seminar: Cost-Benefit and Local Economic Policy Analysis Fall 2017 Instructor: Dr. Anita Alves Pena Contact: Office: C 306C Clark Building Phone: 970-491-0821 Fax: 970-491-2925

More information

Course Syllabus It is the responsibility of each student to carefully review the course syllabus. The content is subject to revision with notice.

Course Syllabus It is the responsibility of each student to carefully review the course syllabus. The content is subject to revision with notice. Elder Abuse CCJS 498 Criminology & Criminal Justice Studies University of Maryland, Shady Grove Campus Meeting time and location: TU 1:00-3:30 Bldg. III Room Course Syllabus It is the responsibility of

More information

CRITICAL THINKING AND WRITING: ENG 200H-D01 - Spring 2017 TR 10:45-12:15 p.m., HH 205

CRITICAL THINKING AND WRITING: ENG 200H-D01 - Spring 2017 TR 10:45-12:15 p.m., HH 205 CRITICAL THINKING AND WRITING: ENG 200H-D01 - Spring 2017 TR 10:45-12:15 p.m., HH 205 Instructor: Dr. Elinor Cubbage Office Hours: Tues. and Thurs. by appointment Email: ecubbage@worwic.edu Phone: 410-334-2999

More information

Adler Graduate School

Adler Graduate School Adler Graduate School Richfield, Minnesota AGS Course 500 Principles of Research 1. Course Designation and Identifier 1.1 Adler Graduate School 1.2 Course Number: 500 1.3 Research 1.4 Three (3) credits

More information

San José State University Department of Psychology PSYC , Human Learning, Spring 2017

San José State University Department of Psychology PSYC , Human Learning, Spring 2017 San José State University Department of Psychology PSYC 155-03, Human Learning, Spring 2017 Instructor: Valerie Carr Office Location: Dudley Moorhead Hall (DMH), Room 318 Telephone: (408) 924-5630 Email:

More information

An unexamined life is not worth living -Socrates

An unexamined life is not worth living -Socrates Philosophy& 101: INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY Pierce College, Puyallup Spring Quarter 2017; Mon-Thurs 1-2:05 pm, ADM 155 Professor: Katrina Winzeler Office hours: 161A ADM, 10-10:55 am daily (or by appointment)

More information

SPANISH 102, Basic Spanish, Second Semester, 4 Credit Hours Winter, 2013

SPANISH 102, Basic Spanish, Second Semester, 4 Credit Hours Winter, 2013 SPANISH 02, Basic Spanish, Second Semester, 4 Credit Hours Winter, 203 Instructor: Elena García MCC Phone #: (23) 777-0445 Home Phone #: (23) 798-406 Section & W0: 4 class hours per week (M-TH: 0:0am :05am)

More information

COURSE DESCRIPTION PREREQUISITE COURSE PURPOSE

COURSE DESCRIPTION PREREQUISITE COURSE PURPOSE EDF 515 Spring 2013 On-Line Course Theories of Learning and Motivation Instructor: Dr. Alan W. Garrett Office: ED 147 Telephone: 575-562-2890 E-mail: alan.garrett@enmu.edu Office Hours: Monday: 8:00-10:00

More information

ACC : Accounting Transaction Processing Systems COURSE SYLLABUS Spring 2011, MW 3:30-4:45 p.m. Bryan 202

ACC : Accounting Transaction Processing Systems COURSE SYLLABUS Spring 2011, MW 3:30-4:45 p.m. Bryan 202 1 The University of North Carolina at Greensboro Bryan School of Business and Economics Department of Accounting and Finance ACC 325-01: Accounting Transaction Processing Systems COURSE SYLLABUS Spring

More information

FINANCE 3320 Financial Management Syllabus May-Term 2016 *

FINANCE 3320 Financial Management Syllabus May-Term 2016 * FINANCE 3320 Financial Management Syllabus May-Term 2016 * Instructor details: Professor Mukunthan Santhanakrishnan Office: Fincher 335 Office phone: 214-768-2260 Email: muku@smu.edu Class details: Days:

More information

English Policy Statement and Syllabus Fall 2017 MW 10:00 12:00 TT 12:15 1:00 F 9:00 11:00

English Policy Statement and Syllabus Fall 2017 MW 10:00 12:00 TT 12:15 1:00 F 9:00 11:00 English 0302.203 Policy Statement and Syllabus Fall 2017 Instructor: Patti Thompson Phone: (806) 716-2438 Email addresses: pthompson@southplainscollege.edu or pattit22@att.net (home) Office Hours: RC307B

More information

Required Text: Oltmanns, T. & Emery, R. (2014). Abnormal Psychology (8th Edition) ISBN-13: ISBN-10:

Required Text: Oltmanns, T. & Emery, R. (2014). Abnormal Psychology (8th Edition) ISBN-13: ISBN-10: SYLLABUS Course Information: PSYC 4311.060: ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY SPRING 2016 ONLINE Instructor Information: Dung Ngo, Ph.D. Office: HPR 224 Email: (best way to reach me) dngo@uttyler.edu Office Hours: Wednesdays,

More information

An unexamined life is not worth living -Socrates

An unexamined life is not worth living -Socrates 1 Philosophy& 101: Introduction to Philosophy Pierce College, Puyallup Winter Quarter 2017; meets daily Professor: Katrina Winzeler Office hours: 161A ADM, 10-10:55 am daily (or by appointment) Email:

More information

ENG 111 Achievement Requirements Fall Semester 2007 MWF 10:30-11: OLSC

ENG 111 Achievement Requirements Fall Semester 2007 MWF 10:30-11: OLSC Fleitz/ENG 111 1 Contact Information ENG 111 Achievement Requirements Fall Semester 2007 MWF 10:30-11:20 227 OLSC Instructor: Elizabeth Fleitz Email: efleitz@bgsu.edu AIM: bluetea26 (I m usually available

More information

TROY UNIVERSITY MASTER OF SCIENCE IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS DEGREE PROGRAM

TROY UNIVERSITY MASTER OF SCIENCE IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS DEGREE PROGRAM TROY UNIVERSITY MASTER OF SCIENCE IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS DEGREE PROGRAM IR 6601 RESEARCH METHODS IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS PROFESSOR INFORMATION (Insert name, mailing address, phone [optional], FAX

More information

Course Syllabus Art History II ARTS 1304

Course Syllabus Art History II ARTS 1304 Semester with Course Reference Number (CRN) Spring 2015 CRN 45135 Course Syllabus Art History II ARTS 1304 Instructor contact information Office Location and Hours Course Location/Times Course Semester

More information

MAR Environmental Problems & Solutions. Stony Brook University School of Marine & Atmospheric Sciences (SoMAS)

MAR Environmental Problems & Solutions. Stony Brook University School of Marine & Atmospheric Sciences (SoMAS) MAR 340-01 Environmental Problems & Solutions Stony Brook University School of Marine & Atmospheric Sciences (SoMAS) This course satisfies the DEC category H This course satisfies the SBC category STAS

More information

Visual Journalism J3220 Syllabus

Visual Journalism J3220 Syllabus Visual Journalism J3220 Syllabus Section: 15CB Semester: Fall 2013 Class meeting time: Tuesday and Thursday from 4:05-6 p.m., Matherly 107 Instructor: Andrea Hall Email: andreaehall@ufl.edu Phone number:??

More information

- Social Psychology -

- Social Psychology - PSYCHOLOGY 280 - Social Psychology - Dr. G. Wells & Dr. R. Hessling, Psych. 280, Fall 2013 First half of semester Second half of semester Professors: Dr. Gary Wells Dr. Robert Hessling Offices: 476 Science

More information

McKendree University School of Education Methods of Teaching Elementary Language Arts EDU 445/545-(W) (3 Credit Hours) Fall 2011

McKendree University School of Education Methods of Teaching Elementary Language Arts EDU 445/545-(W) (3 Credit Hours) Fall 2011 McKendree University School of Education Methods of Teaching Elementary Language Arts EDU 445/545-(W) (3 Credit Hours) Fall 2011 Instructor: Dr. Darryn Diuguid Phone: 537-6559 E-mail: drdiuguid@mckendree.edu

More information

Office Hours: Mon & Fri 10:00-12:00. Course Description

Office Hours: Mon & Fri 10:00-12:00. Course Description 1 State University of New York at Buffalo INTRODUCTION TO STATISTICS PSC 408 4 credits (3 credits lecture, 1 credit lab) Fall 2016 M/W/F 1:00-1:50 O Brian 112 Lecture Dr. Michelle Benson mbenson2@buffalo.edu

More information

Foothill College Fall 2014 Math My Way Math 230/235 MTWThF 10:00-11:50 (click on Math My Way tab) Math My Way Instructors:

Foothill College Fall 2014 Math My Way Math 230/235 MTWThF 10:00-11:50  (click on Math My Way tab) Math My Way Instructors: This is a team taught directed study course. Foothill College Fall 2014 Math My Way Math 230/235 MTWThF 10:00-11:50 www.psme.foothill.edu (click on Math My Way tab) Math My Way Instructors: Instructor:

More information

Chemistry 106 Chemistry for Health Professions Online Fall 2015

Chemistry 106 Chemistry for Health Professions Online Fall 2015 Parkland College Chemistry Courses Natural Sciences Courses 2015 Chemistry 106 Chemistry for Health Professions Online Fall 2015 Laura B. Sonnichsen Parkland College, lsonnichsen@parkland.edu Recommended

More information

Foothill College Summer 2016

Foothill College Summer 2016 Foothill College Summer 2016 Intermediate Algebra Math 105.04W CRN# 10135 5.0 units Instructor: Yvette Butterworth Text: None; Beoga.net material used Hours: Online Except Final Thurs, 8/4 3:30pm Phone:

More information

PSY 1010, General Psychology Course Syllabus. Course Description. Course etextbook. Course Learning Outcomes. Credits.

PSY 1010, General Psychology Course Syllabus. Course Description. Course etextbook. Course Learning Outcomes. Credits. Course Syllabus Course Description This course is an introductory survey of the principles, theories, and methods of psychology as a basis for the understanding of human behavior and mental processes.

More information

Biology 10 - Introduction to the Principles of Biology Spring 2017

Biology 10 - Introduction to the Principles of Biology Spring 2017 Biology 10 - Introduction to the Principles of Biology Spring 2017 Welcome to Bio 10! Lecture: Monday and Wednesday Lab: Monday 7:00 10:00pm or 5:30-7:00pm Wednesday 7:00 10:00pm Room: 2004 Lark Hall Room:

More information

Introduction to Psychology

Introduction to Psychology Course Title Introduction to Psychology Course Number PSYCH-UA.9001001 SAMPLE SYLLABUS Instructor Contact Information André Weinreich aw111@nyu.edu Course Details Wednesdays, 1:30pm to 4:15pm Location

More information

Syllabus: PHI 2010, Introduction to Philosophy

Syllabus: PHI 2010, Introduction to Philosophy Syllabus: PHI 2010, Introduction to Philosophy Spring 2016 Instructor Contact Instructor: William Butchard, Ph.D. Office: PSY 235 Office Hours: T/TH: 1:30-2:30 E-mail: Please contact me through the course

More information

POFI 1349 Spreadsheets ONLINE COURSE SYLLABUS

POFI 1349 Spreadsheets ONLINE COURSE SYLLABUS POFI 1349 Spreadsheets ONLINE COURSE SYLLABUS COURSE NUMBER AND TITLE: POFI 1349 SPREADSHEETS (2-2-3) COURSE (CATALOG) DESCRIPTION: Skill development in concepts, procedures, and application of spreadsheets

More information

Syllabus: Introduction to Philosophy

Syllabus: Introduction to Philosophy Syllabus: Introduction to Philosophy Course number: PHI 2010 Meeting Times: Tuesdays and Thursdays days from 11:30-2:50 p.m. Location: Building 1, Room 115 Instructor: William Butchard, Ph.D. Email: Please

More information

APPLIED RURAL SOCIOLOGY SOC 474 COURSE SYLLABUS SPRING 2006

APPLIED RURAL SOCIOLOGY SOC 474 COURSE SYLLABUS SPRING 2006 Course Information: APPLIED RURAL SOCIOLOGY SOC 474 COURSE SYLLABUS SPRING 2006 Meeting Place: 206 Kethley Hall Meeting Times: Monday, 6:00 8:00 pm Instructor: Dr. Alan Barton Office: 201F Kethley Telephone:

More information

San José State University

San José State University San José State University College of Humanities and the Arts Philosophy Department Philosophy 111:01; 27899; Gero 29012; HS 29010; Nurs 29011 Medical Ethics Spring 2017 Instructor: Office Location: Telephone:

More information

MATH 1A: Calculus I Sec 01 Winter 2017 Room E31 MTWThF 8:30-9:20AM

MATH 1A: Calculus I Sec 01 Winter 2017 Room E31 MTWThF 8:30-9:20AM Instructor: Amanda Lien Office: S75b Office Hours: MTWTh 11:30AM-12:20PM Contact: lienamanda@fhda.edu COURSE DESCRIPTION MATH 1A: Calculus I Sec 01 Winter 2017 Room E31 MTWThF 8:30-9:20AM Fundamentals

More information

INTRODUCTION TO HEALTH PROFESSIONS HHS CREDITS FALL 2012 SYLLABUS

INTRODUCTION TO HEALTH PROFESSIONS HHS CREDITS FALL 2012 SYLLABUS INTRODUCTION TO HEALTH PROFESSIONS HHS 2000 3 CREDITS FALL 2012 SYLLABUS Meeting Times: Tuesday, Thursday 12:30-1:45pm in ISA 1051 Textbook: Introduction to the Health Professions. (6 th edition) by Peggy

More information

POFI 1301 IN, Computer Applications I (Introductory Office 2010) STUDENT INFORMANTION PLAN Spring 2013

POFI 1301 IN, Computer Applications I (Introductory Office 2010) STUDENT INFORMANTION PLAN Spring 2013 POFI 1301 IN, Computer Applications I (Introductory Office 2010) STUDENT INFORMANTION PLAN Spring 2013 INSTRUCTOR: Patty Balderas PHONE: 281 756 3507 CLASSROOM: MyBlackboard E MAIL:MyBlackboard or pbalderas@alvincollege.edu

More information

ACCT 100 Introduction to Accounting Course Syllabus Course # on T Th 12:30 1:45 Spring, 2016: Debra L. Schmidt-Johnson, CPA

ACCT 100 Introduction to Accounting Course Syllabus Course # on T Th 12:30 1:45 Spring, 2016: Debra L. Schmidt-Johnson, CPA ACCT 100 Introduction to Accounting Course Syllabus Course # 22017 on T Th 12:30 1:45 Spring, 2016: Debra L. Schmidt-Johnson, CPA Course Description: This class introduces the student to the basics of

More information

Photography: Photojournalism and Digital Media Jim Lang/B , extension 3069 Course Descriptions

Photography: Photojournalism and Digital Media Jim Lang/B , extension 3069 Course Descriptions Course Descriptions Photography: Photojournalism and Digital Media Jim Lang/B105-107 812-542-8504, extension 3069 jlang@nafcs.k12.in.us http://fcmediamatters.wordpress.com Journalism I: Journalism I is

More information

IST 440, Section 004: Technology Integration and Problem-Solving Spring 2017 Mon, Wed, & Fri 12:20-1:10pm Room IST 202

IST 440, Section 004: Technology Integration and Problem-Solving Spring 2017 Mon, Wed, & Fri 12:20-1:10pm Room IST 202 IST 440, Section 004: Technology Integration and Problem-Solving Spring 2017 Mon, Wed, & Fri 12:20-1:10pm Room IST 202 INSTRUCTOR: TEACHING ASSISTANT (TA): Dr. Alison Murphy amurphy@ist.psu.edu (814) 814-8839

More information

Texas A&M University - Central Texas PSYK EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY INSTRUCTOR AND CONTACT INFORMATION

Texas A&M University - Central Texas PSYK EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY INSTRUCTOR AND CONTACT INFORMATION Texas A&M University - Central Texas PSYK 303.125 EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY INSTRUCTOR AND CONTACT INFORMATION Instructor: Stephanie R. Smith, Ed.D., LPC-S, LSSP Virtual Office Hours: By appointment only

More information

MAT 122 Intermediate Algebra Syllabus Summer 2016

MAT 122 Intermediate Algebra Syllabus Summer 2016 Instructor: Gary Adams Office: None (I am adjunct faculty) Phone: None Email: gary.adams@scottsdalecc.edu Office Hours: None CLASS TIME and LOCATION: Title Section Days Time Location Campus MAT122 12562

More information

PSY 1012 General Psychology. Course Policies and Syllabus

PSY 1012 General Psychology. Course Policies and Syllabus PSY 1012 General Psychology Course Policies and Syllabus Course Number: PSY 1012, General Psychology Instructor: Deidre Seker Office Hrs. No posted office hours. If a meeting is desired beyond immediate

More information

PHILOSOPHY & CULTURE Syllabus

PHILOSOPHY & CULTURE Syllabus PHILOSOPHY & CULTURE Syllabus PHIL 1050 FALL 2013 MWF 10:00-10:50 ADM 218 Dr. Seth Holtzman office: 308 Administration Bldg phones: 637-4229 office; 636-8626 home hours: MWF 3-5; T 11-12 if no meeting;

More information

HUMAN DEVELOPMENT OVER THE LIFESPAN Psychology 351 Fall 2013

HUMAN DEVELOPMENT OVER THE LIFESPAN Psychology 351 Fall 2013 PSYC 351, p.1 HUMAN DEVELOPMENT OVER THE LIFESPAN Psychology 351 Fall 2013 CLASS MEETING DAYS: Tuesdays CLASS MEETING PLACE: Room 114 CLASS MEETING TIME: 9:00-11:45 a.m. CLASS WEBSITE: www.tulloch.org/uc/psy321home.html

More information

Please read this entire syllabus, keep it as reference and is subject to change by the instructor.

Please read this entire syllabus, keep it as reference and is subject to change by the instructor. Math 125: Intermediate Algebra Syllabus Section # 3288 Fall 2013 TTh 4:10-6:40 PM MATH 1412 INSTRUCTOR: Nisakorn Srichoom (Prefer to be call Ms. Nisa or Prof. Nisa) OFFICE HOURS: Tuesday at 6:40-7:40 PM

More information

Military Science 101, Sections 001, 002, 003, 004 Fall 2014

Military Science 101, Sections 001, 002, 003, 004 Fall 2014 Military Science 101, Sections 001, 002, 003, 004 Fall 2014 Instructor Name: SFC Jonathan Whittington Email: whittingjm@sfasu.edu Phone: 936-468-4230 Office: Military Science Building, Room 104 Office

More information

MANAGERIAL LEADERSHIP

MANAGERIAL LEADERSHIP MANAGERIAL LEADERSHIP MGMT 3287-002 FRI-132 (TR 11:00 AM-12:15 PM) Spring 2016 Instructor: Dr. Gary F. Kohut Office: FRI-308/CCB-703 Email: gfkohut@uncc.edu Telephone: 704.687.7651 (office) Office hours:

More information

Intensive English Program Southwest College

Intensive English Program Southwest College Intensive English Program Southwest College ESOL 0352 Advanced Intermediate Grammar for Foreign Speakers CRN 55661-- Summer 2015 Gulfton Center Room 114 11:00 2:45 Mon. Fri. 3 hours lecture / 2 hours lab

More information

Course Syllabus. Alternatively, a student can schedule an appointment by .

Course Syllabus. Alternatively, a student can schedule an appointment by  . Course Syllabus Course Information Course Number/Section CS/SE 6301.006 Course Title Virtual Reality Term Spring 2013 Days & Times Tues & Thurs 1:00pm 2:15pm; JO 3.516 Professor Contact Information Professor

More information

THE UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO. Department of Psychology

THE UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO. Department of Psychology THE UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO LONDON CANADA Department of Psychology 2011-2012 Psychology 2301A (formerly 260A) Section 001 Introduction to Clinical Psychology 1.0 CALENDAR DESCRIPTION This course

More information

COURSE SYLLABUS for PTHA 2250 Current Concepts in Physical Therapy

COURSE SYLLABUS for PTHA 2250 Current Concepts in Physical Therapy COURSE SYLLABUS for PTHA 2250 Current Concepts in Physical Therapy CATALOGUE DESCRIPTION Current concepts, skills, and knowledge in the provision of physical therapy services. Includes enhancement of professional

More information

*In Ancient Greek: *In English: micro = small macro = large economia = management of the household or family

*In Ancient Greek: *In English: micro = small macro = large economia = management of the household or family ECON 3 * *In Ancient Greek: micro = small macro = large economia = management of the household or family *In English: Microeconomics = the study of how individuals or small groups of people manage limited

More information

Demography and Population Geography with GISc GEH 320/GEP 620 (H81) / PHE 718 / EES80500 Syllabus

Demography and Population Geography with GISc GEH 320/GEP 620 (H81) / PHE 718 / EES80500 Syllabus Demography and Population Geography with GISc GEH 320/GEP 620 (H81) / PHE 718 / EES80500 Syllabus Catalogue description Course meets (optional) Instructor Email The world's population in the context of

More information

Soil & Water Conservation & Management Soil 4308/7308 Course Syllabus: Spring 2008

Soil & Water Conservation & Management Soil 4308/7308 Course Syllabus: Spring 2008 1 Instructor: Dr. Clark Gantzer Office: 330 ABNR Building Mailbox: 302 ABNR Building Phone: 882-0611 E-mail: gantzerc@missouri.edu Office Hours: by Appointment Class Meetings: Lecture - 1:00 1: 50 pm MW

More information

ITM2500 Spreadsheet & Database Productivity. Spreadsheet & Database Productivity

ITM2500 Spreadsheet & Database Productivity. Spreadsheet & Database Productivity Course Information ITM2500 Spreadsheet & Database Productivity SAINT LOUIS UNIVERSITY, MADRID CAMPUS Spring 2016 Course Title Course Numbers Course Discipline Spreadsheet & Database Productivity ITM-2500

More information

STANDARDIZED COURSE SYLLABUS

STANDARDIZED COURSE SYLLABUS STANDARDIZED COURSE SYLLABUS COURSE TITLE ENG 2223 VAA--American Literature I Instructor: Glenda Silverii Copiah-Lincoln Community College Office Phone: 601.643.8440 Email: Glenda.silverii@colin.edu Office

More information

Social Media Marketing BUS COURSE OUTLINE

Social Media Marketing BUS COURSE OUTLINE Social Media Marketing BUS 317 001 COURSE OUTLINE Semester: Fall 2017 Class Time: Tuesday/Thursday 16:00 17:15 Class Room #: ED 621 Instructor: Office Hours: Dr. Lisa Watson Tuesday/Thursday 14:30-15:45,

More information

Northeastern University Online Course Syllabus

Northeastern University Online Course Syllabus 1 Northeastern University Online Course Syllabus Course Title: Health Behavior Change Course Number: NTR 6118-70074 Fall 2017 October 30 December 16, 2017 Instructor Contact Information Gary S. Rose, Ph.D.

More information

The New Venture Business Plan BAEP 554

The New Venture Business Plan BAEP 554 Instructor: The New Venture Business Plan BAEP 554 Lloyd Greif Center for Entrepreneurial Studies Marshall School of Business, Bridge Hall One (lower level) University of Southern California Los Angeles,

More information

Introduction to Forensic Anthropology ASM 275, Section 1737, Glendale Community College, Fall 2008

Introduction to Forensic Anthropology ASM 275, Section 1737, Glendale Community College, Fall 2008 Introduction to Forensic Anthropology ASM 275, Section 1737, Glendale Community College, Fall 2008 Instructor: Dr. P. James Macaluso Email: paul.macaluso@gcmail.maricopa.edu Phone: 480-731-8866, Mailbox

More information

Spring 2015 CRN: Department: English CONTACT INFORMATION: REQUIRED TEXT:

Spring 2015 CRN: Department: English CONTACT INFORMATION: REQUIRED TEXT: Harrisburg Area Community College Virtual Learning English 104 Reporting and Technical Writing 3 credits Spring 2015 CRN: 32330 Department: English Instructor: Professor L.P. Barnett Office Location: York

More information

IPHY 3410 Section 1 - Introduction to Human Anatomy Lecture Syllabus (Spring, 2017)

IPHY 3410 Section 1 - Introduction to Human Anatomy Lecture Syllabus (Spring, 2017) IPHY 3410 Section 1 - Introduction to Human Anatomy Lecture Syllabus (Spring, 2017) INSTRUCTOR: Dr. Leif Saul Office: TB01-108 (Temporary Bldg. 01 is attached to the West end of Clare Small) Phone: (303)

More information

MKT ADVERTISING. Fall 2016

MKT ADVERTISING. Fall 2016 TENTATIVE syllabus ~ subject to changes and modifications at the start of the semester MKT 4350.001 ADVERTISING Fall 2016 Mon & Wed, 11.30 am 12.45 pm Classroom: JSOM 2.802 Prof. Abhi Biswas Email: abiswas@utdallas.edu

More information

IST 649: Human Interaction with Computers

IST 649: Human Interaction with Computers Syllabus for IST 649 Spring 2014 Zhang p 1 IST 649: Human Interaction with Computers Spring 2014 PROFESSOR: Ping Zhang Office: Hinds Hall 328 Office Hours: T 11:00-12:00 pm or by appointment Phone: 443-5617

More information

CHEM:1070 Sections A, B, and C General Chemistry I (Fall 2017)

CHEM:1070 Sections A, B, and C General Chemistry I (Fall 2017) CHEM:1070 Sections A, B, and C General Chemistry I (Fall 2017) Course Objectives CHEM:1070 provides students with an introduction to chemistry and is appropriate for students who have not had an advanced

More information

SOUTHERN MAINE COMMUNITY COLLEGE South Portland, Maine 04106

SOUTHERN MAINE COMMUNITY COLLEGE South Portland, Maine 04106 SOUTHERN MAINE COMMUNITY COLLEGE South Portland, Maine 04106 Title: Precalculus Catalog Number: MATH 190 Credit Hours: 3 Total Contact Hours: 45 Instructor: Gwendolyn Blake Email: gblake@smccme.edu Website:

More information

HSMP 6611 Strategic Management in Health Care (Strg Mgmt in Health Care) Fall 2012 Thursday 5:30 7:20 PM Ed 2 North, 2301

HSMP 6611 Strategic Management in Health Care (Strg Mgmt in Health Care) Fall 2012 Thursday 5:30 7:20 PM Ed 2 North, 2301 HSMP 6611 Strategic Management in Health Care (Strg Mgmt in Health Care) Fall 2012 Thursday 5:30 7:20 PM Ed 2 North, 2301 Instructor: Tim D. Noe, Ph.D. Assistant Professor, Colorado School of Public Health

More information

Content Teaching Methods: Social Studies. Dr. Melinda Butler

Content Teaching Methods: Social Studies. Dr. Melinda Butler Content Teaching Methods: Social Studies ED 456 P60 2 Credits Dr. Melinda Butler (208) 292-1288 office (208) 666-6712 fax (208) 771-3703 cell Email: mkbutler@lcsc.edu or butlerm2@mac.com Course Description:

More information

Pitching Accounts & Advertising Sales ADV /PR

Pitching Accounts & Advertising Sales ADV /PR Pitching Accounts & Advertising Sales ADV 378 05816/PR 378 06233 Fall 2011 UTC 3.110 Fridays 9 am to 12 pm Instructor: Office: Office Hours: TA & Off. Hours: Fran Harris CMA A7.154B By appointment, Thursdays

More information

International Business BADM 455, Section 2 Spring 2008

International Business BADM 455, Section 2 Spring 2008 International Business BADM 455, Section 2 Spring 2008 Call #: 11947 Class Meetings: 12:00 12:50 pm, Monday, Wednesday & Friday Credits Hrs.: 3 Room: May Hall, room 309 Instruct or: Rolf Butz Office Hours:

More information

Texas A&M University - Central Texas PSYK PRINCIPLES OF RESEARCH FOR THE BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES. Professor: Elizabeth K.

Texas A&M University - Central Texas PSYK PRINCIPLES OF RESEARCH FOR THE BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES. Professor: Elizabeth K. Texas A&M University - Central Texas PSYK 335-120 PRINCIPLES OF RESEARCH FOR THE BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES Professor: Elizabeth K. Brown, MS, MBA Class Times: T/Th 6:30pm-7:45pm Phone: 254-338-6058 Location:

More information

MTH 215: Introduction to Linear Algebra

MTH 215: Introduction to Linear Algebra MTH 215: Introduction to Linear Algebra Fall 2017 University of Rhode Island, Department of Mathematics INSTRUCTOR: Jonathan A. Chávez Casillas E-MAIL: jchavezc@uri.edu LECTURE TIMES: Tuesday and Thursday,

More information

BI408-01: Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology

BI408-01: Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology BI408-01: Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology Spring 2013 Instructor: Jennifer R. Kowalski, Ph.D. Office: Gallahue Hall 271 Phone: 940-8879 Office Hours: 10:00-11:30 a.m. Mon. and Wed. E-mail: jrkowals@butler.edu

More information

RL17501 Inventing Modern Literature: Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio and XIV Century Florence 3 credits Spring 2014

RL17501 Inventing Modern Literature: Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio and XIV Century Florence 3 credits Spring 2014 RL17501 Inventing Modern Literature: Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio and XIV Century Florence 3 credits Spring 2014 Instructor: Brian O Connor email: oconnobc@bc.edu Office: Lyons 204a Office Hours: MWF 12:00-1:00;

More information