May 17, 2024  
Course Catalog 2010-2011 
    
Course Catalog 2010-2011 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Oberlin College Courses Offered in 2010-11 (and planned offerings in future years)


 
  
  • THEA 174 - Lighting Technology and Design


    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU
    An introduction to lighting technology, terminology and technique. Lectures cover lighting history, equipment, manual and computer controlled lighting systems, distribution systems, electricity, lamps, reflectors, lenses, projection equipment and moving lights. Beginning design processes will also be covered. Students hang and focus lights for actual shows and participate in a crew for a theater, dance or opera production during the semester.



    Enrollment Limit: 14
    Instructor: J. Benjamin
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
    Prerequisites & Notes
    In case of schedule conflicts a project may be substituted for the run crew.
  
  • THEA 199 - Theater Production Lab


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 0 hours
    Attribute: 0 HU
    Each enrolled student will serve on one technical/administrative crew for one of the theater, dance or opera productions during the semester: scenery, lighting, sound, costumes or publicity.
    Instructor: D. James
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Mandatory one-time class meeting on the second Friday of the semester; 4:30-6:00 p.m.
  
  • THEA 200 - Acting 2: Scene Study


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU
    The class will focus on observation, personalization, activation, and moment-to-moment realization of character. It will explore the process of crafting a character, rehearsal techniques and scene study utilizing contemporary plays.

     
    Enrollment Limit: 14
    Instructor: M. Wright
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite: THEA 100. Auditions in late spring. A few slots will be held for fall auditions and transfers.

  
  • THEA 202 - Acting for the Camera


    This course may also count for the major in (consult the program or department major requirements) :
    Cinema Studies
    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 1-3 hours
    Attribute: 1-3HU
    In weekly on-camera assignments, students will explore the particular challenges and opportunities entailed in making vivid acting choices in front of a camera. Work will include improvisation, monologues and scene work. Counts toward both THEA and CINE majors.
    Enrollment Limit: 12
    Instructor: P. Moser
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite: THEA 100. Prerequisite may be waived for Cinema Studies majors.
  
  • THEA 207 - Acting Ensemble


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 1-3 hours
    Attribute: 1-3HU
    Student actors in this class will collaborate with the student directors in THEA 307: Directing 2. First module will involve staging exercises and scene work. Second module will involve the preparation of one act plays presented in rep in the Little Theater. Variable credit depending upon level of involvement.
    Enrollment Limit: 16
    Instructor: P. Moser
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite: THEA 100.
  
  • THEA 208 - Directing I


    Next Offered: Fall 2011
    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU
    This course is designed to introduce students to the art and craft of directing. Students will explore the theory and function of the director as well as become familiar with the step by step process that a director must take to create a piece from first read into production. Students will develop strategies for analyzing scripts, visualizing design concepts, as well as engage in exercises to create dynamic staging and begin building a vocabulary for working with actors.

     
    Enrollment Limit: 12
    Instructor: J. Emeka
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite: THEA 100.

  
  • THEA 210 - Movement for Actors


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU
    This course is designed to increase the actor’s physical range of motion and gain awareness of how the body contributes to the process of acting. Students will use techniques in pantomime, viewpoints, and Capoeira to explore the use of gesture, space, and rhythm onstage. Students will participate in daily movement exercises, improvisations, and scene work that allow them to increase their physical imagination. We will focus on using the body to listen, express emotion, create character, and pursue actions. The goal of the class is to provide skills that allow students to gain comfort and confidence in fully engaging their body onstage.



    Enrollment Limit: 14
    Instructor: J. Emeka
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
  
  • THEA 212 - Stage Management


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU
    This course is an introduction to the practice of stage management for theater, dance, musical theater, and opera. Topics covered include: organization, communication, interpersonal relations, the production process, rehearsal and performance procedures, and documentation. This course will culminate in a final stage management project and a prompt book for a play.
    Enrollment Limit: 14
    Instructor: D. James
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
  
  • THEA 213 - Stage Management Practicum


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 1-3 hours
    Attribute: 1-3HU
    For student stage managers currently working on productions sponsored by the Theater and Dance Program. Consent of instructor required.
    Instructor: D. James
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: May be taken concurrently with THEA 212.
  
  • THEA 216 - Narrative Film Workshop - Directing


    This course may also count for the major in (consult the program or department major requirements) :
    Cinema Studies
    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 4 hours
    Attribute: 4HU
    This studio course will focus on the director/actor collaboration within narrative film production. We will cover basic character-based text analysis, behavioral story-telling, staging for the camera, storyboards, shooting scripts, and the fundamentals of American method acting and coaching techniques. The directors will collaborate on a sequence of on-camera assignments with actors in THEA 202: Acting for the Camera Practicum, culminating in the shooting of a short film. Course may count toward the Cinema Studies major.

     
    Enrollment Limit: 6
    Instructor: P. Moser
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite: CINE 298.

  
  • THEA 218 - Stage Combat


    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 2 hours
    Attribute: 2HU
    This course will cover safety, basic hand-to-hand combat, falling and rolling techniques, introduction to sword (rapier), and choreography development. Teamwork. concentration, physical control and, most of all, safety will be fostered in this work.
    Enrollment Limit: 20
    Instructor: J. Davis
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Priority given to junior and senior Theater & Dance majors.
  
  • THEA 222 - Introduction to Design


    Next Offered: Fall 2011
    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU
    An introduction to designing for the performing arts. Lectures and readings explore the design process, and projects exercise the designer’s fundamental tools in creating the visual world of a performance. Goals of the course include understanding the designer’s role in collaboration, communicating a design vision and experimenting with the design process to develop a full expression of creative ideas. Text analysis and concept are also covered from a visual perspective. A preliminary course to further studies in scene, costume or lighting design.

     
    Enrollment Limit: 10
    Instructor: C. Flaharty
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes

  
  • THEA 225 - Individual or Group Projects


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 1-3 hours
    Attribute: 1-3HU
    Intended for intermediate or advanced-level work by individuals and small groups not easily covered in the private reading option. Projects must be approved by the sponsoring faculty member before registration. Consent of director required.
    Instructor: P. Moser, M. Wright, Staff
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
  
  • THEA 230 - Autobiography and Performance


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 4 hours
    Attribute: 4HU, CD, WP
    Autobiography and Performance is a course which integrates performance practices with intellectual theories in order to investigate the various ways individuals choose to construct a representation of their self/selves. We will consider how one’s history, gender, race or ethnic identification, sexuality and ability shape the creation of an autobiographical performance. How does the presence of the performer’s body affect our reception of the autobiographical voice?



    Enrollment Limit: 15
    Instructor: A. Albright
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
    Cross List Information This course is cross listed with Dance 230
  
  • THEA 232 - Costume Design


    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU
    This course is an introduction to the art of designing costumes for the theater, with a primary focus on the process of creating the visual world of a play in both aesthetic and practical terms. Ranging from basic art concepts, through text and character analysis, research and design development to finished designs, the course will emphasize the conception of ideas that help project the style and meaning of a production. Readings, lectures, discussions, design exercises and projects will comprise the material for this course, which demands high student initiative.
    Enrollment Limit: 12
    Instructor: C. Flaharty
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Demands high student initiative and sustained individual work.
  
  • THEA 236 - Scene Design


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU
    This course will use historical theater architecture and scene design as an impetus to the design process by using historically accurate elements to inspire plans and elevations for class design projects. Presentation of individual and group design projects will be by plan, elevation, rendering and model. Basic scenographic techniques will be covered, as well as design processes involving the collaborative nature of the medium.



    Enrollment Limit: 12
    Instructor: M. Grube
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
  
  • THEA 252 - Western Theater History I


    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU
    A year-long lecture course tracing the evolution of the Western theater from Dionysian ritual in ancient Greece through contemporary performance practice in Europe and America. Theater architecture, works of dramatic literature and theoretical treatises on performance will be studied in relation to the social and intellectual history of each major era. Three historical periods will receive special attention: the 5th century BC in Greece, the 17th century in England and France, and the 20th century in Europe and America.



    Enrollment Limit: 35
    Instructor: R. Copeland
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisites: THEA 252 and consent of instructor are prerequisites for THEA 253.
  
  • THEA 253 - Western Theater History II


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU
    A year-long lecture course tracing the evolution of the Western theater from Dionysian ritual in ancient Greece through contemporary performance practice in Europe and America. Theater architecture, works of dramatic literature, and theoretical treatises on performance are studied in relation to the social and intellectual history of each major era. Three historical periods receive special attention: the fifth century BC in Greece, the 17th century in England and France, and the 20th century in Europe and America.

     
    Enrollment Limit: 35
    Instructor: R. Copeland
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisites: THEA 252 and consent of instructor are prerequisites for THEA 253.

  
  • THEA 254 - Classical Asian Theater/Dance Forms


    This course may also count for the major in (consult the program or department major requirements) :
    East Asian Studies, Dance
    Next Offered: 2011-2012
    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3 HU, CD
    Asian performance rarely makes the sort of distinction between ‘theater’ and ‘dance’ that characterizes much Western performance. This course is designed as an introduction to those modes of Asian performance which combine elements of both theater and dance: Kabuku, Noh and Bunraku from Japan, Beijing Opera from China, Wayang Kulit from Indonesia, and Kathakali from India. Many of these forms also utilize masks and puppets. This course will examine the wide range of theatrical elements that Asian forms utilize to create an alternative to the Western style known as ‘realism.’
    Enrollment Limit: 20
    Instructor: R. Copeland
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
  
  • THEA 264 - African American Drama


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU, CD
    This class surveys plays written by Black Americans from the post-slavery period through the late 20th century. An overview of the history of African-American performance is followed by reading and discussion of current criticism and a wide selection of plays by writers such as James Baldwin, Lorraine Hansberry, Amiri Baraka (LeRoi Jones), Adrienne Kennedy, Langston Hughes, Ntozake Shange, August Wilson, and George Wolfe. Requirements include papers, journals and scene work.



    Enrollment Limit: 20
    Instructor: C. Jackson-Smith
    Cross List Information This course is cross-listed with AAST 264
  
  • THEA 268 - Black Arts Workshop


    Next Offered: Fall 2011
    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU, CD
    The Black Arts Workshop combines theory and performance in African American cultural styles. Readings and discussions encompass Afrocentric philosophy, history, religion and aesthetics, dance, music, visual arts and drama. Classroom exercises focus on meditation, movement, dance and acting skills. In the latter part of the semester there is a focus on Black theater including scene work. Written work is required. Final projects are to be creative in nature.
    Enrollment Limit: 20
    Instructor: C. Jackson-Smith
    Consent of the Instructor Required? No
    Cross List Information This course is cross-listed with AAST 268.
  
  • THEA 269 - Voice for the Actor


    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 2-3 hours
    Attribute: 2-3HU
    This course introduces basic principles of voice production for actors: breathing, relaxation, coordination, resonance and centering. Exercises are designed to integrate mind/breath/sound/body in the act of purposeful communication: daily progression from pure sound to text work. Emphasis on freeing the students’ natural range and expressiveness.



    Enrollment Limit: 12
    Instructor: H. Anderson Boll
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
  
  • THEA 270 - Speech and Dialects For The Actor


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU
    A course designed to introduce the student to the fundamentals of General American speech through the study of the International Phonetic Alphabet. The first module of the course will address individual speech challenges and the second module will investigate the process of learning dialects for the stage.



    Enrollment Limit: 12
    Instructor: H. Anderson Boll
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
  
  • THEA 281 - Rehearsal and Performance


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 1-3 hours
    Attribute: 1-3HU
    Intermediate and advanced level work in preparation and public performances of a production directed by a member of the theater faculty.



    Instructor: Staff
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Notes: May be repeated once only for credit. CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • THEA 300 - Acting 3: Poetic Realism


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU
    This is a studio course in advanced scene study which builds on skills learned in THEA100 and THEA 200 and which focuses on the great works of realism from the late 19th century to the present day.
    Enrollment Limit: 12
    Instructor: H. Anderson Boll
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
    Prerequisites & Notes
    THEA 100, THEA 200. Consent of instructor required.
  
  • THEA 301 - Acting 3: Shakespeare


    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU
    This course will introduce skills needed to perform Shakespeare: imaging, phrasing, scansion, and rhetorical analysis.



    Enrollment Limit: 12
    Instructor: P. Moser
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite: Students are encouraged to take THEA 301 concurrently with THEA 269: Voice for the Actor. This combination of courses is designed to prepare advanced students planning to apply to graduate school in Acting.
  
  • THEA 302 - Non-Literary Theater: 1960 to the Present


    This course may also count for the major in (consult the program or department major requirements) :
    Dance
    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU
    This course studies `non-literary’ theater in America from the 1960’s through the 21st Century. We will focus on the work of contemporary ensembles such as The Wooster Group which performs radically ‘de-constructed’ versions of classic texts. The course also examines various concepts of physical theater, audience participation, environmental theater, and guerilla theater. This course will also touch works of more conventional theater directors whose approach to dramatic literature has been influenced by developments in non-literary theater as well as by contemporary dance forms.
    Enrollment Limit: 20
    Instructor: R. Copeland
  
  • THEA 304 - Professional Aspect of Theater


    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 2-3 hours
    Attribute: 2-3HU
    This course will examine all aspects of creating a professional life in today’s theater culture: detailed instruction in audition/interviewing technique, preparation for admission to graduate training, creating an on-line profile, where to live, how to support your career, the fundamental professional tools of the picture and resume and career paths within the field. The second module will focus on the development of a showcase performance.



    Enrollment Limit: 12
    Instructor: M. Wright
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite & Notes: Consent of instructor.
  
  • THEA 306 - Acting 3: Advanced Scene Study - African-American and Latino Playwrights


    This course may also count for the major in (consult the program or department major requirements) :
    African American Studies
    Next Offered: Spring 2012
    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU
    In this class, we will work on and explore scenes written by African-American and Latino playwrights such as Lynn Knottage, August Wilson, Suzanne Lori-Parks, Jose Rivera, Ntozake Shange, Nilo Cruz, and Alice Childress. While staging scenes, students will develop their method of acting as well as discuss the issue of cultural awareness on the actor’s process–specifically, what role race and culture play in the shaping of character and relationship. Student assignments include reading plays, writing in a journal, as well as performing scenes.

     
    Enrollment Limit: 12
    Instructor: J. Emeka
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite: THEA 200.

  
  • THEA 307 - Directing 2: Rehearsal Process


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 4 hours
    Attribute: 4HU
    During first module, students will be introduced to different modes of textual analysis and how these lead to key artistic choices in rehearsal. Assignments will focus on careful play reading, staging and coaching actors. During the second module, classes will monitor the progress of student-directed one act plays to be performed in the Little Theater.



    Enrollment Limit: 6
    Instructor: P. Moser
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
  
  • THEA 309 - Theater of the Millenium


    Next Offered: Spring 2012
    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU
    This class will explore millenial dramatic literature written by living American playwrights: Tony Kushner, George Wolfe, Anna DeVeare Smith, Emily Mann, Horton Foote, Jose Rivera, Oliver Mayer, Eve Ensler, August Wilson, Maria Irene Fornes, Adrienne Kennedy, Amiri Baraka, Kia Corthron, and Suzann Lori-Parks among others. Plays will be contextualized and complemented by critical and historical readings. In addition to discussions and written assignments, scene work will be an important component of the class.
    Enrollment Limit: 20
    Instructor: C. Jackson-Smith
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
  
  • THEA 311 - Directing II: Staging From Non-Dramatic Sources


    This course may also count for the major in (consult the program or department major requirements) :
    Cinema Studies
    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU
    Course is designed to develop young directors’ ability to create new work for the theater from material that was not originally developed for the stage.  Students will explore the use of theatrical space, composition, shape, and rhythm in storytelling; while developing dynamic staging skills adapting poetry, folktales, songs, short stories, etc.–into performance.  Special attention will be placed on adaptation and techniques in ensemble work.  Students will serve as directors, performers, and, occasionally, writers.
    Enrollment Limit: 12
    Instructor: J. Emeka
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite: Thea 208, Thea 100.
  
  • THEA 318 - Imagistic Theater: A Workshop


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 1-3 hours
    Attribute: 1-3HU
    A workshop exploring practical techniques for devising original “theater pieces” that utilize visual images (rather than words ) as their primary means of communicating with an audience. The resulting works will be post-psychological, anti -illusionistic, and non-literary (if not entirely non-verbal. ) We will also explore strategies for staging wordless sequences from works of dramatic literature including Genet’s The Screens, Strindberg’s A Dream Play, Sarah Kane’s Blasted, and Caryl Churchill’s A Mouthful of Birds.
    Enrollment Limit: 12
    Instructor: R. Copeland
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
  
  • THEA 320 - Special Projects


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 1 - 4
    Attribute: 1 - 4 HU
    Special Projects supervised by Theater Faculty.
    Instructor: M. Grube
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
  
  • THEA 321 - The Kander Project


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 1-4 hours
    Attribute: 1-4HU
    This special project will focus on creating a fully realized production of Kander and Ebb’s FLORA THE RED MENACE, to be performed in Hall Auditorium, May 2011 and again during Commencement Week.  BY AUDITION ONLY.  Students must be available during Commencement Week, 2011.
    Instructor: M. Wright
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite & Notes: Consent of the instructor required and contingent upon auditioning and being cast in the production. Students must be available during Commencement Week, 2011.
  
  • THEA 324 - The Concept of the Avant-Garde


    Next Offered: Spring 2012
    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU
    A seminar examining the cultural and political forces of the late 19th and early 20th century which helped create an ‘adversarial’ relationship between ‘avant-garde’ artists and middle-class society. The course focuses on those modernist movements that affected painting and literature as well as the performing arts. Major issues to be explored include: the relationship of the avant-garde to radical politics as well as to popular culture, the tension between abstraction and representation, and the fate of the avant-garde in the age of post-modernism.
    Enrollment Limit: 20
    Instructor: R. Copeland
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
  
  • THEA 328 - Musical Theater


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU
    A studio class introducing the fundamental techniques of musical theatre performance. The course will cover song interpretation, as well as action-driven acting technique through scene study of classic and contemporary American musical theatre masterworks.



    Enrollment Limit: 12
    Instructor: C. Flaharty, M. Wright
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
  
  • THEA 341 - Directing Project


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 1-3 hours
    Attribute: 1-3HU
    Individual study in directing. Student directors will meet weekly with a faculty advisor to discuss and monitor their projects through the various stages of production: script analysis, concept, design, casting, rehearsals, tech and performance.

     
    Enrollment Limit: 6
    Instructor: J. Emeka, C. Jackson-Smith, P. Moser
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Students must first gain Theater and Dance Program approval for their project, at which time a faculty advisor will be assigned. Applications available in the program office, are due April 15th.

  
  • THEA 368 - Black Arts Workshop II


    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 4 hours
    Attribute: 4HU, CD
    This course continues the inquiry begun in AAST/THEA 268 focusing on the Western Hemispheric inheritance from traditional African cultures. This course will focus on performance in sacred and secular cultures of the African diaspora in the mid-to-late 20th century. The class will hone performance skills through in-class exercises and assignments, and intellectual and critical skills through reading, discussions, presentations, journals and critical papers examining aesthetic and cultural performance theories. The course will culminate in a final performance.



    Enrollment Limit: 20
    Instructor: C. Jackson-Smith
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite: AAST/THEA 268 or other AAST Fine Arts classes taught by Professors Coleman, Sharpley and/or Logan.
    Cross List Information This course is cross-listed with AAST 368
  
  • THEA 420 - Honors Project


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 2-6 hours
    Attribute: 2-6HU
    Intensive independent work in theater on a research thesis or creative project to be decided upon in consultation with an advisor.



    Instructor: R. Copeland, J. Emeka, M. Grube, C. Jackson-Smith, P. Moser, M. Wright
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite: Admission to the Honors Program.
  
  • THEA 995 - Private Reading


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 0.5-3 hours
    Attribute: 0.5-3HU
    Signed permission of the instructor required.
    Enrollment Limit: 5
    Instructor: R. Copeland, J. Cuthbertson, J. Emeka, C. Flaharty, M. Grube, C. Jackson-Smith, P. Moser, M. Wright
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Consent must be granted in person via a Private Reading Card.
  
  • TWS 401 - Honors


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3-4 Hours
    Attribute: 3-4 SSCI
    Honors is open to students by invitation of the department.
    Instructor: M. Blecher
    Consent of the Instructor Required? Yes
 

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