Mar 28, 2024  
Course Catalog 2008-2009 
    
Course Catalog 2008-2009 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Oberlin College Courses


 
  
  • ARTS 064 - Problems in: Photography


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU

    During this class students will be introduced to more advanced photographic topics. Among other topics, studio lighting and large format photography, as well as the zone systems, will be covered. Studio assignments are research-based and are designed to address a variety of critical topics within the medium. Along with studio projects and demonstrations there will be writing assignments and class presentations. Consent of instructor required. Enrollment Limit: 12.
    Instructor: P. Nguyen-Duy
  
  • ARTS 065 - Problems in: Painting, An Introduction to Figure Painting


    Next Offered: 2009-2010
    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU

    The course will focus on painting from a live model using oil paints. We will begin with self-portraiture and portraiture and then will begin to explore the genre of the male and female nude. Consent of instructor required. Enrollment Limit: 18.
    Instructor: S. Schuster
  
  • ARTS 066 - Problems in: Silkscreen and Other Reproductive Media


    Next Offered: 2009-2010
    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU

    An extension of ARTS 053 Visual Concepts and Processes: Silkscreen course. Emphasis will be on concept rather than technical processes; however, the cross-fertilization of duplication and other media such as painting, photography, xerography, and three-dimensional media will be emphasized. This course will investigate how visual form and structure mediate conceptual intent. Consent of instructor required. Enrollment Limit: 12.
    Instructor: J. Pearson
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite: ARTS 053.
  
  • ARTS 067 - Problems In: Margin Release: The Oberlin New Media Lectures


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU

    Margin Release is a course divided into three sections, each exploring a different sub-genre within the over-arching enigmatic world of “new media.” Each section culminates in a public lecture and class visit from a prominent new media artist, who will discuss how their work relates to the genre. For the month leading up to each visit, students will study seminal videos, sound pieces, and texts relating to the upcoming lecture.  Enrollment Limit: 12.
    Instructor: J. Christensen
    Prerequisites & Notes
     Consent of the instructor is required.

     
    Cross List Information
    This course is cross-listed with TECH 067

  
  • ARTS 068 - Problems in: Collaboration, (E)CAMP: (Experimental) Collaborations in Art/Music/Performance


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU

    This course focuses on the collaborative development and realization of cross-disciplinary, interactive installations. This is an upper level class for advanced students in TIMARA and in the Department of Art who are interested in using media-rich installation to its full expressive potential. We will engage in critical exploration of recent trends in the field and will hone skills and tools for contemporary installation practice. Students will work with partners/teams from outside their home department.  Enrollment Limit: 14.
    Instructor: J. Christensen, P. Swendsen
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Consent of the instructor is required.
    Cross List Information
    This course is cross-listed with TECH 068
  
  • ARTS 069 - Problems in: Re-imagining the Book


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU

    This course will explore and expand upon the notion of the book as both an object and a text. Using narrative and non-narrative techniques in relation to concept, content, image, and form, students will design and construct a series of books. We will make frequent trips to view the artist’s book collection in the Clarence Ward Art Library in Oberlin. Materials and techniques such as basic use of tools, collage, design, learned and invented bindings, will be covered. This class will focus on inventive approaches to the book NOT traditional bookmaking or binding. Readings, sketchbook, discussion and critique are required forms of participation. Consent of instructor required. Enrollment Limit: 15.
    Instructor: N. Yannuzzi-Macias
  
  • ARTS 070 - Problems in: Painting, Narrative and the Contemporary Figure


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU

    Students must have completed one course in drawing and painting, and have had some experience working with oil paint and from a live model before this course. You will work from live models and from your imaginations. We will look at the way the human figure is used by a number of contemporary artists and study the form and content that drive contemporary figure painting. Consent of instructor required. Enrollment Limit: 12.
    Instructor: S. Schuster
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite:  One course in drawing and one course in painting
  
  • ARTS 072 - Blues Aesthetic: Continuity and Transformation


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU, CD

    The emphasis of this course is upon the thesis that the Black or `Blues Aesthetic’ is a cultural perspective that emerges from within the experiences of Black people, facing the socio-political and economic conditions of modern and contemporary America. Our focus will be upon the traditions of African American music, literature, theater/film, and specifically the visual arts. Enrollment Limit: 12.
    Instructor: J. Coleman
    Cross List Information
    This course is cross-listed with AAST 072.
  
  • ARTS 082 - Problems in: Creative Resistance


    Next Offered: 2009-2010
    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU

    Current history and theory of media-based protest arts, including hacktivism, tactical media, and public intervention will be explored. We will learn how artists utilize digital tools to create acts of resistance, and how this relates to the history of protest in the arts. Ideas about new technologies as art-making tools (GPS, cellular technology, hand-held devices, wi-fi) will be introduced and explored. We will stage and enact media interventions, using digital tools and performance. Experience with Dreamweaver/HTML and/or Final Cut Pro suggested.
    Instructor: J. Christensen
  
  • ARTS 083 - Problems In: Design as Social Process


    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU

    New Course Added 06.24.08.

    In this class students will develop skills in working with text and images, as well as various modes of inquiry such as problem-posing, conceptualizing, and critical thinking. By working with type, image, color, found images and materials, and computer-generated and hand-drawn images, students will develop an understanding of the design process and learn design fundamentals. Topics will focus on the cultural, social, technological aspects of design and the role of the designer in raising awareness and stimulating thought. Enrollment Limit: 10.
    Instructor: A. Ozkal-Telhan

  
  • ARTS 084 - Problems in Visual Narrative: The Site of Memory


    Next Offered: 2009-2010
    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU

    The focus of this course is to critically examine the spaces between the stories that we intend to tell, and the stories that we discover in our efforts to craft them. This is an advanced studio workshop focused upon the honing of the narrative content and/or processes of the artists present. Projects will be formally proposed by students enrolled, and presented for in progress assessments by the class. Readings will be assigned for class discussion. Enrollment Limit: 12.

    Instructor: J. Coleman
    Prerequisites & Notes
     

    Prerequisites:Visual processes courses in both drawing and sculpture.

  
  • ARTS 085 - Problems in Sculpture-With the Grain


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU

    This course seeks to provide students with an intensive workshop in which to develop facility with woodworking skills. The course immerses participants in sequential processes of articulating ideas through drawing, constructing models, and assembly. Three structures are explored: a bench, a chest, and a table. Each project is presented in the context of function, style, and culture. Students will build one structure at full scale from his or her own designs. Consent of the instructor required. Enrollment Limit: 12.
    Instructor: J. Coleman
  
  • ARTS 089 - Advanced Individual Projects


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU

    Students will present their ideas on art and demonstrate them through media of choice. Individual attention is emphasized and assignments given to assist students in clarifying their ideas effectively. Meets weekly to present work for group discussion. At least 12 hours of work outside of class. Similar to Sr Studio but no individual studio space is guaranteed.
    Instructor: J. Pearson
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Open only to upper division students who have: a) established their maturity in studio art and b) minimum of 2 “Vis/Pro” & at least 1 “Problems” courses required.
  
  • ARTS 092 - Renegade Nature


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU

    Course begins with guided research using resources of Lewis Center for Environmental Studies, Cleveland Museum of Natural History, Cleveland Botanical Gardens, into environmental phenomena such as invasive species; overpopulation of species i.e. Canada geese, spread of species range, i.e. the coyote, spread of plant diseases, etc. Each student will keep a research journal, including sketches, and each will create a series of completed works. The latter might include botanical illustration, landscape painting, photography or sculpture.
    Instructor: D. Harvey
  
  • ARTS 093 - Advanced New Media: Land Arts in an Electronic Age


    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU

    New Course Added 06.26.08.

    This class is an upper-level hands-on seminar course, examining modes in which artists interact with the land in our post-digital landscape. The course will begin with an introduction of various forms of psychogeographic research and digital creative cartographic tools. The class will travel to Gary, IN with representatives from the Center for Land use Interpretation. The class will create final pieces to be exhibited in a collaborative show with students at Carnegie Mellon University. Enrollment Limit: 14.
    Instructor: J. Christensen

  
  • ARTS 095 - Senior Studio and Thesis


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 6 hours
    Attribute: 6HU

    A year long team-taught studio course for highly self-motivated students. Taught by two faculty each semester. Participants will work toward a critical articulation of their work and process, through the development of a visual thesis that may include painting, digital media, installation, sculpture, photography, performance or silkscreen or any combination thereof. Students will produce a thesis exhibition, artist’s statement and a professional portfolio by the end of the second semester. Enrollment Limit: 12.
    Instructor: J. Coleman, N. Yannuzzi-Macias, S. Umbenhour, S. Schuster, P. Nguyen-duy
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: Admission by portfolio review. It is strongly suggested that students complete all winter terms prior to their senior year, since students will be required to continue working toward their final exhibition during this time.
  
  • ARTS 200 - Approaches to Western Art


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU *See notes regarding Writing Proficiency

    This course introduces students to the materials and methods of art history. Though arranged chronologically, the class is not a survey. Instead, we address central art historical topics such as technique, style, iconography, the status of the artist and art’s relationship with its original context. This course makes integral use of the Allen Memorial Art Museum. Enrollment Limit: 30.
    Instructor: E. Inglis, S. Kane, J. van Dyke

    Prerequisites & Notes
    NOTE: Not all offerings carry writing proficiency. Must confirm the designation of writing proficiency with the instructor.
  
  • ARTS 205 - Approaches to Western Architectural History


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU

    This course serves as a topical introduction to the history of architecture. The course will introduce students to different ways of seeing buildings and thinking about architecture. Emphasis will be placed on buildings as complex cultural artifacts, rather than as products of a purely stylistic history. Enrollment Limit: 30.
    Instructor: J. Harwood
  
  • ARTS 250 - Approaches to Chinese Art


    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU, CD

    This introduction to the arts of China focuses on artistic production from three perspectives: the artisan, artist, and the art market. We will explore art and architecture across a broad geographic and temporal frame (Neolithic-20th century), but focus on smaller contexts and themes within the larger framework, e.g. tombs, cave-temples, imperial courts, literati and avant-garde circles, and the religious or socio-political networks that informed these contexts. An underlying aim is to develop visually literacy in speech and writing using the terminology of the discipline. Enrollment limit: 30.
    Instructor: B. Cheng
    Cross List Information
    This course is cross-listed with EAST 141.
  
  • ARTS 251 - Approaches to Japanese Art


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU, CD

    This survey of Japan will highlight a range of artistic media from ancient times to the modern day. We will examine the art and architecture of religious and secular traditions, with an emphasis on painted traditions (narrative hand scrolls, prints, and screens). Primary themes will include the contexts of artistic production (as informed by gender or socio-political circumstances), the spatial or social networks of their use, cultural exchange with China, and tensions between court-sponsored traditions and other artistic practices. Enrollment Limit: 30.
    Instructor: B. Cheng
    Cross List Information
    This course is cross-listed with EAST 142.
  
  • ARTS 305 - Architecture of the Enlightenment


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU

    History of architecture and architectural theory from emergence of academic theory in France in latter quarter of 17th century through French Revolution will be covered. Emphasis will be given to central importance of French architectural culture for European architecture as a whole. Significant architects and writers from England, Germany, Italy and Portugal will be covered in detail. Among historical themes covered will be integration of applied sciences and archaeology into architectural theory, meteoric rise of bourgeois culture, philosophies of sensation and rationalism, birth of the police, and “revolutionary architecture”  Enrollment limit: 30.
    Instructor: J. Harwood
  
  • ARTS 308 - Greek and Roman Sculpture


    Next Offered: 2009-2010
    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU, CD, WR

    A study of the origins and development of Greek and Roman sculpture. Why, how and for whom was this art form made? Special emphasis will be given to the study of its place in the development of figural art. Enrollment Limit: 30.
    Instructor: S. Kane
  
  • ARTS 310 - Medieval Art


    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU

    A chronological survey of medieval art emphasizing the period’s creativity and fundamental importance for the larger history of western art. Topics covered include: the invention of Christian art and architecture, manuscript illumination, Byzantine icons and iconoclasm, Romanesque and Gothic architecture, art in monasteries, courts and cities, medieval realism and the beginnings of secular art. Enrollment limit: 40.
    Instructor: E. Inglis
  
  • ARTS 311 - Egyptian Art and Architecture


    Next Offered: 2009-2010
    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU, CD, WR

    This survey course will provide a basic outline of ancient Egyptian culture from the perspective of the visual arts and architecture from the redynastic Period through Roman times (4,000 B.C. to A.D. 300) as well as discuss the influence of Egyptian art and architecture on later periods of western culture.

     




    Instructor: S. Kane

  
  • ARTS 325 - Art since 1945


    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU

    New Course Added 05.22.08.

    A focused survey of American and European art in all media since the end of the Second World War, as well as the competing critical paradigms advanced to discuss and understand it. The main emphasis will be on historical conditions, artistic developments and critical debates after 1960, with particular focus on the problems of originality and authorship, autonomy and contingency, object and conception, expression and representation, the body and identity, and critique and complicity. Enrollment Limit: 30.
    Instructor: J. van Dyke
    Prerequisites & Notes
    A 200-level course in art history

  
  • ARTS 335 - Saints and Relics in Medieval and Renaissance Art


    This course may also count for the major in (consult the program or department major requirements) :
    East Asian Studies
    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3HU, WR

    This course studies the role art played in the Christian cult of the saints during the Middle Ages. We begin in the fourth century, when Christianity first assumes a broad public face, and finish around 1550, in the wake of the Protestant Reformation. We will study both thematic issues—the importance of relics, the promotion of pilgrimage, etc.—and the iconography of specific saints—among them Thomas Becket, Francis of Assisi, and King Louis IX. We will seek to understand the impact of the cult of the saints on medieval art, and the impact of medieval art on the cult of the saints. Enrollment Limit: 40.
    Instructor: E. Inglis
  
  • ARTS 337 - Architecture in the Age of Historicism, 1790-1900


    Next Offered: 2009-2010
    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU

    This course will provide a broad overview of architecture of the 19th century, from the Napoleonic Era to the decline of academicism. Products of unprecedented and even violent exchanges between cultures, economies, sciences, and religions, the buildings of the 19th century provide crucial insights into the development of modern culture. The architecture of Western Europe and the United States will be central objects of study, but we will also investigate colonial architecture from India to China and New Zealand. 
    Instructor: J. Harwood
  
  • ARTS 338 - Topics in Architecture, Modern and Postmodern


    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU

    This course will provide a broad overview of the history of 20th century architecture, relating key buildings and images of buildings to the historical, scientific, technical, economic, ideological, and aesthetic concepts that they are shaped by, and that they in turn help to construct.  Particular emphasis will be given to the contentious and fractured character of modernist architectural theory and practice. In addition to the work of canonical figures (Frank Lloyd Wright, Le Corbusier, Mies van der Rohe, etc.), we will examine examples of the complex modernisms of non-Western or non-Northern cultures (e.g. Japan, Brazil), of collective modes of architectural production, and the numerous challenges put to modernism from the 1950’s to today. Enrollment Limit:  30.
    Instructor: J. Harwood
    Prerequisites & Notes
     

     

  
  • ARTS 340 - Greek Art and Archaeology


    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU, WR

    Greek democracy, Greek architecture, Greek sculpture—these achievements are an integral part of our western culture and society. This course will examine Greek art and architecture from its Bronze Age beginnings, through the high Classical period, to the Hellenistic time of Alexander the Great (3000 B.C. – 300 B.C.). It will also consider how archaeological discoveries have shaped—and continue to reshape—our interpretation of ancient Greek culture over time.
    Instructor: S. Kane
  
  • ARTS 345 - Roman Art and Architecture


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU, WR

    All roads lead to Rome. Once the ruler of the entire Mediterranean world, Rome remains a central element in our cultural consciousness through its legacy of political, cultural and artistic achievements. This course provides an introduction to the art and architecture of Rome and her empire from its Italic beginnings, through the Republic and into the late Imperial period (8th century B.C. – A.D. 400).
    Instructor: S. Kane
  
  • ARTS 348 - Art of the Italian Renaissance


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU

    This class will explore a range of alternative approaches to Italian Renaissance art and examine works by some of the most famous artists of the Western tradition, including Giotto, Leonardo, Raphael, Michelangelo and Titian. Topics to be explored include: the significance of naturalism; the revival of antiquity; the rise of the cultivated patron; miraculous images and civic life; art and politics; portraiture and gender.Enrollment Limit: 40.
    Instructor: C. Neilson
    Prerequisites & Notes
    An introductory art history course.
  
  • ARTS 354 - Topics in East Asian Art: Monuments in a Comparative Perspective


    Next Offered: 2009-2010
    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU, CD

    An examination of personal, religious, and political monuments in ancient-modern Japan and China, this course explores diverse approaches in the construction of monuments and memorials. Do monuments help us remember the past; allow us to generate new memories, or both? We will focus on the overall artistic design of sites, including material, iconography, and space, and examine how features have been reshaped or generated controversies. Topics may include the Ise Shrine, Todaiji, Peace Memorial Park, Nanjing Massacre Museum, and Tian’anmen Square.  
    Instructor: B. Cheng
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Background in East Asia or Art History is strongly recommended.

  
  • ARTS 355 - The Art of Japanese Prints


    This course may also count for the major in (consult the program or department major requirements) :
    East Asian Studies
    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU, CD

    This course will explore one of Japan’s most prominent mediums, the woodblock print. Using the vast collection in the Allen Memorial Museum to highlight major iconographic trends, topics will include: actors and courtesans, representations of traditional narratives, views of Edo and the Stations of the Tokai-do, architectural representations and perspective scenes, and meisho, among others. The end of each topic section will conclude with a longer class session in the AMAM, from which students will conduct in-depth research. Enrollment Limit: 30.
    Instructor: B. Cheng
  
  • ARTS 361 - Nineteenth-Century Art


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU

    New Course Added 11.03.2008.

    A focused survey of European and American art from circa 1785 to circa 1906. The course will begin with the resurgence of neoclassicism in the late eighteenth century and then consider various artistic responses – including Romanticism, Realism, and Impressionism – to traditional academic principles and practices. Works of art, critical debates, and institutional developments will be discussed in relationship to economic and technological modernization, social transformation, and political revolution. Enrollment limit: 30.
    Instructor: J. van Dyke
    Prerequisites & Notes
    A 200-level course in art history

  
  • ARTS 370 - History of Sustainable Architecture


    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU

    New Course Added 05.01.08

    Addressing the intersecting histories of environmentalism and of architecture, this course examines the contested origins of environmentalism as a global movement and environmentalism’s impact on architecture. The readings stress synchronic developments around the world, weaving them into a cross-cultural enquiry of architectural environmentalism. This course has four chronological sections: the pre-history of environmental thinking; “Silent Spring” and the counter culture of the 1960s; the 70s energy crises; and the discourse of sustainability.  Enrollment limit: 30.
    Instructor: V. Baweja
    Prerequisites & Notes
    An introductory class in Art History or Environmental Studies

  
  • ARTS 372 - Cities and Architecture of Empire


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU

    New course added 05.13.08.

    This course addresses the architectural and urban transformations in the Indian sub-continent, Africa, and South-East Asia, that resulted from cultural contact with the British and French Empires. The course will encourage students to examine how histories of architecture and urbanism intersect with histories of colonialism. The central question addressed will be “How does the built environment illuminate colonial and post-colonial representations of colonialism, and inversely, how has colonialism produced new forms of architecture and urbanism?” Enrollment limit: 30.
    Instructor: V. Baweja
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Introductory course in Art History.

  
  • ARTS 401 - Research Methods and Resources in the Visual Arts


    Semester Offered: First Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 1 hours
    Attribute: 1HU, CD

    Examination of visual arts research and bibliography. Analysis of specific titles, categories of publications, electronic resources will be done within context of actual research practices and specific information needs. Basic steps of research process, database structure and searching, search engines, critical analysis of information, researching artists and artworks will be discussed. Consent of instructor required. Enrollment Limit: 15.
    Instructor: B. Prior
  
  • ARTS 403 - Readings on the Techniques of Archaeological Excavation


    Semester Offered: Second Semester, Second Module
    Credits (Range): 1 Hour
    Attribute: 1 SS

    This course is highly recommended for students planning to enroll in ARTS 413/ACHS 200 Archaeological Field Course and will consist of directed readings on archaeological field work techniques and methods.
    Instructor: S. Kane
    Prerequisites & Notes
     

     

  
  • ARTS 405 - The Chair


    Next Offered: 2009-2010
    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU

    Poet Theodore Roethke once wrote, “A funny thing about the Chair: You hardly ever think it’s there.” We will investigate the history and theory of a ubiquitous but little understood object. A symbol of power, means of regulating labor/social relations, industrial commodity, architecture, art object/subject, and a thing one sits on. We will discuss and examine first-hand chairs and sitting practices, from ancient folding stools to contemp. contract furniture, and digest the diversity of theoretical approaches to chairs and sitting. Enrollment Limit: 15
    Instructor: J. Harwood

  
  • ARTS 408 - European Drawings, 16th-19th Centuries


    Next Offered: 2009-2010
    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Module
    Credits (Range): 2 Hours
    Attribute: 2 HU

    This course will provide an overview of the history of European drawings from the 16th to the 19th centuries. Students will learn about function, technique, materials, and historical context, as well as topics relating to academic instruction, the history of collecting, and provenance. Class meetings and assignments will be organized around the study of original drawings at the Allen Memorial Art Museum. Consent of instructor required. Enrollment Limit: 12.
    Instructor: A. Derstine

  
  • ARTS 413 - Archeological Field Course


    Semester Offered: Summer
    Credits (Range): 4 Hours
    Attribute: 4 SS

    A four week summer course in field archaeology offered in conjunction with the Sangro Valley Project, a joint archaeological project of Oberlin College and Oxford University (www.sangro.org) at the Samnite/Roman site of Monte Pallano in the Abruzzo, Italy. Participants will learn theoretical and practical aspects of excavation. There will also be field trips, lectures on the history of the region, and discussions of the current problems facing professionals in the field of heritage resource management. Enrollment Limit: 6.
    Instructor: S. Kane
    Cross List Information
    This course is cross-isted with ACHS 200.
  
  • ARTS 415 - Art at the Valois Courts


    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU

    As a new dynasty, the Valois turned to art and architecture to legitimate their rule, and their patronage drove artistic production in late medieval France. This class will study such important patrons as King Charles V and his brothers the Dukes of Berry, Burgundy and Anjou, together with the famous artists they employed, including the Limbourg Brothers, Jean Bondol, and Claus Sluter. Monuments in Paris, Dijon, Bourges and Angers will be studied. Enrollment limit: 15.
    Instructor: E. Inglis
  
  • ARTS 417 - The Art Museum as Institution and Object


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU

    New Course Added 11.02.2008.

    A seminar exploring the art museum as an historical phenomenon, social institution, and architectural type emerging in the late eighteenth-century and ever since functioning to produce definitive narratives and authoritative knowledge about artistic value and aesthetic experience. The seminar will also examine the work of artists who since the 1970s have employed various strategies and media in their work to reflect upon the premises, limitations, and effects of the art museum as an ideological apparatus. Enrollment Limit: 15. Consent of the instructor required.
    Instructor: J. van Dyke

  
  • ARTS 422 - Seminar: The History of Art History


    Next Offered: 2009-2010
    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU

    A course on art historical practice from antiquity to the present. We will read early art historical works by such authors as Pliny, Vasari and van Mander; discuss the professionalization of the discipline in the 19th century; and engage contemporary debates over methodology. Consent of instructor required. Enrollment Limit: 15.
    Instructor: E. Inglis
  
  • ARTS 423 - Advanced Archeological Field Course


    Semester Offered: Summer
    Credits (Range): 5 Hours
    Attribute: 5 SS

    A four week summer course for students with previous fieldwork experience who wish to further their training in archaeological field methods and research. Offered in conjunction with the Sangro Valley Project in the Abruzzo, Italy (www.sangro.org). The seven week course will include pre-season training; four weeks of excavation; and post-excavation analysis. Students taking this course will serve as trench supervisors and/or laboratory/technical assistants under the supervision of the senior personnel; they will also collaborate with professional staff in their ongoing research projects. Enrollment Limit: 6.
    Instructor: S. Kane
    Cross List Information
    This course is cross-listed with ACHS 250.
  
  • ARTS 425 - Space and Environment


    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU

    The twin concepts of “space” and “environment” have never been more charged with political meaning, nor more ubiquitous in the discourses of science, art and architecture. This seminar will investigate the roots–etymological, conceptual, and instrumental–of these two intertwining concepts, and help students to identify their manifold contradictions. Readings will range widely in philosophy, history and theory of science, the theory of perspective, ecology, noology and economics. Enrollment limit: 15.
    Instructor: J. Harwood
    Prerequisites & Notes
    At least one course in Intermediate-level Art History.
  
  • ARTS 429 - Greek Sanctuaries


    Next Offered: 2009-2010
    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU

    This course will investigate the religious sanctuaries of ancient Greece (such as Athens, Delphi, Delos, and Olympia) with attention given to each sanctuary’s deity or deities, its particular architectural components, types of dedications offered, and main festivals and religious activities conducted. 
    Instructor: S. Kane
  
  • ARTS 451 - Death and Dying in East Asian Art


    This course may also count for the major in (consult the program or department major requirements) :
    EAST
    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3HU, CD

    This course is canceled effective 11.03.2008.

    The concept of death and one’s post-mortem fate has traditionally elicited an array of human responses, often an amalgam of fear and fascination. This seminar considers art and practices inspired by these concerns: preparations for graves, ritual treatment/transformation of the body, representations of otherworldly realms, and modern modes of commemoration. We consider themes of the soul, Buddhist judgment and rebirth, ritual sacrifice, and suicide to understand how preparations for or representations of death assuage fears of death. Consent of instructor required. Enrollment Limit: 15.
    Instructor: B. Cheng

  
  • ARTS 455 - New Ghosts Old Dreams: The Art of Post-Imperial China


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU

    New Course added 11.03.2008.

    During the 20th century, China struggled frequently with internal and external forces in its attempt to reconcile its political authority and its position in the post-imperial world. This seminar considers the various phases in which China refashioned its artistic identity in light of compelling social forces. Underlying themes include the lingering burden of traditional China and the dilemma of Westernization. Both official trends and unofficial counter-currents will be explored as responses to the confrontation of the West. Consent of instructor required. Enrollment Limit: 15.
    Instructor: B. Cheng
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite: At least one 200-numbered course in Art History.

  
  • ARTS 463 - Seminar in Renaissance and Baroque Art


    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 HU

    During the Renaissance new technologies and scientific advances brought about new understandings of desire and sexuality, which had results in the representational arts. At the same time, many values associated with love and sexuality marked a continuum with the preceding period, including ideas about marriage. We will examine Renaissance art through the lens of social values and rituals associated with love, lust and desire. Artists to consider include: Botticelli, Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, and Titian. Enrollment limit: 15.
    Instructor: C. Neilson
    Prerequisites & Notes
    An intermediate level art history class.
  
  • ARTS 599 - Honors


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3-4 hours
    Attribute: 3-4HU

    For Honors candidates only under the supervision of one or more members of the staff.
    Instructor: E. Inglis
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Consent of instructor and of the co-chair for Art History required.
  
  • ARTS 995 - Private Reading


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 0.5-3 hours
    Attribute: 0.5-3HU

    Signature of the instructor is required.
    Instructor: J. Coleman, B. Cheng, A. Derstine, J. Harwood, E. Inglis, S. Kane, P. Nguyen-Duy, J. Pearson, B. Prior, S. Schuster, S. Umbenhour, C. Wang, N. Yannuzzi-Macias
  
  • ASTR 100 - Introductory Astronomy


    Semester Offered: First Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 NS, QP-H

    This course, designed primarily for students with little scientific background, is an introduction to what we know about astronomy and how we know it. We will study light, the tools of astronomy, stars, galaxies and cosmology. We will also cover sky basics such as seasons, moon phases, eclipses, and constellations. There will be required participation in five planetarium sessions (half an hour per biweekly session) and four observatory sessions during the semester. Enrollment Limit: 90.
    Instructor: D. Stinebring
  
  • ASTR 117 - Meteorite Impacts in Space and Time


    Semester Offered: Second Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 1 Hour
    Attribute: 1 NS

    This course examines where and why impacts take place and what happens when they do. Enormous amounts of energy are released when meteorites, asteroids, comets and planets collide at “cosmic velocities.” Serious collisions create impact craters, which occur in abundance throughout the solar system. Topics will include: Did an asteroid kill all the dinosaurs? Do meteorites from Mars contain evidence of extraterrestrial life? Could a large impact end human civilization? Enrollment Limit: 60.
    Instructor: B. Simonson
    Cross List Information
    This course is cross-listed with GEOL 117.
  
  • ASTR 301 - Astrophysics I: Stars and Planets


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 NS

    Astrophysics is physical analysis applied to astronomical problems. We will develop some of the basic tools of astrophysics in this course. Radiation theory including thermal and non-thermal radiation will be studied as well as the transfer of radiation through typical astrophysical media. Other topics will include star formation, degenerate matter, atomic physics in an interstellar setting, and the detection of electromagnetic radiation over a broad range of wavelength regimes. Enrollment Limit: 20.
    Instructor: C. Martin

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite: PHYS 212.

     

     

  
  • ASTR 302 - Astrophysics II: Galaxies and Cosmology


    Next Offered: 2009-2010
    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 Hours
    Attribute: 3 NS

    This course will explore basic astrophysical topics beyond the local stellar neighborhood. We will consider the “ecology” of the Milky Way galaxy and use it to understand galaxies in isolation and in clusters. Cosmological topics will include the dynamics of an expanding universe including an acceleration term. Results from anisotropy studies of the cosmic background radiation will be studied in some detail. Evidence for dark matter and dark energy will be thoroughly reviewed. Enrollment Limit: 20.
    Instructor: D. Stinebring
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite: PHYS 212
  
  • ATHL 100 - Fitness For Life


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 1 hours
    Attribute: 1EX

    This class combines aerobic and anaerobic exercises with resistance training into a high energy, total body workout. Students will work on the seven components of health-related fitness: aerobic/anaerobic, body composition, muscular endurance, muscular strength, flexibility, and stress management and nutrition. By the end of the class students will be able to develop their own workouts and a healthy diet and understand what it means to be fit for life. Enrollment Limit: 30.
    Instructor: J. Hudson

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 105 - Introduction to Somatic Studies: Exploration through Movement


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3EX

    A vibrant state of well-being is an essential foundation to health. This hands-on course explores different movement modalities, using movement and analysis to gain a better understanding of our physical potential, while increasing our awareness of each person’s unique muscular usage in combination with his/her thinking patterns.
    Instructor: D. Vogel
    Prerequisites & Notes
    No previous dance experience is necessary, only an honest desire to explore movement and a commitment to health and wellness in your own life. Identical to Dance 105.
    Cross List Information
    This course is cross-listed with Dance 105.
  
  • ATHL 110 - Waterfront Lifeguarding


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3EX

    Includes American Red Cross Lifeguard Training, Waterfront Lifeguard and CPR for the Professional Rescuer/AED. Successful completion of course certifies student for pool and waterfront but not surf or water park life-guarding. Enrollment Limit: 16.
    Instructor: B. Bruce, M. Fino
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite: 500 yard nonstop swim demonstrating front crawl and breaststroke diving and underwater swim ability including retrieval of 10 pound brick from 13 feet depth. Estimated additional fee of $40 covers required books and chapter fee.
  
  • ATHL 111 - Water Safety Instructor


    Semester Offered: Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 3 hours
    Attribute: 3EX

    Fundamentals of Instructor Training course included. Coursework: multiple planning and teaching experiences with peers, adult non-swimmers and school-aged children. Successful completion certifies student to teach American Red Cross courses: Infant and Preschool Aquatic Program (IPAP), seven level Learn to Swim program, Community Water Safety and Water Safety Aide. Enrollment Limit: 12.
    Instructor: B. Bruce
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite: Lifeguard training recommended but not required. Strong aquatic skills including four competitive strokes and diving. Estimated additional fee of $45 covers required books, materials and chapter fee.
  
  • ATHL 117 - Hatha Yoga


    This course may also count for the major in (consult the program or department major requirements) :
    DANC
    Semester Offered: First Semester, First Module, Second Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 1 hours
    Attribute: 1EX

    Hatha Yoga is a mindful physical practice which develops strength, flexibility, and balance, and cultivates attention and concentration. The class will focus on the practice of yoga postures. The history and philosophy of yoga will also be given. Enrollment Limit: 30.
    Instructor: E. Stewart
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading. Participants will be required to bring a sticky mat, strap, and two firm yoga blankets. These will be available from the instructor at the first class.
  
  • ATHL 120 - Aerobics I


    Semester Offered: First Semester, First Module, Second Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    Blending aerobics, muscle toning, yoga and Pilates movements into fun dance routines set to fresh music, lessons consist of an energizing cardio component to increase cardio vascular fitness, resistance training to improve muscle tone and stretching to improve flexibility. All fitness levels welcome.
    Instructor: K. Verda
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 122 - Pickleball


    Semester Offered: Second Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    This course is canceled effective 02.10.2009.

     
    Instructor: D. New

  
  • ATHL 123 - Women’s Strength Training


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Module, Second Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    This class is an introductory resistance training class for women, emphasizing basic principles of strength training, proper body alignment, and health benefits for women. Students will learn how to safely exercise using Hammer Strength and Nautilus equipment, free weights, plyometrics, and core strength training on a mat and a Swiss ball. Enrollment Limit: 30.
    Instructor: K. Hayden
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 124 - Women’s Fitness


    Semester Offered: First Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    This class is an introductory general fitness class for women. Students will be taught a variety of different methods of cardio and strength training in a different setting each week. Principles and benefits of cross training will be addressed through participation in a wide variety of activities in the gym, outside, in the pool and on the climbing wall. Enrollment Limit: 30.
    Instructor: A. Davis
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 126 - Strength Training I


    Semester Offered: First Semester, First Module, Second Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    This class is an introductory resistance training class for women, emphasizing basic principles of strength training, proper body alignment, and health benefits for women. Students will learn how to safely exercise using Hammer Strength and Nautilus equipment, free weights, plyometrics and core strength training on a mat and a Swiss ball. Enrollment Limit: 30.
    Instructor: I. Cavaco, A. Estep, K. Walz
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 127 - Running Conditioning


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Module, Second Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    A modular course designed for the beginning to the advancer runner in which students will learn proper running form, stretching techniques, injury prevention and workout routines and routes in and around Oberlin. The goal of the course is to improve general fitness.
    Instructor: R. Appenheimer, J. Hudson
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 129 - Strength Training II


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Module, Second Semester, Second Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    This class focuses on advanced concepts of strength training while maintaining safe lifting techniques. Students will use a variety of methods including the use of resistance machines, free weights, plyometrics and core strength training on a mat or ball. Students will develop their own regimen demonstrating their understanding of the different principles of strength training. Enrollment Limit: 30.
    Instructor: J. Ramsey, A. Stillman
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite: One introductory weight training class and adherence to a 6-week strength training program immediately prior to the first class. Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 131 - Cycling Conditioning


    Semester Offered: First Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    This class will improve your general fitness through bicycling. Students will learn bicycling laws and safety, proper gear operation and general maintenance. Riding will be done on bike paths and roads throughout and around Oberlin. Bicycle and helmet are required. Enrollment Limit: 12.
    Instructor: J. Hudson
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 132 - Badminton


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    Upon completion of this class, students will be able to perform the basic strokes, including serves, clears, drop shots, drives and smashes. Other objectives are developing an understanding of the rules and positional strategy necessary to participate and score both singles and doubles play. Enrollment Limit: 30.
    Instructor: C. Ananiadis
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 133 - Cardio Kickboxing


    Semester Offered: First Semester, First Module, Second Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    This class will provide for a total body workout, with energizing cardio exercise to increase cardio vascular fitness, flexibility through stretching, core strength all while reducing stress.  Enrollment Limit: 20.
    Instructor: J. Fehlan
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 135 - Zumba


    Semester Offered: First Semester, First Module, Second Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): .5 Hours
    Attribute: .5EX

    New Course Added 08.28.08

    Workout to a Latin beat. This is a total body cardio workout that will increase your strength, flexibility, and aerobic capacity. This fun workout will leave you energized and stress free
    Instructor: J. Fehlan

  
  • ATHL 138 - Power Hour


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    This class will blend various modes of movement (yoga, Pilates, plyometrics, cardio, etc.) to offer a challenging workout for all. Challenge your muscles in a variety of ways and increase balance, stability, agility, core strength, flexibility and endurance
    Instructor: C. Ananiadis
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 139 - Boxing Fitness


    Semester Offered: Second Semester, Second Module
    Credits (Range): .5 Hours
    Attribute: .5 EX

    New Course added 10.28.2008

    Your way to better cardio fitness through traditional boxing workouts including use of speed bags, heavy bags, rope jumping and more but no sparring. Enrollment Limit: 12.
    Instructor: Kerry Jenkins

  
  • ATHL 144 - Bowling I


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 1 hours
    Attribute: 1EX

    Students will work on skill development in bowling and learn to keep score. The first half of the semester will focus on intensive instruction and skill development and the second half will focus more on scoring. Enrollment Limit: 24.
    Instructor: T. Reid
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading. Additional fee: $15.
  
  • ATHL 151 - Racquetball


    Semester Offered: First Semester, First Module, Second Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    The first semester, first module offering of this course is canceled effective 09.09.2008. The Second Semester, First Module of this course is canceled effective 02.09.2009.

    Students will be introduced to the basic skills of racquetball: forehand, backhand, serves and volley. Basic positioning will be introduced as well as singles, cut-throat (3 players) and doubles play and rules. Equipment provided. Enrollment Limit: 15.
    Instructor: C. Cavanaugh, K. Jenkins, A. Shoemaker
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.

  
  • ATHL 154 - Badminton


    Semester Offered: Second Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    Upon completion of this class, students will be able to perform the basic strokes, including serves, clears, drop shots, drives and smashes. Other objectives are developing an understanding of the rules and positional strategy necessary to participate and score both singles and doubles play. Enrollment Limit: 30.
    Instructor: C. Ananiadis
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 155 - Games


    Semester Offered: Second Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    Games
    Instructor: R. Appenheimer
  
  • ATHL 157 - Backyard Games


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Module
    Credits (Range): .5
    Attribute: .5EX

    Wiffleball, Kickball, Dodgeball, Floor Hockey and more. Come join in those games you enjoyed playing with your family and friends in the neighborhood
    Instructor: B. New
  
  • ATHL 160 - International Squash


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Module, Second Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    The second semester offering of this course is canceled effective 02.06.09.

    Students will be introduced to the basic skills of softball squash: forehand, backhand, serves and serve reception, volley, drop shots and two and three wall boasts. Rules, scoring and strategy will be presented mid-term as players start to play matches. Equipment provided and protective eyewear must be worn. Enrollment Limit: 10.
    Instructor: B. Bruce, A. Davis, A. Shoemaker
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.

  
  • ATHL 180 - Basic Self Defense for Women


    Semester Offered: First Semester, First Module, Second Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    This course teaches the Rape Aggression Defense System (RAD), which is a program of realistic, self-defense tactics and techniques. The RAD system is a comprehensive course for women that begin with awareness, prevention, risk reduction and avoidance while progressing onto the basics of hands on defense training. The class will include lectures of awareness, demonstrations of techniques, options of escape and full contact simulation. Enrollment Limit: 20.
    Instructor: R. Gresco
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 181 - Advanced Self Defense for Women


    Semester Offered: Second Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    Enrollment Limit: 20.
    Instructor: R. Gresco
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 197 - Beginning Swimming


    Semester Offered: Second Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    Enrollment Limit: 10.
    Instructor: B. Bruce
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 203 - Swim Conditioning


    Semester Offered: First Semester, First Module, Second Semester, Second Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    Those who feel comfortable in the water can swim both front and back crawl and want to improve efficiency of stroke while building endurance should choose this class. Workouts are written with individuals in mind. Enrollment Limit: 40.
    Instructor: M. Fino, E. Knoche
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Notes: CR/NE or P/NP grading. Must be able to swim to enroll.
  
  • ATHL 220 - Aerobics II


    Semester Offered: First Semester, First Module, Second Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    Aerobics, muscle toning, yoga and Pilates movements in fun dance routines set to fresh music. Lessons consist of an energizing cardio component to increase cardio vascular fitness; resistance training to improve muscle tone; and stretching to improve flexibility. Enrollment Limit: 15.
    Instructor: K. Verda
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading. All fitness levels welcome.
  
  • ATHL 244 - Bowling II


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Semester
    Credits (Range): 1 hours
    Attribute: 1EX

    Enrollment Limit: 18.
    Instructor: T. Reid
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Notes: CR/NE or P/NP grading. Labs required. Additional fee: $15.
  
  • ATHL 252 - Tennis II


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    A continution of Tennis I.
    Instructor: C. Ananiadis
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Notes: CR/NE or P/NP grading. Labs required. Additional fee: $15.
  
  • ATHL 253 - Doubles Tennis


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Module
    Credits (Range): 0.5 hours
    Attribute: 0.5EX

    New courses added for first semester, second module (moved from second semester, first module.)

    Students will further their understanding of the game of doubles tennis though drills and match play. Successful completion of Tennis I and/or playing experience recommended.
    Instructor: A. Shoemaker
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Notes: CR/NE or P/NP grading. Labs required. Additional fee: $15.

  
  • ATHL 400 - Varsity Basketball-Men


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Module, Second Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0-1 hours
    Attribute: 0-1EX

    Varsity sport.
    Instructor: I. Cavaco
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 401 - Varsity Cross Country-Men


    Semester Offered: First Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0-1 hours
    Attribute: 0-1EX

    Varsity sport.
    Instructor: R. Appenheimer
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 402 - Varsity Football-Men


    Semester Offered: First Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0-1 hours
    Attribute: 0-1EX

    Varsity sport.
    Instructor: J. Ramsey
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 403 - Varsity Soccer-Men


    Semester Offered: First Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0-1 hours
    Attribute: 0-1EX

    Varsity sport.
    Instructor: D. New
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 404 - Varsity Swimming-Men


    Semester Offered: First Semester, Second Module, Second Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0-1 hours
    Attribute: 0-1EX

    Varsity sport.
    Instructor: M. Fino
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 405 - Outdoor Track


    Semester Offered: Second Semester, Second Module
    Credits (Range): 0-1 hours
    Attribute: 0-1EX

    Varsity sport.
    Instructor: R. Appenheimer
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 406 - Baseball


    Semester Offered: Second Semester, Second Module
    Credits (Range): 0-1 hours
    Attribute: 0-1EX

    Varsity sport.
    Instructor: E. Lahetta
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 407 - Tennis


    Semester Offered: Second Semester, Second Module
    Credits (Range): 0-1 hours
    Attribute: 0-1EX

    Varsity sport.
    Instructor: A. Shoemaker
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 408 - Lacrosse


    Semester Offered: Second Semester, Second Module
    Credits (Range): 0-1 hours
    Attribute: 0-1EX

    Varsity sport.
    Instructor: K. Walz
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 409 - Indoor Track


    Semester Offered: Second Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0-1 hours
    Attribute: 0-1EX

    Varsity sport.
    Instructor: R. Appenheimer
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
  
  • ATHL 410 - Varsity Golf-Men


    Semester Offered: Second Semester, Second Module
    Credits (Range): 0-1 hours
    Attribute: 0-1EX

    Varsity sport.
    Instructor: D. New
  
  • ATHL 451 - Varsity Cross Country-Women


    Semester Offered: First Semester, First Module
    Credits (Range): 0-1 hours
    Attribute: 0-1EX

    Varsity sport.
    Instructor: R. Appenheimer
    Prerequisites & Notes
    Note: CR/NE or P/NP grading.
 

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