2017-2018 Undergraduate General Catalog


100

GENL 100 Career and Life Planning

This course is designed for students who are uncertain of their major or career. Activities are designed to accommodate students with different degrees of decidedness. Assignments involve self-exploration, occupational research, and an informational interview. Lectures, small group activities, guest speakers, off-campus employer visits, multi-media, individual consultation, self-assessments, and use of career theories constitute some of the techniques used to deliver instruction in the course. The course concludes with an introduction to the job search process and the development of an action plan to achieve one’s goals.

Credits

3

GENL 100A Career and Life Planning

This course includes an overview of career decision-making that assist students with the exploration of life goals, educational planning, and career development. Activities are designed to accommodate students with different degrees of decidedness. Assignments involve self-assessment, occupational research, and resume writing. Students may not take both GENL 100 and GENL 100A.

Credits

1

GENL 105 Off Campus Study Programs

Students participating in an approved interim, summer or semester-long study abroad experience register for this course.

Credits

4-15

GENL 116 Becoming a Master Student

An intensive opportunity for students to learn to adopt methods to promote their success in college. Participants will explore specific strategies for managing time commitments, improving memory, taking notes and studying for tests.

Credits

1

GENL 118 HECUA: Art for Social Change

Art for Social Change: Intersections of Art, Identity, and Advocacy. Explore the ways in which artistic expression defines, preserves, and transforms cultural identity. This class is taught in partnership with Pillsbury House + Theatre, an innovative center for creativity and community. Students meet and intern with PH+T staff, resident artists, and a myriad of leaders from the City Council, neighborhood associations, and local businesses. Students receive mentorship from public artists to create their own community-engaged art projects, allowing them to explore their personal identity, power, and perspective. 

Credits

16

GENL 119 HECUA: Inequality in America

Inequality in America: Policy, Community, and the Politics of Empowerment. This course delves deeply into the complex causes and impacts of the unprecedented gap between the rich and the poor in the United States. Students engage in a hands-on examination of the social systems that feed increases in poverty and inequality. In a simultaneous internship with a local nonprofit, students begin to test and implement their own change-making skills. Everyone leaves the classroom with increased confidence in their own abilities to effect change in their communities.

Credits

16

GENL 146 HECUA: Democracy and Social Change in Northern Ireland

Students examine the legacy of violent conflict, and experience the powerful role citizens can play as agents of social transformation. Students travel through Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland as part of integrated learning experiences that connect classroom with community. During a seven-week internship, students get hands-on experience with organizations working for social change.

Credits

16

GENL 147 HECUA: The New Norway

In less than fifty years, Norway moved from being one of the poorest and most homogenous countries in Europe to one of the richest in the world with a multicultural population. Coursework and an internship provide unique perspectives on how the Norwegian social democracy and Scandinavian welfare states are working to address the challenges posed by immigration and cultural and ethnic diversity. Students choose an independent study project or Norwegian language courses.

Credits

16

GENL 149 HECUA: Community Internship in LatinAmerica

Based in Quito, Ecuador. Hands-on internship means deep involvement in a community-based organization and study of the community development process. A home-stay also develops Spanish and real-world skills. Topics include globalization, the environment, oil politics, and key local and international issues.

Credits

16

GENL 158 HECUA: Social and Political Transformation in Ecuador

Conducted in English. Examines socioeconomic issues in Ecuador, especially the country’s growing inequality and the new social movements to address this crisis. Topics: indigenous rights, gender equality, the protection and management of natural resources, Ecuador’s new constitution, comparison with other parts of Latin America. Fieldwork and NGO site visits in capital city of Quito and rural communities in the Amazon and the mountains of Imbabura province. Spanish helpful but not necessary: homestay host families contain at least one English speaker, and translators provided in the field.

Credits

4

GENL 159 HECUA: Race in America

Trace the history of the civil rights movement through the South. See how America’s present is inextricably linked to its past. Field experiences, readings, videos, and class discussions center the past and present of racial oppression and movements for racial equality in America. Offered in partnership with the Fannie Lou Hamer Institute in Jackson Mississippi, with trips to Tennessee, Alabama, and Louisiana.

Credits

4

GENL 163 HECUA: Environmental Sustainability

Environmental Sustainability: Ecology, Policy, and Social Transformation. Four linked courses reveal the dynamic interplay between ecological and social change. This program builds hands-on knowledge of key processes of ecosystem degradation and recovery, the social and economic underpinnings of conflict over environmental change, and public policy and community-based strategies that strive towards sustainability. An integrated approach to environmental issues addresses the linkages between ecological, economic, and social systems. Professional internships provide access to the vibrant environmental movement in the Twin Cities.

Credits

16

GENL 179 HECUA: New Zealand Culture and the Environment

New Zealand Culture and the Environment: A Shared Future. Over the course of this semester-long program students get to know the people, places, and ideas that have driven developments such as truth and reconciliation processes between government and the indigenous Māori peoples, and sustainable environmental and governance reforms. Students spend the first months traveling by bus to key biodiversity and cultural sites, learning, cooking, and discussing together. The next three months are based in Wellington, where students attend class, complete an independent study project, and are placed in an internship with a local NGO.

Credits

16

GENL 189 HECUA: Sustainable Agriculture, Food, and Justice in Italy

Sustainable Agriculture, Food, and Justice in Italy. Students live and study on a working farm estate 12 miles outside of Florence. They explore the historical, economic, and political contexts of food and sustainability as they meet and work with vendors, producers, farmers and theorists. All students complete a brief course in Italian Language; the program itself is taught in English. Internship placement sites include the farmers’ market in the village of Montespertoli, local farms, artisanal producers of cheese and gelato in nearby Florence, and the Castello Sonnino estate itself.

Credits

16