Interdisciplinary and Supporting Courses (College of Arts and Sciences)
Description
Interdisciplinary courses are designed to provide students with the opportunity to link disciplines within the liberal arts as they engage in the in-depth investigation and analysis of special topics. These courses are organized as follows:
Critical Reading (CRS) courses strengthen critical reading skills through close readings of disciplinary texts. The courses focus on foundational critical reading objectives, among which are identifying the text’s thesis or themes, main points, and types and quality of evidence, paraphrasing or summarizing the content and meaning of the text, identifying the text’s purpose and audience, identifying the author’s organizational and rhetorical strategies, and recognizing strengths, weaknesses, and inconsistencies in the text.
Humanities (HUM) courses are offered by faculty in arts and humanities disciplines, including art, English, language and cultural studies, history, international studies, music, philosophy, theology, and women’s studies.
Interdisciplinary (INT) courses involve study across disciplines. Such courses challenge the student to engage in an in-depth analysis of content within the context of the connection of seemingly diverse and separate disciplines such as art and science. Courses offered under the INT designation are often Seminar II courses for the Foundation for Leadership Curriculum and are offered in a seminar format. Listings follow and are also noted in various program sections.
Language Studies (ARBC, FREN, SPAN) courses are offered in Arabic, French and Spanish to develop students’ fluency in another language and to provide experiences in the culture of its speakers. These skills help to cement a liberal education that is truly global in breadth and hands-on in practice.
Language Studies Policies
Advanced Placement:
Credit is granted for a score of 4 or 5 on the AP examination. These credits may replace the General Education Curriculum language requirement.
CLEP Policy:
The standard score or above on the CLEP examination satisfies the language requirement of the General Education Curriculum.
Grades in Designated Courses:
Students are required to earn a grade of “C” (2.0) or better in FREN 101 Elementary French IIntegrates the skills of speaking, listening, reading, and writing at the elementary level. Emphasizes oral communication through paired and group activities. Integrates cultural information. and SPAN 101 Elementary Spanish IIntroduces language skills that enable students to speak and write about certain, specific learned contexts, such as weather, food, names of family members, individual preferences, etc. and to express them in present and future tense. Students will comprehend and discuss simple texts related to vocabulary studied. Visual aids and special materials will be used in class to help students achieve basic competency. Students must complete the course with a grade of C or better in order to register for SPAN 102. Formerly SPA 101 Elementary Spanish I.
Prerequisites: None
Credits: 3 to advance to the next level. Thse courses cannot be taken Pass/No Pass.
Progression:
Students who are taking courses in a language must take those courses in sequence starting with the introductory course to be followed by the second course (e.g., SPAN 101 Elementary Spanish IIntroduces language skills that enable students to speak and write about certain, specific learned contexts, such as weather, food, names of family members, individual preferences, etc. and to express them in present and future tense. Students will comprehend and discuss simple texts related to vocabulary studied. Visual aids and special materials will be used in class to help students achieve basic competency. Students must complete the course with a grade of C or better in order to register for SPAN 102. Formerly SPA 101 Elementary Spanish I.
Prerequisites: None
Credits: 3 before SPAN 102 Elementary Spanish IIServes as a continuation of Elementary Spanish I. Students learn to speak and write about past events, and further develop their capacity to interact in spontaneous situations. Can comprehend and discuss simple texts related to vocabulary studied. Visual aids and special materials will be used in class to help students achieve basic competency. Formerly SPA 102 Elementary Spanish II. and then SPAN 201 Intermediate Spanish for CommunicationDevelops and builds increasing confidence and competency in using Spanish. Special materials will be used to develop speaking and listening comprehension abilities without neglecting the writing and reading skills necessary to achieve higher levels of proficiency. Formerly SPA 201 Intermediate Spanish I. before SPAN 202 Spanish for Professional CommunicationDevelops basic effective communication with Spanish-speaking co-workers, clients, students, their parents and others who don’t master the English language. Specific professional focuses of the course will vary according to students’ needs. Class materials centers on simulated communication situations to build listening and oral comprehension through simple and clear linguistic structures. Generates a useful communication style generated from cross cultural understanding to be acquired from readings and class discussions. Formerly SPA 202 Intermediate Spanish II.).
Transfer Credits:
Students may apply transfer credits toward meeting the langauges requirement.
Natural Sciences and Math (NCSM) courses are offered by faculty in the natural sciences and mathematics. These courses are a combination of any of the following: biology, chemistry, and mathematics
Social Sciences (SSC) courses are offered by the faculty in the social sciences. These courses are a combination of the following disciplines: communication, economics, international studies, political science, public affairs, psychology, sociology, and women’s studies, as well as business and education.
Trinity also offers certain courses that support major coursework and serve as electives and/or General Education Curriculum requirements for students. These courses are listed below as Supporting Courses.
Critical Reading Courses (CRS)
CRS 100S Foundations of ReadingThis course provides students with an intensive review of basic reading skills needed for both critical and college level reading. Students will practice the following: using context clues to make inferences; employing a variety of vocabulary strategies; analyzing sentences and paragraphs for main idea, supporting details, fact/opinion, language use, and relationships; and applying structure and phonics to improve reading fluency. A weekly laboratory supplements instruction for this course. This course may not be taken as pass/no pass. CAS students who place into CRS 100 must earn C or higher in order to pass this course and register for CRS 101.
4 credits
Gen Ed Area: Area I - Foundational Skills
CRS 100ES
CRS 101 Critical Reading SeminarStrengthens critical reading skills through close readings of disciplinary texts. The course focuses on foundational critical reading objectives, among which are identifying the text's thesis or themes, main points, and types and quality of evidence, paraphrasing or summarizing the content and meaning of the text, identifying the text's purpose and audience, identifying the author's organizational and rhetorical strategies, and recognizing strengths, weaknesses, and inconsistencies in the text.
3 credits
Prerequisite: CRS 100S with a grade of C or better, or placement test proficiency
CRS 101S Critical Reading Seminar Suppl InstrStrengthens critical reading skills through close readings of disciplinary texts. The course focuses on foundational critical reading objectives, among which are identifying the text's thesis or themes, main points, and types and quality of evidence, paraphrasing or summarizing the content and meaning of the text, identifying the text's purpose and audience, identifying the author's organizational and rhetorical strategies, and recognizing strengths, weaknesses, and inconsistencies in the text.A weekly laboratory meeting supplements instruction for this course.4 credits
CRS 102 CRS: Prof & Career Success in the Health ProfessionsStrengthens the student's critical reading skills through close readings of texts on contemporary health care issues. Students will explore the evolution of the various disciplines in the health professions and models of professional socialization. Current issues and trends influencing the health care delivery system, such as increased use of technology, rising health care costs, and maintaining quality in health care agencies are among the topics of discussion. Students will develop proficiency in the use of select electronic data bases, as well as techniques of professional writing.
Humanities Courses (HUM)
HUM 300 Women in Love: The Novel in Europe and the AmericasAnalyzes the social construction of gender and gender roles in the contexts of marriage and heterosexual and lesbian relationships as explored in the 19th and 20th century novels drawn from canonical and non-canonical literature and film produced in Europe and the Americas. Representative readings may include such works as Flaubert's Madame Bovary, Bombal's Shrouded Woman, Minot's Evening, and Esquivel's Like Water for Chocolate.
3 credits
FLC Seminar II
HUM 381 Victorian StudiesDiscusses the art, literature, history, politics and society of Victorian England within the context of their own time as well as their effect on future generations.
3 credits
FLC Seminar II
General Education Requirements: Capstone Seminar
Interdisciplinary Courses (INT)
INT 100 Academic Success SeminarStudents will learn the behavioral and life skills necessary for success in college. Topics include academic planning, time management and study skills, effective relationship management and teamwork, critical and creative thinking, and techniques for successful academic performance.
1 credit
Enrollment limited to Future Focus students
INT 105A Mathematical Problem SolvingThis course is designed for students who wish to become teachers, although it satisfies the critical reasoning requirement for all students. Topics include number theory, probability, basic descriptive statistics, geometry, measurement, and other topics that include both content and process knowledge. The emphasis is on building mathematical reasoning skills and on applying mathematical concepts to diverse situations. The use of calculators is not permitted in this course.
3 credits
Prerequisite: MATH 101S
Gen Ed Critical Reasoning
INT 109 Information LiteracyTechnology has brought a vast new world of information resources into the classroom and the University. We are accessing, analyzing and communicating information faster than every before. A measure of success today is how well one can discover, retrieve, evaluate, manage and communicate all forms of data, information and knowledge within a technological environment both ethically and legally. This course introduces Trinity students to the information and technology tools that support the information discovery, analysis and integration that are part of critical thinking and communicating. This includes having a fundamental understanding of the ethical and legal issues.
3 credits
Core Area I: Skills for Work and Life
INT 205 Effective Peer MentoringDesigned specifically for Future Focus Peer Mentors, this course introduces students to effective mentoring techniques, student development theory, and leadership techniques. Students are challenged to critically evaluate these techniques and determine which aspects will shape their developing mentoring methods. The course is also designed to provide students with the knowledge and skills to become effective peer mentors and planners by employing student development theory and effective communication methods.
3 credits
Permission of instructor required
INT 373A Culture and Society in Latin AmericaFosters a more precise understanding of those with whom we share this hemisphere, reconsiders accepted assumptions, and challenges the images that have shaped them. This course will orient students to gain insight into the future of the nations of the Americas, and the impact they will have on the rest of the world in the coming years. May be repeated as topic changes.
3 credits
FLC Seminar II
INT 373B Culture and Society in the CaribbeanEmphasizes cultural commonalities without neglecting political chronology but with the history traced from a defined Caribbean and Latin American perspective. Text from contemporary authors may include literary works by Jamaica Kincaid, Julia Alvarez, and Edwige Danticat among others. Class presentations, films, and discussions will also deal with the review of the political factors that infiltrate on the social and economic structures.
3 credits
FLC Seminar II
INT 407 Human Rights in the AmericasFocuses on domestic violence and its relationship to social violence, seeking to raise awareness and calling for leadership within families and communities as they constitute the cradle of respect for the rights of children and women and where the protection of those rights are born. Offers a basic multidisciplinary perspective from educators, economists, international organizations, legislators and policy-makers, as well as from popular writers of fiction. A program of guest speakers will be an integral part of the course.
3 credits
General Education Requirements: Capstone Seminar
Language Studies (ARBC, FREN, SPAN)
ARBC 101 Introductory Arabic IFocuses on developing proficiency in standard modern Arabic. The main goal is attaining early proficiency in the fundamentals of listening, speaking, reading, and writing the language. The course begins with learning of script and pronunciation, and develops into the use of situation-based texts and topics that build vocabulary, grammar and general communicative competence.
4 credits
ARBC 102 Introductory Arabic IIIntroductory Arabic II serves as a continuation of Introductory Arabic I. Extends skills in spoken and written standard modern Arabic. Emphasis will be placed on building vocabulary, pronunciation, conversation, grammar, reading, and composition abilities within the context of real-life situations and contemporary Arab culture and civilization. 4 credits.
ARBC 201 Intermediate Arabic IEnables students to further develop their skills in reading, writing, listening, and speaking in Modern Standard Arabic. The course will focus on improving oral comprehension, expanding vocabulary, and strengthening composition and reading skills through discussions, writing exercises, and extensive readings. Emphasis will be placed on the cultural contexts of language.
4 credits
ARBC 202 Intermediate Arabic IIA continuation of ARBC 201, this course enhances students' proficiency in Modern Standard Arabic through the further development of speaking, reading, writing and listening skills. Emphasis will be placed on correct use of syntax and grammar, and students will engage in increasingly complex oral and written communication. Students will also work with more varied, challenging readings on a variety of cultural topics.
4 credits
FREN 101 Elementary French IIntegrates the skills of speaking, listening, reading, and writing at the elementary level. Emphasizes oral communication through paired and group activities. Integrates cultural information.
FREN 102 Elementary French IIContinues to integrate the skills of speaking, listening, reading, and writing acquired in FREN 101. Emphasizes oral communication through paired and group activities. Integrates cultural information.
FREN 201 Intermediate French IReviews and develops aural comprehension, speaking, reading, and writing skills.
3 Credits
Prerequisites: FREN 102 or placement
FREN 202 Intermediate French IIDevelops and emphasizes conversational skills. Structural practice, spontaneous exchanges, role playing, prepared presentations.
SPAN 101 Elementary Spanish IIntroduces language skills that enable students to speak and write about certain, specific learned contexts, such as weather, food, names of family members, individual preferences, etc. and to express them in present and future tense. Students will comprehend and discuss simple texts related to vocabulary studied. Visual aids and special materials will be used in class to help students achieve basic competency. Students must complete the course with a grade of C or better in order to register for SPAN 102. Formerly SPA 101 Elementary Spanish I.
Prerequisites: None
Credits: 3
SPAN 102 Elementary Spanish IIServes as a continuation of Elementary Spanish I. Students learn to speak and write about past events, and further develop their capacity to interact in spontaneous situations. Can comprehend and discuss simple texts related to vocabulary studied. Visual aids and special materials will be used in class to help students achieve basic competency. Formerly SPA 102 Elementary Spanish II.
SPAN 201 Intermediate Spanish for CommunicationDevelops and builds increasing confidence and competency in using Spanish. Special materials will be used to develop speaking and listening comprehension abilities without neglecting the writing and reading skills necessary to achieve higher levels of proficiency. Formerly SPA 201 Intermediate Spanish I.
SPAN 202 Spanish for Professional CommunicationDevelops basic effective communication with Spanish-speaking co-workers, clients, students, their parents and others who don’t master the English language. Specific professional focuses of the course will vary according to students’ needs. Class materials centers on simulated communication situations to build listening and oral comprehension through simple and clear linguistic structures. Generates a useful communication style generated from cross cultural understanding to be acquired from readings and class discussions. Formerly SPA 202 Intermediate Spanish II.
SPAN 301 Reading and Writing for Advanced or Native SpeakersDesigned for Spanish speakers whose dominant language is English, this course draws from the students’ linguistic background in both languages in order to teach them to write effectively in Spanish. Activities include news reporting, book reviews, essays, and business and formal letters. Students may suggest their own topics of interest to be used in three out of the six papers required. Grammar explanations including accentuation, orthography, verb tenses and uses of the subjunctive mood will be used in relation with vocabulary and idiomatic expressions to enhance language development. Readings based on the cultural life and experience of Spanish-speaking people in the U.S. Formerly SPA 401 Advanced Composition.
3 credits
Prereq: Native or near-native proficiency in Spanish
SPAN 302 Reading and Writing for Advanced or Native Speakers IIServes as a continuation of SPAN 301, expanding and refining many of the grammar explanations and raising the writing activities to a higher level of proficiency and sophistication. Students may suggest their own topics of interest to be used in three out of the six papers required Formerly SPA 401 Advanced Composition.
SPAN 491 InternshipProvides students with the opportunity to perform an internship to apply the academic knowledge they have learned in the classroom. Formerly SPA 488 Internship.
Natural Sciences and Math (NSCM)
NSCM 499 Divisional SeminarExamines selected topics in the natural sciences. Requires written and oral presentations based on reading and analysis of the current scientific literature.
3 credits
General Education Requirements: Applications (Leadership)
Social Sciences Courses (SSC)
SSC 107 Social Science WritingIntroduces students to the basics of writing papers for social science courses. It will cover proposal writing, library research, internet research, organization of the paper, outlines, drafts, and documentation.
SSC 300 Politics and FilmPolitics and film investigates the intersection of film with political institutions, the portrayal of political institutions on film and the contributions film makes to our understanding and opinion of politics and society. Through weekly readings and screenings the course invited students to see film politically.
SSC 317 The Cold War and Its LegaciesExamines the Cold War, the world order that it created, and its enduring effects on contemporary international issues, with particular emphases on its social, political, and economic contexts. Among questions to be addressed are: What events and ideas provoked the Cold War? How did the Cold War shape international political and economic institutions? How did advances in science and technology helpfuel a global arms race? How did the Cold War condition society and culture? What traces of the Cold War continue to influence world politics in the early 21st century? This course is taught in a seminar format.
3 credits
Supporting Courses
ENVS 101 Discovering Planet EarthIntroduces non-science majors to evolution, earth science, and plate tectonics with an emphasis on the mid-Atlantic region. Labs include use of the scientific method, development of observational skills, computer-assisted learning, and several field trips. There is an additional laboratory fee for this course. Formerly ENV 101 Discovering Planet Earth.
4 credits
General Education: Knowledge and Inquiry Area
FLC Area IV
Core Area II: Understanding Self, Society, and Nature
PHYS 103 Acoustics: The Science of MusicIntroduces the physics of musical sounds and the various aspects of the science of audible sound. This includes the production, transmission, reception, and reproduction of sound. The course will include the study of waves, the production of sound from musical instruments, how humans receive and interpret sound, and sound reproduction systems. Formerly PHY 106 Acoustics: The Science of Music.
4 credits
FLC Area IV, Exploration Cluster
PHYS 105 AstronomyIntroduces students to classical through modern astronomy. Studies the basics of astronomical systems. The course places emphasis on observational techniques, stellar evolution, planets, the sun, galaxies, cosmology, and the general theory of relativity. Formerly PHY 220 Astronomy.
4 credits
Prerequisites: MATH 103
FLC Area IV, Exploration Cluster
PHYS 111 General Physics ICovers mechanics in a calculus-based course in fundamental physics. Topics include Newton's laws, work and energy, rotational dynamics, conservation of energy, and momentum. Intended primarily for students in math and science but open to all qualified students. The course consists of three hours of lecture, three of laboratory, and a one-hour problem session per week. There is an additional laboratory fee for this course. Formerly PHY 115 General Physics I.
4 credits
Prerequisite: MATH 125
General Education Requirement: Kniowledge and Inquiry Area
FLC Area IV, Laboratory Science Cluster
PHYS 112 General Physics IICovers electricity, magnetism, and electro-magnetic propagation in a calculus-based course in fundamental physics. Topics include electric fields, Maxwell's equations, electrical circuits, magnetic fields, and light. Intended primarily for students in math and science but open to all qualified students. The course consists of three hours of lecture, three of laboratory, and a one-hour problem session per week. There is an additional laboratory fee for this course. Formerly PHY 116 General Physics II.
4 credits
Prerequisites: MATH 125 and PHYS 111