Fall 2015 - Barrett Honors College
Transcription
Fall 2015 - Barrett Honors College
Fall 2015 Registration Information ASU Tempe Campus PO BOX 871612 Tempe, AZ 85287-1612 Updated 5/14/2015 ● Priority enrollment for honors students is February 26, 2015. See the details of your “Enrollment Appointment” on My ASU to find out exactly what time you may begin registering for classes. You may continue making changes online through the first week of classes. If you have questions or concerns about your enrollment appointment as noted on My ASU, please contact the advising office at 480.965.9155. ● Be sure to see your major advisor so you’ll be cleared to register, and resolve any other “Holds” mentioned on My ASU, prior to registering. ● This document is designed to inform you of opportunities for honors classes in Fall 2015. Feel free to come by and discuss courses with an honors advisor in Sage Hall North. Business Honors students can go to BA 109 for assistance. If you’re looking for honors directed study or thesis class numbers, see the department of your thesis director. ● List of classes and courses for which honors contracts are specifically available is at the VERY bottom of this document. Please remember that honors contract courses must be taught by full-time ASU faculty, and contracts are only available online the first few weeks of class. As you are choosing courses, look for classes taught by faculty members titled as: Full Professor, Assistant Professor, Associate Professor, or regularly appointed Lecturer or Instructor, if you plan to pursue an honors contract in the class. Many classes for which honors contracts are particularly available will be noted in the university’s schedule of classes with a class note mentioning, “Honors Contracts available for this class.” ●For Course Descriptions, scroll all the way down—past all the Excel Spreadsheets. Project Excellence Courses and Descriptions are listed AFTER all the regular HON and Honors Only Section spreadsheets and descriptions (approx. pg. 15). ***DISCLAIMER: Details in the schedule are subject to additions, subtractions & changes without warning. PLEASE check back often and double check the information in this document with that in the online schedule of university classes (the online catalog is likely the most correct). *** 1 Fall 2015 HON Courses Class# Sec# CAMPUS COURSE 71384 1001 Tempe HON 171 71385 1002 Tempe HON 171 71386 1003 Tempe HON 171 71387 1004 Tempe HON 171 71388 1005 Tempe HON 171 71389 1006 Tempe HON 171 71390 1007 Tempe HON 171 71391 1008 Tempe HON 171 71395 1014 Tempe HON 171 71396 1015 Tempe HON 171 71397 1017 Tempe HON 171 71398 1018 Tempe HON 171 71399 1019 Tempe HON 171 71401 1021 Tempe HON 171 71402 1022 Tempe HON 171 71403 1023 Tempe HON 171 82911 1024 Tempe HON 171 73364 1025 Tempe HON 171 77397 1028 Tempe HON 171 TITLE The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) DAYS BEGIN END INSTRUCTOR ROOM TTH 10:30a 11:45a SOARES CERHAL 101 3 TTH 1:30p 2:45p SOARES CERHAL 101 3 TTH 3:00p 4:15p SOARES CERHAL 101 3 TTH 9:00a 10:15a INGRAM-WATERS CERHAL 201 3 TTH 10:30a 11:45a INGRAM-WATERS CERHAL 201 3 TTH 10:30a 11:45a BHATTACHARJYA JNHAL 101 3 TTH 1:30p 2:45p BHATTACHARJYA JNHAL 101 3 TTH 3:00p 4:15p BHATTACHARJYA JNHAL 101 3 TTH 7:30a 8:45a STAFF WILOHAL 112 3 TTH 9:00a 10:15a STAFF WILOHAL 112 3 TTH 10:30a 11:45a STAFF WILOHAL 112 3 TTH 1:30p 2:45p PARKER WILOHAL 112 3 TTH 3:00p 4:15p PARKER WILOHAL 112 3 TTH 10:30a 11:45a STAFF WILOHAL 212 3 TTH 1:30p 2:45p STAFF WILOHAL 212 3 TTH 3:00p 4:15p STAFF WILOHAL 212 3 TTH 9:00a 10:15a STOFF SGHAL 141 3 TTH 10:30a 11:45a STOFF SGHAL 141 3 TTH 9:00a 10:15a MILLER SGHAL 142 3 2 CRDTS 78001 1029 Tempe HON 171 73956 1031 Tempe HON 171 73957 1032 Tempe HON 171 82912 1033 Tempe HON 171 74091 1034 Tempe HON 171 74092 1035 Tempe HON 171 74232 1036 Tempe HON 171 90195 1016 Tempe HON 171 75088 1038 Tempe HON 171 75089 1039 Tempe HON 171 75254 1040 Tempe HON 171 75255 1041 Tempe HON 171 82913 1042 Tempe HON 171 75266 1043 Tempe HON 171 90044 1085 Tempe HON 171 90045 1086 Tempe HON 171 90197 1065 Tempe HON 171 71393 1011 Tempe HON 171 71394 1012 Tempe HON 171 82910 1013 Tempe HON 171 82914 1046 75941 1047 Tempe Tempe HON 171 HON 171 The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event TTH 10:30a 11:45a MILLER SGHAL 142 3 TTH 10:30a 11:45a KING SGHAL 242 3 TTH 1:30p 2:45p KING SGHAL 242 3 TTH 3:00p 4:15p KING SGHAL 242 3 TTH 9:00a 10:15a STAFF CWHAL 101 3 TTH 10:30a 11:45a STAFF CWHAL 101 3 TTH 1:30p 2:45p STAFF CWHAL 101 3 TTH 3:00p 4:15p STAFF CWHAL 101 3 TTH 10:30a 11:45a STAFF CWHAL 103 3 TTH 1:30p 2:45p STAFF CWHAL 103 3 TTH 3:00p 4:15p STAFF CWHAL 103 3 TTH 9:00a 10:15a STAFF HONHAL 123 3 TTH 10:30a 11:45a STAFF HONHAL 123 3 TTH 1:30p 2:45p STAFF HONHAL 123 3 TTH 9:00a 10:15a STAFF JNHAL 201 3 TTH 10:30a 11:45a STAFF JNHAL 201 3 TTH 1:30p 2:45p STAFF JNHAL 201 3 MW 12:00p 1:15p SUK WILOHAL 212 3 MW 1:30p 2:45p SUK WILOHAL 212 3 MW 4:30p 5:45p SUK WILOHAL 212 3 MW MW 10:30a 1:30p 11:45a 2:45p DELUSE DELUSE CERHAL 101 CERHAL 101 3 3 3 77001 1050 Tempe HON 171 77002 1051 Tempe HON 171 90029 1071 Tempe HON 171 77003 1052 Tempe HON 171 77004 1053 Tempe HON 171 82915 1054 Tempe HON 171 77887 1055 Tempe HON 171 79691 1056 Tempe HON 171 79692 1057 Tempe HON 171 79693 1058 Tempe HON 171 79709 1060 Tempe HON 171 79710 1061 Tempe HON 171 79711 1062 Tempe HON 171 79712 1063 Tempe HON 171 82916 1067 Tempe HON 171 84584 1068 Tempe HON 171 84611 1069 Tempe HON 171 90028 1070 Tempe HON 171 90030 1072 Tempe HON 171 90031 1073 Tempe HON 171 90032 1074 Tempe HON 171 (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) MW 9:00a 10:15a GRAFF CERHAL 201 3 MW 10:30a 11:45a GRAFF CERHAL 201 3 MW 1:30p 2:45p GRAFF SGHAL 142 3 MW 1:30p 2:45p STANFORD CERHAL 201 3 MW 3:00p 4:15p STANFORD CERHAL 201 3 MW 1:30p 2:45p STAFF JNHAL 101 3 MW 3:00p 4:15p STAFF JNHAL 101 3 MW 4:30p 5:45p STAFF JNHAL 101 3 MW 9:00a 10:15a DOVE-VIEBAHN WILOHAL 112 3 MW 10:30a 11:45a DOVE-VIEBAHN WILOHAL 112 3 MW 9:00a 10:15a VOORHEES WILOHAL 212 3 MW 10:30a 11:45a VOORHEES WILOHAL 212 3 MW 1:30p 2:45p BRIAN WILOHAL 112 3 MW 3:00p 4:15p BRIAN WILOHAL 112 3 MW 7:30a 8:45a NIEBUHR JNHAL 201 3 MW 9:00a 10:15a NIEBUHR JNHAL 201 3 MW 10:30a 11:45a NIEBUHR JNHAL 201 3 MW 1:30p 2:45p NIEBUHR JNHAL 201 3 MW 9:00a 10:15a STAFF SGHAL 142 3 MW 12:00p 1:15p STAFF JNHAL 201 3 MW 3:00p 4:15p STAFF JNHAL 201 3 4 90196 1064 Tempe HON 171 90033 1075 Tempe HON 171 90034 1076 Tempe HON 171 90035 1077 Tempe HON 171 90036 1078 Tempe HON 171 90037 1079 Tempe HON 171 90038 1080 Tempe HON 171 90040 1081 Tempe HON 171 90041 1082 Tempe HON 171 90042 1083 Tempe HON 171 90043 1084 Tempe HON 171 82909 1009 Tempe HON 171 71392 1010 Tempe HON 171 90046 1087 Tempe HON 171 90047 1088 Tempe HON 171 90048 1089 Tempe HON 171 90049 1090 Tempe HON 171 90050 1091 Tempe HON 171 90052 1093 Tempe HON 171 90053 1094 Tempe HON 171 90054 1095 73524 1001 Tempe DTPHX HON 171 HON 171 The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event MW 4:30p 5:45p STAFF JNHAL 201 3 MW 10:30a 11:45a STAFF CWHAL 101 3 MW 12:00p 1:15p STAFF CWHAL 101 3 MW 3:00p 4:15p STAFF CWHAL 101 3 MW 4:30p 5:45p STAFF CWHAL 101 3 MW 9:00a 10:15a STAFF CWHAL 103 3 MW 10:30a 11:45a STAFF CWHAL 103 3 MW 1:30p 2:45p STAFF CWHAL 103 3 MW 10:30a 11:45a STAFF HONHAL 123 3 MW 1:30p 2:45p STAFF HONHAL 123 3 MW 3:00p 4:15p STAFF HONHAL 123 3 WF 9:00a 10:15a BRUHN JNHAL 101 3 WF 10:30a 11:45a BRUHN JNHAL 101 3 WF 9:00a 10:15a LOEBENBERG SGHAL 141 3 WF 10:30a 11:45a LOEBENBERG SGHAL 141 3 WF 1:30p 2:45p LOEBENBERG SGHAL 141 3 WF 10:30a 11:45a FOY SGHAL 142 3 WF 12:00p 1:15p FOY SGHAL 142 3 WF 9:00a 10:15a STAFF CWHAL 101 3 WF 12:00p 1:15p STAFF CWHAL 103 3 WF TTH 1:30p 9:00a 2:45p 10:15a STAFF LYNCH CWHAL 101 UCENT 162 3 3 5 76422 1002 DTPHX HON 171 73955 1003 DTPHX HON 171 82264 1004 DTPHX HON 171 75867 1005 DTPHX HON 171 78827 1007 DTPHX HON 171 82265 1008 DTPHX HON 171 89364 1009 DTPHX HON 171 89365 1010 DTPHX HON 171 73431 1001 Poly HON 171 77259 1002 Poly HON 171 77997 1003 Poly HON 171 79743 1004 Poly HON 171 82768 1005 Poly HON 171 78066 West HON 171 73451 87184 West HON 171 West HON 171 74826 1001 Tempe HON 272 74827 1002 Tempe HON 272 77999 1003 Tempe HON 272 79715 1004 Tempe HON 272 79716 1005 Tempe HON 272 (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (First Semester) The Human Event (Second Semester) The Human Event (Second Semester) The Human Event (Second Semester) The Human Event (Second Semester) The Human Event (Second Semester) TTH 10:30a 11:45a LYNCH UCENT 162 3 TTH 3:00p 4:15p STAFF UCENT 162 3 TTH 4:30p 5:45p STAFF UCENT 162 3 MW 7:30a 8:45a STAFF UCENT 162 3 MW 9:00a 10:15a STAFF UCENT 162 3 MW 10:30a 11:45a STAFF UCENT 162 3 MW 12:00p 1:15p O’FLAHERTY UCENT 162 3 MW 1:30p 2:45p O’FLAHERTY UCENT 162 3 MW 12:00p 1:15p MARTIN PERALTA 309 3 MW 1:30p 2:45p MARTIN PERALTA 309 3 MW 3:00p 4:15p MARTIN PERALTA 309 3 MW 4:30p 5:45p MARTIN PERALTA 309 3 W MW 4:30p 1:30p 7:15p OBERLE SANTAN 215 3 2:45p GRUBER 3 TTh 1:30p 2:45p GRUBER 3 TTh 10:30a 11:45a STAFF 3 MW 10:30a 11:45a LYNCH SGHAL 242 3 MW 12:00p 1:15p LYNCH SGHAL 242 3 MW 3:00p 4:15p LYNCH SGHAL 141 3 WF 9:00a 10:15a POPOVA CERHAL 101 3 WF 12:00p 1:15p POPOVA CERHAL 101 3 6 81336 83401 1004 90652 1001 80016 1002 West Tempe Tempe Poly West 83166 84446 84447 84448 89367 89483 84444 HON 191 HON 194 Freshman Seminar: Becoming a Community of Scholars Barrett Leadership F M 12:00p 3:00p 1:15p 3:50p RAMSEY STAFF SGHAL 141 1 1 HON 194 Preparing to Compete: Exploring the Self TH 12:00p 12:50p DAVILA SGHAL 141 1 HON 194 Mastering the Honors Experience W 10:30a 11:20a OBERLE, MARTIN PERALTA 239 1 10:30a 11:45a BILLBE F TTH MW MW M M W 12:00p 1:30p 4:30p 12:00p 3:00p 4:30p 6:00p 2:45p 2:45p 5:45p 1:15p 5:30p 7:15p 8:45p OBERLE, MARTIN INGRAM-WATERS STANFORD SIMPSON O’FLAHERTY OBERLE RAMSEY PERALTA 309 CERHAL 201 CERHAL 201 SGHAL 141 UCENT 162 PERALTA 314 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 TTH 3:00p 4:15p JACOBS SGHAL 142 3 M 3:00p 6:00p GINER CERHAL 101 3 TTH 12:00p 1:15p ZACHARY CERHAL 101 3 W 4:30p 5:20p STAFF SGHAL 142 1 MW MW 12:00p 1:30p 1:15p 2:45p SULLIVAN, KASHIWAGI SULLIVAN, CAVC 451 CAVC 451 3 3 Honors Devils (Requires application and approval to enroll. Contact sasha.billbe@asu.edu for more HON 194/294/394/494 information.) F 1002 1002 1003 1004 1001 1001 Poly Tempe Tempe Tempe DTPHX Poly West HON 294 HON 370 HON 370 HON 370 HON 370 HON 370 HON 370 73958 1002 Tempe HON 394 83106 1019 Tempe HON 394 90275 1003 Tempe HON 394 80597 1024 Tempe HON 394 76046 1018 77012 1001 Tempe Tempe HON 394 HON 394 Writing Center Colloquium History of Ideas History of Ideas History of Ideas History of Ideas History of Ideas History of Ideas The History and Evolution of Human Food Myth and Mysteries of the Tarot: An Opening into Creativity The Quest for Enhanced Consciousness: from the Greeks to Google Gammage Scholars Project Deductive Logic, Leadership & Industry Structure Deductive Logic, 7 1 79717 1017 Tempe HON 394 90343 1004 Tempe HON 394 90344 1005 Tempe HON 394 90345 1006 Tempe HON 394 90346 1007 Tempe HON 394 90466 1008 Tempe HON 394 90467 1009 Tempe HON 394 90468 1010 90469 1011 92218 1015 90569 1012 Tempe Tempe Tempe Tempe HON 394 HON 394 Leadership & Industry Structure Deductive Logic, Leadership & Industry Structure History of Travel: A Voyage of Identity Political Ecology of Borders Writing to Teach, Teaching to Write Anthropology and Play: RPG Creative Laboratory Diversity in American Cultures: Race, Autobiography, and American Politics Medicine and Madness in Film Russian Civilization, “The Russian Event” The Birth of Quantum HON 394 Power and Politics: The American President Field Experience: Changemaking in Education Problems in Men’s Health The Western Diet HON 394 84369 1005 90300 1001 DTPHX DTPHX HON 394 HON 394 90581 1002 DTPHX HON 394 90582 1003 DTPHX HON 394 90583 1004 DTPHX HON 394 Self Defense for SelfConfidence and Safety Running Into InjurySession B Social Innovation and Creative Confidence (Session B) KASHIWAGI TTH 10:30a 11:45a SULLIVAN, KASHIWAGI SS 236 3 T 3:00p 3:50p NIEBUHR JNHAL 201 1 M 12:00p 12:50p POPOVA CERHAL 101 1 F 12:00p 12:50p DOVE-VIEBAHN CERHAL 201 1 T 3:00p 3:50p LOEBENBERG CERHAL 201 1 MW 1:30p 2:45p VOORHEES SGHAL 242 3 TTH 1:30p 2:45p MILLER SGHAL 142 3 TTH WF 1:30p 3:00p 2:45p 4:15p STOFF FOY SGHAL 141 SGHAL 142 3 3 MW 3:00p 4:15p SIMPSON SGHAL 242 3 SGHAL 141 3 1 1 TH 4:30p 7:15p Panneton, Trujillo Gallegos, Gusz MW F 6:00p 12:00p 6:50p 1:15p BERGER WHARTON Tues 4:30pm 5:20pm SMITH UCENT 263 NHI2 222 SUN DEVIL FITNESS RM 212 W 4:30p 6:10p HARPER UCENT 253 1 W 3pm 4:40pm EWING UCENT 162BARRETT 1 8 1 90775 1006 DTPHX HON 394 90292 West HON 394 90280 West HON 394 81233 West HON 394 90242 West HON 394 87185 West HON 394 Explorations in Sleep – Hybrid (Session A) Contemporary Mexican Cinema Utopia/Dystopia: Scifi & Media Richard III W 90096 1001 Tempe HON 447 71380 1002 Tempe HON 484 80757 72951 71381 71382 1004 1003 1001 1001 Tempe Tempe Tempe Tempe HON 484 HON 484 HON 492 HON 493 78831 1001 78832 1001 80765 1001 80766 1001 DTPHX 3:00p VANA NHI2 105 1 MW 10:30a 11:45a Luna 3 TTh 12:00p 1:15p Lerman 3 F 9:00a 10:15 Anderson 1 F 10:30a 11:45 Hanlon 1 F 12:00p 1:15p Manninen 1 Walt Whitman's Songs of Himself Why Do We (Should We?) Pray? Lean Launch – Hybrid (Session B) Fall Internship ( 9/9,10/7, 11/4, 12/2) 1:00p T 6:00p 9:00p W 5:00p 7:50p DELUSE SGHAL 242 1-3 Internship Experience Lux Internship Honors Directed Study Honors Thesis N/A TBA N/A N/A N/A TBA N/A N/A N/A TBA N/A N/A NELSON N/A N/A N/A TBA N/A N/A 0 1-3 1-3 1-6 HON 492 Honors Directed Study N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 1-3 DTPHX POLY POLY HON 493 HON 492 HON 493 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 1-6 1-3 1-6 73395 1005 Tempe HON 494 TH 3:00p 5:45p SAREWITZ WGHL 401 3 80489 1017 Tempe HON 494 F 2:15p 5:05p KASHIWAGI CAVC 459 3 83698 1004 Tempe HON 494 M 4:30p 7:15p KASHIWAGI CAVC 451 3 90570 1002 84131 1016 Tempe Tempe HON 494 HON 494 T TBA 3:00p TBA 5:45p TBA BRIAN HARTWELL SGHAL 141 TBA 3 3 83494 1018 Tempe HON 494 TTH 3:00p 4:15p HALDEN ECG 237 3 90584 1001 DTPHX HON 494 Honors Thesis Honors Directed Study Honors Thesis Uncertainty and Decision Making Information Measurement Theory I Information Measurement Theory I Malignant: Cancer Politics and Policy st 21 Century Skills Sustainable Environmental Biotechnologies Developing the Mind of a Champion: Psychological Skills for W 4:30p 6:10p HOFFNER, KRISTIN UCENT 253 1 9 BA 265 Bhattacharjya 3 90585 1002 DTPHX HON 494 Optimal Performance (Session A) Leadership Effectiveness: Analysis of the Visions and Practices of Participatory Leaders and Mentors (Session A) 72887 1001 Tempe HON 497 Embryo Project W 3:00p 5:45p DAVIS, STEPHEN MAIENSCHEIN, WELLNER 72904 1002 Tempe HON 497 Digital Animation TTH 5:40p 8:30p VILES 72905 1003 Tempe HON 497 TTH 5:40p 8:30p 73606 1001 DTPHX HON 497 F 10:30a 80717 1003 DTPHX HON 498 F 80773 1004 DTPHX HON 498 71383 1001 Tempe HON 498 74348 1002 72972 1001 72973 1002 Tempe Tempe Tempe HON 498 HON 499 HON 499 Advanced Digital Animation Community Encounters (8/21, 9/4, 9/18, 10/2, 10/16, 10/30, 11/20, 12/4) Thesis Prep Course Session A Honors Independent Study Honors Independent Study Honors Independent Study Teacher Assistant I Teacher Assistant II TTH 1:30p 2:20pm UCENT 162BARRETT 1 3 VILES LSE 232 BARRETT COMP LAB, HONORS HALL 242 BARRETT COMP LAB, HONORS HALL 242 12:30p OFLAHERTY AEEB A 1 10:30a 12:00p RINGENBACH UCENT 162 1 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 1-3 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 1-3 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 1-3 1-3 1-3 3 3 Honors Only Sections (This list is not complete; it will be updated as course information is provided. Class Search information is usually most accurate information) Class # Subject Course # Title Campus 10 Days Begin End Instructor Credits 84020 ACC 261 Honors Fundamentals of Financial Accounting Tempe MW 3:00p 4:15p TBA 3 73686 ACC 271 Honors Fundamentals of Managerial Accounting Tempe TTH 10:30a 11:45a TBA 3 74896 ACC 271 Honors Fundamentals of Managerial Accounting Tempe TTH 3:00p 4:15p TBA 3 73536 AEE 360 Aerodynamics Tempe TTH 7:30a 8:45a TBA 4 87026 ASB 497 Political Ecology: Theory and Research Tempe TH 1:30p 4:15p 3 87027 ASB 497 Principles of Epid for GH Tempe W 9:00a 11:45a 3 72681 BIO 181 General Biology I - LAB Tempe T 1:30p 4:15p Abraham 0 73932 BIO 181 General Biology I - LECTURE Tempe MWF 10:30a 11:20a Caron, Mor 4 70200 BIO 182 General Biology II - LAB Tempe 4:30p 7:00p Michel 0 73931 BIO 182 General Biology II - LECTURE Tempe MWF 12:00p 12:50p Bang, Caron 4 79389 BIO 281 Conceptual Approach Bio Majors I - Lab Tempe T 7:30a 10:15a Abraham 0 79397 BIO 281 Conceptual Approach Bio Majors I – Lab Tempe TH 7:30a 10:15a Abraham 0 79403 BIO 281 Conceptual Approach Bio Majors I - Recitation Tempe W 7:55a 8:45a Stout 0 79415 BIO 281 Conceptual Approach Bio Majors I - Lecture Tempe TTH 10:30a 11:20a Stout 4 83443 BIO 331 Animal Behavior Tempe TTH 3:00p 4:15p 3 75542 BIO 340 General Genetics – Recitation Tempe W 6:00p 7:40p 75543 BIO 340 General Genetics - Lecture Tempe TTH 9:00a 10:15a Liebig Cartwright, Amdam Cartwright, Amdam 83444 BIO 345 Organic Evolution Tempe TTH 10:30a 11:30a 3 83445 BIO 353 Cell Biology Tempe MW 3:00p 4:15p Wojciechowski Capco. Chandler 83447 BIO 461 Comparative Animal Physiology Tempe TTH 12:00p 1:15p Harrison 3 83448 BIO 467 Neurobiology Tempe MW 10:30a 11:45a Neisewander 3 81318 BLE 220 Foundations of SEI Tempe MW 12:00p 1:15p TBA 3 74115 CIS 236 Honors Information Systems Tempe TTH 9:00a 10:15a STAFF 3 70905 ECN 213 Honors Macroeconomics Tempe TTH 1:30p 2:45p TBA 3 28038 ECN 231 Honors Business Statistics Tempe MW 3:00p 4:15p TBA 3 86146 ECN 414 Advanced Honors Microeconomics Tempe TTH 4:30p 5:45p TBA 3 76056 EDT 321 Computer Literacy: Mobile Tech Tempe MW 3:00p 4:15p TBA 3 77767 ENG 102 First Year Composition Honors Tempe TTH 10:30a 11:45a Wells 3 77769 ENG 102 First Year Composition Honors Tempe TTH 12:00p 1:15p 3 86538 ENG 440 Contemporary U.S. Literature (Hybrid Course) Tempe MW 4:30p 5:45p Wells SadowskiSmith 11 0 4 3 3 72620 FIN 303 Honors Finance Tempe MW 3:00p 4:15p TBA 3 75120 FIN 303 Honors Finance Tempe MW 4:30p 5:45p TBA 3 77287 FMP 261 Introduction to Screenwriting (Lecture) Tempe T 12:00p 1:15p Bernstein 3 77288 FMP 261 Introduction to Screenwriting (Recitation) Tempe TH 12:00p 1:15p Bernstein 0 89849 GCU 494 Landscape, Place, and memory Tempe TTH 12:00p 1:15P McHugh 3 83453 HPS 322 History of Science Tempe TTH 10:30a 11:45a 73469 JMC 301 Intrm Reporting & Writing DPHX MW 8:00a 9:50a TBA 3 71481 JMC 305 Online Media DPHX TTH 3:00p 4:50p TBA 3 74975 JMC 366 Journalism Ethics & Diversity DPHX MW 12:00p 1:15p TBA 3 74977 JMC 366 Journalism Ethics & Diversity DPHX MW 10:30a 11:45a TBA 3 82400 MAE 212 Engineering Mechanics – Lecture Tempe MW 9:00a 10:15a TBA 4 80023 MAE 212 Engineering Mechanics – Lecture Tempe MW 9:00a 10:15a TBA 4 83778 MAE 240 Tempe MW 12:00p 1:50p TBA 4 72763 MAT 267 Calculus for Engineers III Tempe MW 12:00p 1:15p Gardner 3 81809 MAT 272 Calc w/Analytic Geometry III - Lecture Tempe TTH 1:30p 2:45p Kostelich 4 81810 MAT 272 Calc w/Analytic Geometry III - - Recitation Tempe T 12:00p 12:50p Kostelich 0 73000 MAT 275 Modern Differential Equations - Lecture Tempe TTH 9:00a 10:15a Baer 3 74652 MAT 275 Modern Differential Equations - Lab Tempe TBD TBD TBD TBD 0 73020 MAT 300 Mathematical Structures Tempe TTH 12:00p 1:15p Czygrinow 3 82188 MAT 343 Applied Linear Algebra Tempe TTH 10:30a 11:45a Welfert 3 83450 MIC 220 Biology of Microorganisms Tempe MWF 12:00p 12:50p Cadillo-Quiroz 3 83451 MIC 314 HIV/AIDS: Sci/Behavior/Society Tempe MW 6:00p 7:15p Salamone 3 73286 MGT 303 Honors Organizational Strategies, Leadership and Behavior Tempe TTH 9:00a 10:15a TBA 3 82270 MGT 303 Honors Organizational Strategies, Leadership and Behavior Tempe TTH 12:00p 1:15p TBA 3 72603 MKT 303 Honors Marketing Theory & Practice Tempe 3:00p 4:15p TBA 3 86140 MUP 459 Barrett Choir Tempe TTH 6:00p 7:15p Schildkret 1-2 77219 NTR 440 Advanced Human Nutrition I DPHX TTH 10:30a 11:45a Johnston 3 77226 NTR 441 Advanced Human Nutrition II DPHX TTH 10:30a 11:45a Lespron 3 77227 NTR 441 Advanced Human Nutrition II DPHX TTH 12:00p 1:15p Lespron 3 76663 PHY 121 Tempe MWF 9:00a 10:50a Drucker 3 76692 PHY 122 University Physics I: Mechanics - Lecture University Physics Lab I (This lab must be taken with PHY 121 (78083) NO EXEPTIONS. Email physics.info@asu.edu with ASU ID for Tempe MW Drucker 1 12 TTH 3 enrollment. Lab built into Lecture time.) 86858 POS 468 Comparative Asian Foreign Pols Tempe TTh 1:30p 2:45p Simon 3 81971 POS 497 Honors Colloquium Tempe W 4:30p 7:00p Siroky 3 78482 PSY 101 Introduction to Psychology Tempe TTH 9:00a 10:15a Hart 3 78587 PSY 351 Honors Social Psychology Tempe MW 3:00p 4:15p Saenz 3 72296 PSY 497 Research in Psychology Tempe TTH 12:00p 1:15p Presson 3 73507 PUP 190 Sustainable Cities - Lecture Tempe MW 4:30p 5:45p Hagen 3 PUP 190 Sustainable Cities – Recitation Tempe W 6:30p 7:20p Pijawka 0 73122 SCM 303 Honors Global Supply Operations Tempe F 9:00a 11:45a 3 76785 SOS 111 Sustainable Cities - Lecture Tempe MW 4:30p 5:45p TBA Redman, Hagen 74588 SPE 222 Orientation to Education of Exceptional Children Tempe TTH 12:00p 1:15p TBA 3 77301 TEL 215 Intro to Child&Adolescent Dev Tempe TTH 9:00a 10:15a TBA 3 82998 TEL 494 Tempe TTH 3:00p 4:15p TBA 3 78866 USL 216 Tempe F 12:00p 1:15p TBA 3 Service Learning:For Educators 3 The following courses will receive automatic honors credit every semester: • • • • • • • • • • CEE 486 ENG 105 – Instruction Mode must be “In Person” GRK 101 LAT 421 PHY 201 PHY 333 CEE/CNE 212 CHE 211 CPI 310 CSE/EEE 230 Honors Course Descriptions HON 171 - The Human Event (first semester) Discussion of landmark texts in human social and intellectual development, with emphasis on critical thinking and argumentative writing, from earliest recorded human ideas to approximately 1600 CE. Enrollment restricted to Barrett students. 13 HON 194 – Mastering the Honors Experience Hit the ground running! Whether your learning style is that of a paratrooper, a hobo, or somewhere in-between, you want to get off to the right start in your freshman year AND set ambitious goals that make your first year at Barrett the foundation of a lifelong pattern of leadership, inquiry and rigor. This one-credit, 10 week course is designed to help you hit the ground running not just for Barrett’s introductory “Human Event,” but for the whole of your college career. Think of it as an advanced “how-to” class in “university thinking!” Topics discussed include: · How to make yourself and others ‘smarter’ through class discussion; · How to manage heavy reading loads; · How to write an awesome, rigorous, muscular argumentative thesis; · How to negotiate an honors contract; · How to start building toward your Honors Thesis on day one; · How to not be google dumb: online research, study aids and the meaning of book scholarship in a digital age. Through in-class activities, short readings, exercises and panel discussions including present and former students, the course aims at giving you a head start on surviving the first-year honors curriculum, setting ambitious goals for yourself as a scholar, and for contributing to the community. Mastering the Honors Experience – Go from Barrett Newbie to Ninja in just ten weeks! HON 194 - The Development of LeadershipThis course explores compelling questions about leadership and its impact on society, while giving students the opportunity to build a cohesive network of shared experiences to measure their effectiveness in making ethical choices while exercising leadership in their personal and professional lives. Components of leadership development such as values-based leadership, theory and practice are addressed as students consider ethical issues, the role of ethics in decision-making and the processes by which leaders make decisions and affect change in a variety of roles and circumstances. The theoretical and experiential approach focuses on a variety of learning activities, including case discussions, simulations, and applied leadership exercises. OPEN ONLY TO FIRST SEMESTER FRESHMEN. HON 194/294/394/494: Honors Devils The Honors Devils paraprofessional student organization at the West campus of Barrett meets for a one-credit course on Friday mornings. Students must apply to become an Honors Devil. For more information, contact sasha.billbe@asu.edu. HON 272 - The Human Event (second semester) Continuation of HON 171. Discussion of landmark texts in human social and intellectual development, with emphasis on critical thinking and argumentative writing, from approximately 1600 CE to the present. Prerequisite: HON 171 with a ‘C’ or better. HON 370: - History of Ideas An advanced and intensive survey of key social and intellectual currents in the development of the human race organized around a topic or theme, with an emphasis on critical thinking and argumentative writing. Enrollment is restricted to upper-division students transferring into Barrett, the Honors College. 14 Simpson course description: This interdisciplinary seminar will explore the philosophy and practice of leadership in peace and war from ancient Greece to the nineteenth century. What makes for a good leader? How has that definition changed over time? How does one link the means of policy to the ends of statecraft? Students will read and discuss the writings of Plutarch, Machiavelli, Sun Tzu, and Clausewitz, among others, who have shaped notions of leadership across time. Ingram-Waters course description: In this three credit upper division honors seminar, students will explore historical and modern notions of social control. In our readings, assignments, and discussions, we will engage with a range of primary sources, including religious texts, works of literature, art, and music, and selections from sociology, media studies, and queer theory. Stanford course description: This course will examine ideas about crime and punishment from ancient times to the present. Readings will consist of religious texts (e.g., the Laws of Manu, the Covenant Code, the Koran), secular laws (e.g., the Arizona Revised Statutes), and excerpts from the work of legal philosophers (e.g., Beccarria, Kant), as well as a number of literary works, including novels, poems, and plays. Through all of these texts, we will pursue a recurring set of questions—What makes something a crime? Why have different societies defined “crime” so differently? What is the difference between a crime and a wrong (or tort) under civil law? How do different theories of government yield different ideas about crime? What forces—social, psychological, moral—turn a person into a criminal? Assuming that it is necessary to punish lawbreakers, exactly what form should that punishment take? And in prescribing forms of punishment, how should we balance justice and mercy? HON 394 –The History and Evolution of Human Food The course is an examination of the history and the evolution of the relationship between humans and their food. A part of the course will focus on the origins of agriculture 8,000 to 10,000 years ago, asking why and how this profound change in our eating and foraging habits occurred. But we will also use paleoanthropological resources and informed speculation about human physiology and nutrition to try to understand pre-agricultural human and hominid diets. And we will extend our study to the present, looking at modern cuisines, cultural and nutritional differences in the food humans eat today, and speculating about how our evolved physiology copes with the nutritional input we give it. HON 394 – Power and Politics: The American President This course explores the American presidency in historical perspective, examining the challenges faced by American presidents through case studies. Each full week of the semester will include a presentation on a theme related to the presidency (civil rights, the “bully pulpit,” war powers home and abroad) followed by class discussions based on primary sources outlining specific examples of various presidents addressing issues. At the end of the semester students will complete a research project concerning one specific example of how a president approached and resolved (or failed to resolve) a particular issue. There’s no prerequisite for the course other than an interest in learning more about the American presidency in historical perspective. HON 394 – History of Travel: A Voyage for Identity This course will survey the history of travel, from its earlier and perhaps most problematic recorded beginnings to the present day. Part of this exercise is to understand better not only how long people have encountered each other in a global space, but also use those interactions to inform how people construct identity. Our weekly meetings will examine travel from a geographic perspective, as well as socio-economic, cultural, religious, and military perspective. HON 394 – 21st Century Skills 15 Description: The skills needed to succeed in the 21st Century are dramatically different from the skills needed to succeed in the last century. What has changed? Information is now ubiquitous. Success now depends on how well you can use that information. What skills are required for the 21st Century and how can we acquire them? Employers are in agreement about what those skills are and that current graduates lack them. This course will focus on how to develop the 21st Century skills: 1) Locating and evaluating information 2) Developing a conceptual framework to organize knowledge 3) Critical thinking for complex problems 4) Collaboration among diverse experts 5) Communication within and without the expert domain 6) Creative experimentation in search of new insights This will be a project-based and student-centered course. Students will each work on a research project related to their major of their own choosing. The project can be related to another course or major requirement such as a senior thesis or capstone project or the student can choose a project for this course. Together we will investigate how to acquire and evaluate the skills listed above. HON 394 - Writing to Teach, Teaching to Write People who toss around the old adage, “Those who can’t do, teach” have likely never tried to teach writing without being effective writers themselves. This course proceeds from the premise that the successful teaching of writing—whether in one-on-one conferences, group workshops, or in the classroom—stems from both a theoretical understanding of the intricacies of the written word, from grammar and syntax to rhetorical style, and a sincere enthusiasm for the practice of writing. Taking the form of a combination pedagogy class and writing workshop, this course will explore the teaching of rhetoric and composition at the college level. Students will discuss and practice strategies for effective writing tutoring, revision and editing both their work and the work of others, and other aspects of writing pedagogy from syllabus design to assignment development. This course is recommended for aspiring writers and editors, current Barrett writing tutors, those who would like to become tutors at the Barrett Writing Center, and those who are otherwise hoping, at some point in their careers, to teach writing in secondary or post-secondary educational settings. HON 394 -Russian Civilization, “The Russian Event” Russia cannot be understood by reason alone. Common measures cannot be applied to her. She has a special character. One must simply believe in Russia. - Fedor Tiutchev. . . . Russia. It is a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma. - Winston Churchill These views express conceptions that many hold about the unique and mysterious nature of Russia. Whether you agree with these assessments or not, Russia’s culture inarguably has contributed much to world civilization. This course is designed as an introduction to Russian society and culture from the earliest East Slav settlements to the present day. We will explore the development of Russia through an overview of its art, architecture, literature, music, thought, and film. Hon 394 - Political Ecology of Borders 16 This one-credit seminar course is designed to increase the students’ appreciation of the complex and sometimes paradoxical roles of human and nonhuman actors who inhabit the diverse ecological and geopolitical spaces of borderlands. Political ecology recognizes that there is a link between the production of nature and the process of making borders. Understanding the histories of bordered spaces and the subjects that inhabit them can help illuminate how the concept of nature shifts as people delimit, maintain, secure, and militarize borders. The goal is to see how these narratives about nature shape the lived present and limit future choices. HON 394 - Anthropology and Play: RPG Creative Laboratory This one credit class is designed to introduce students to the anthropology of games and play and to ethnographic writing through experiential learning. Students will encounter readings in the anthropology and philosophy of games as well as receiving classes in the ethnographic method. The majority of the semester will be spent in a creative laboratory creating and playing a role-playing game (RPG) world using the GURPS 4th Edition (Generic Universal Role-Playing System) platform. GURPS is a RPG system wherein each player takes on the role of a character of their own (or another's) creation, and collaborates with other players in acting out that character's actions when presented with a scenario by a referee player called the Game Master (GM). The actions of the character, and the interactions with characters controlled by other players, result in a collaboratively-generated story featuring the players' characters as protagonists. One of the class’s premises will be an extension and creative re-telling of stories of the ancient world. This will both give students an opportunity to re-visit the characters of their Human Event classes, but also to inhabit them and creatively explore how they might interact beyond the boundaries of their text. HON 394 - Diversity in American Cultures: Race, Autobiography, and American Politics This course examines the American tradition of autobiographical writing with particular attention to how it addresses issues of racial politics and democratic leadership. HON 394 - Medicine and Madness in Film and Literature From Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wallpaper" (1892) to David O. Russell's Silver Linings Playbook (2012), popular culture has long exhibited an interest in the unlikely juxtapositions and unsettling dream sequences inherent to representing mental illness. Drawing on literature and film from the late nineteenth century to the present day, this course will chart a theoretical history of cultural representations of mental illness and encourage students to consider the historical contexts out of which these works emerge. While taking psychological and psychiatric writings and theories into consideration, this course does not purport to present a scientific understanding of mental illness. Instead, it will view madness as cultural “artifact,” examining the cultural representations, and the associated political and historical dimensions, that arise from shifting attitudes toward and understanding of mental illness. HON 394 – Deductive Logic, Leadership & Industry Structure This course will teach students a structure in which they can “know everything without knowing any technical information.” It will investigate ways to analyze reality and problems occurring in everyday life and the industry, showing students the simple and logical solutions that can be applied to solve problems. Information Measurement Theory is a foundation of many leading-edge technologies that have been developed at ASU and tested worldwide in construction and non-construction related services. The course material will come from the brains of the world, such as, Socrates, Einstein, and Deming. In this class students will learn and apply advanced business systems that have been test over 800 times on over $3 Billion of projects in numerous industries, with sustained 98% performance. Student will learn how to use information in a way that lets them see the “big picture” without knowing the details, to become more efficient by doing less work, and increase efficiency and effectiveness. This class is based upon a 16 year, $9.5M research effort in the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering. 17 HON 394 – Myth and Mysteries of the Tarot: An Opening into Creativity This workshop is meant to acquaint students with the archetypes contained in the 78 cards of the tarot. It includes basic instruction in reading cards with basic spreads for the purposes of meditation, personal decision-making, and as a prompt to artistic creativity. From the Sforza-Visconti tarot deck to the popular James Bond deck, the tarot has been as source of active imagination for artists and creators throughout time. The class focuses on investigating how the images of the tarot have influenced both classical and folkloric art, and how these in turn have enriched the archetypes presently illustrated in the tarot. The course will outline how artists (Shakespeare, W.B. Yeats, Lorca, T.S. Eliot, etc.) have used tarot archetypes and rituals in their work. The instructor has handled and investigated the 15th century Cary-Yale Visconti Tarot deck (at the Yale Beinecke Rare Book Manuscript), has researched the Salvador Dali tarot of the 1970s, and has studied the Alistair Crowley tarot deck, the Palladini Aquarian deck, and the Rider-Waite deck by Pamela Colman Smith. Students will be expected to keep a journal in which they will record weekly exercises based on the cards. As a final project, students will turn in a research term paper on one of the figures of the Major Arcana. Students will also be expected to perform a standard 10-card Celtic Cross reading and record their findings. HON 394 – The Quest for Enhanced Consciousness: from the Greeks to Google This class would examine three broad paths to enhanced consciousness, or improved thought, through the millennia. Efforts to discipline the workings of the mind emerged as early as the Greeks, and continued through the Enlightenment. In contemporary times, two new paths for enhancing consciousness have emerged, one driven by bio-pharmaceutical technologies and the other driven by digital electronics, computing and the Internet. All three approaches – mental discipline, “the pill,” and “the processor” – coexist today. The class will explore the differences and similarities in approaches to enhanced consciousness. Today the bio-pharma and digital computing approaches are so robust that perfect consciousness and an immortal or everlasting mind is believed to be possible. Why have humans pursued improved ways of thinking for millennia. What’s new and challenging about today’s approaches? What are the dangers of enhanced consciousness, what are the potential benefits, and how can we learn from the past as well as imagine and design more appropriate paths to enhanced consciousness in future? Put more bluntly, must knowledge workers, of any age, contemplate taking Adderall to stay competitive? HON 394 – Field Experience: Changemaking in Education In an interdisciplinary, collaborative and applied course, students of all majors can explore the topics of education and entrepreneurship. Co-taught by representatives from Teach For America and the Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College, students will learn what it means to confront the challenges, opportunities, failures and successes in education through interactive, entrepreneurial coursework. Class will meet as a group periodically throughout the semester while students participate in designing community innovations. Students will create a final applied project that enhances their understanding of how to impact our education system resulting in applications to funding sources with a chance to win prizes to make ideas happen, including up to $10,000 from the ASU Changemaker Challenge, and to begin work on a possible thesis project. HON 394 – Explorations in Sleep – Hybrid (at Downtown) Session A Selected theories on sleep regulation, normal sleep patterns over the lifespan, normal sleep variations, and good sleep hygiene. Students will explore selected theories on sleep regulation, normal sleep patterns over the lifespan, and normal sleep variations. Students also will propose good sleep hygiene practices. HON 394- Social Innovation and Creative Confidence – (at Downtown campus)Session B 18 This course will provide a learning culture where intellectual virtues, personal/social compassion and collision thinking will help to incubate personal discoveries into novel ideas and actions. Social innovation terms, principles, and skills will be practiced and translated for personal, intellectual and social application. HON 394-Self-Defense for Self-Confidence and Safety - (at Downtown campus) This class provides the opportunity to learn a system of practical, proven self-defense techniques, and educate the individual in the strategies of personal safety and awareness. This class is a composite based on over 25 years of experience, including street self-defense, unarmed weapons defense, defense from the ground, abduction resistance, effective use of your environment, and defense tools found in the everyday world. HON 394-Running into Injury - (at Downtown campus)Session B Recent best-selling books have begun challenging long held beliefs about distance running training. This course will investigate if these new notions have any scientific merit and the cultural and commercial consequences of a potential paradigm shift in training for distance running. Are we really “born to run” and what is an “unbreakable runner”? Is modern medicine right in saying that if we want to see less injuries people should stop running or are there ways to train smarter? HON 394: Contemporary Mexican Cinema (at West campus) This course will address major topics and auteurs in contemporary film as their work intersects with larger cultural phenomena. Through film and literature, we will examine major cultural history in Mexico from the 1968 student movement to the present, the major industrial practices in the Mexican film industry and how those practices relate to political and economic history of Mexico, critically analyze the visual, sonorous and semantic qualities of films, and discuss how meaning is made and projected. HON 394: Utopia/Dystopia: Scifi & Media (at West campus) Five science fiction novels by female authors, along with many films and media will provide the lenses with which we will come to grips with the socio-political, artistic, and scientific contexts/concepts of classic utopian and dystopian societies. HON 394: Richard III (at West campus) Shakespeare's Richard III presents the audience with a problem. He is at once an endearing character and one that brings sympathy from the audience. However, as he increasingly engages in heinous deeds he alienates his audience. The play begins with a profound contrast between medieval and modern politics. Richard places himself firmly in the modern camp and goes about achieving power in a way that today seems very normal. But he crosses the line. On his last night before the final battle Richard engages in a profound inner dialogue with himself in which he asks if he should love or hate himself. The next morning he dismisses conscience as a resource for fools saying "march on, join bravely, let us to it pellmell. If not to heaven, then hand in hand to hell." It is easy to see that many of the popular TV shows of today are attempts at imitating the character of Richard III in showing us dastardly characters that nevertheless have some appeal (consider "Breaking Bad"). The many dimensions of this play are essential for a college student and will help in their ability to interpret other texts either Shakespearian or contemporary. HON 394: Walt Whitman's Songs of Himself (at West campus) Whatever else we should say about the politics of our era, or the condition of our various social compacts, or the health of our body politic, in all sorts of other ways it seems that contemporary U.S. culture has been shaped by the priorities of Walt Whitman. Certainly it is Whitman’s wild yawp, 19 his insistence upon an ecstatic romantic individualism, that reverberates through Katy Perry’s promise that you’re gonna hear her roar, or her promise that UR a firework; in Lady Gaga’s reassurance that you were born this way—an individual, utterly specific and something to celebrate rather than efface; in Ke$ha’s tautological and yet resonant declaration that “We R Who We R.” Even (perhaps especially!) if the individualism these artists celebrate remains non-specific, they transact the same romance of the self that energizes the writing of Whitman. “I celebrate myself and sing myself,” he writes. “For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you.” Just as the first word of the first edition of Whitman's _Leaves of Grass_ is “I,” and just as the last word is “you,” and just as _Leaves of Grass_ is therefore the bridge that carries that I to that you, Whitman’s most reflexive association with such bridging is one of eros—something else he shares with his contemporary descendants. “Urge and urge and urge,” he writes. “Always the procreant urge of the world.” This course will give us the chance to reflect upon those connections by thinking of Whitman as a writer whose work refracts the antebellum milieu out of which it arose even as it pushes back against that milieu, and by studying _Leaves of Grass_ as a work in progress whose various revisions tell a story of Whitman and his country over the course of five decades. But our principle activity together will be reading Whitman—his poetry, his journalism, his manifestos, his fiction; the texts that still transport us and that earn him the unofficial title of America’s absolute poet laureate, and also the stuff that is so strange or so bad you can hardly believe it’s him. We will not simply “complicate,” but will utterly cast aside platitudinous renditions of the good gray bard, the “Captain, my Captain” image of Whitman made so tenacious by “The Dead Poet’s Society,” striving instead toward the fraught kind of rapport that arises, inevitably, whenever one self traverses the distance separating another. HON 394: Why Do We (Should We?) Pray? (at West campus) In this course we will look at certain challenges to the traditional use and understanding of prayer (mainly, can God's will be effected by prayer?), and read different perspectives on how human beings should incorporate prayer into their faiths and lives. HON 447 – Lean Launch Students learn lean and customer development methodologies to test assumptions made about a new business concept that they wish to explore or launch. Teaches how to effectively utilize business models and critically assess the assumptions made through the testing of hypotheses to create innovative and market-ready ventures. Includes weekly presentations of learning points and team activities outside of the classroom. Open to students in any major of study with the required prerequisite. HON 484 – Internships Structured practical experience following a contract or plan, supervised by faculty and practitioners. HON 484 – LUX Internship The LUX Internship is a graded internship available only to students who are selected as editors for LUX, the Undergraduate Creative Review at ASU. Students will be required to fully participate in all phases of the publishing process from idea to final product, including but not limited to marketing, submission selection, production and distribution. For more information, contact Nilanjana Bhattacharjya at Nilanjana.Bhattacharjya@asu.edu. HON 484 – Applied Ethics Internship The Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics is the core creator and curator of ethics activities at Arizona State University, both within and beyond the curriculum. Lincoln Center programs include real-life ethics seminars, ethics forums for high school and college students, a statewide network of clinical ethics professionals, and the production of ethics teaching materials from K-12 onward. Working with Lincoln Center staff, affiliated faculty, 20 and various partners at ASU and in the community, this internship experience will include both scholarly research and practical activities in support of the Lincoln Center mission. Students will develop knowledge of practical, professional, and applied ethics, and hone both oral and written communication skills to address diverse audiences effectively. HON 494 - Malignant: Cancer Politics and Policy We will examine cancer as a social, political, cultural, economic, literary, and historical construct. In other words, we will try to understand how the cluster of diseases we call cancer do what they do, from the molecular level through the individual to the social and political levels. This discussionintensive course will center on how people react to cancer, why cancer research has long been a policy priority, and the role of science and policy in understanding and ameliorating its ravages. We will ask and answer questions such as: Why is cancer so feared? What is the role of cancer research? How are new medical technologies developed? What are the processes of commodification and exploitation in cancer treatments? What are the images and concepts that frame how we think about cancer? How do illnesses become “illnesses” and how do those illnesses become industries? Why is cancer treatment so expensive? Does it need to be? Together we will seek to better appreciate the complex ecosystem of cancer research and cancer care. Creatures in that ecosystem include individual patients and health professionals, abiding in a forest of nonprofit organizations, research institutions, government agencies, and companies. We will look for answers and insight from science and technology studies, history, economics, sociology, and bioethics, as well as fiction, movies and personal narratives. HON 494 – Uncertainty & Decision Making Knowledge is always incomplete, yet decisions must be made. This seminar explores uncertainty and its relation to decision making, with a particular focus on the ways that science is applied in order to improve decisions. We will explore the many meanings and origins of uncertainty, using theoretical and case-based approaches. A central theme will be the relation among uncertainty, scientific prediction, and decision making, especially in politically charged issues, for example as related to management of the environment. Ultimately, we will want to understand how effective decisions can be made in the face of inevitable uncertainties. HON 494 - Information Measurement Theory I This is the follow-on course to HON 394 Deductive Logic, Leadership/Management Techniques. This course will delve into a deeper analysis and more in-depth application of the Information Measurement Theory (knowing everything without knowing anything.) IMT replaces the normally required technical data that is needed to know what to do with logic and natural laws similar to how a computer uses concepts of consistency and extremes to minimize the need to make decisions. The course will give the students a methodology to replace the traditional approaches to their industry with a new approach which minimizes the need for traditional experience and expertise, drastically cutting down the time required to have an impact in the industry. This course will teach students how they can utilize the IMT principles to overcome their relative lack of experience and immediately become a value added professional in their industry. It will develop the students' ability to lead, plan, and analyze situations which have a lack of technical information. HON 494-Developing the Mind of a Champion: Psychological Skills for Optimal Performance – (at Downtown campus) Session A The course will focus on psychological techniques to improve effectiveness and overall performance in many relevant areas including but not limited to: academics, sport, work, exercise, and music. We will address motivation, mindset, and confidence through theoretical background and application of techniques such as self-talk, optimal intensity, performance routines, imagery, goal setting, and emotional management. HON 494-Leadership Effectiveness: Analysis of the Visions and Practices of Participatory Leaders and Mentors- (at Downtown campus) Session A 21 This course introduces students to the conceptual model of effective leadership put forth in Kouzes and Posner's The Leadership Challenge as well as analyses of leadership behaviors in works of anthropology, history, and literature. The course also focuses on the student's own development as a leader with the understanding that people are not born leaders; instead, they learn to become leaders, and some learn to become effective leaders dedicated to mentoring and encouraging others, challenging ineffective processes, sharing and establishing visions and goals, and encouraging others rather than merely ordering or managing. HON 497 – Digital Computer Animation/Advanced Digital Computer Animation Have you ever wondered how Hollywood produces all those wonderful special effects that you see in the movies? Would you like to learn how to tell the difference between computer images and models? Would you like to be able to create the same type of animations for yourself or your thesis defense? Well if you answered yes to any of these questions then The Barrett Honors College has a class for you, Computer Digital Animation and Advanced Digital Computer Animation. You will be using Autodesk Maya 7.0 a state of the art animation software package that has produced animations that can be seen in movies like The Mummy and the Star Wars Prequels. The first course begins by showing you how to use the software and techniques to help create a better-looking animation right away. There are no prerequisites for the course, only your desire to work and learn something new. The course is broken down into five tutorials and one final project. After each of the five tutorials you will have added a different skill set to your animation bag of tricks that will be applied to your own final animation. The final animation is of your creation and only has to be approved by the instructor before you begin. Tests and quizzes are kept to a minimum so that you can focus your work on the tutorials and final project. But please understand this is not a "walk in the park course". You will spend hours working with Maya in order to complete all the course work that is required. The second class builds on the knowledge that you gained from the first course and the first course is a requirement of the second class. All of the work that is completed in the second course is geared toward to final character projects. The first three projects: a character, a building, and an environment, are geared toward increasing your knowledge of character animation techniques, lighting techniques, camera movement, camera angles, editing techniques and how they can be applied in a computer generated world. Again in this class tests and quizzes are kept to a minimum so that you can spend as much time as possible working toward your final projects. This class is mainly for BHC students, however if there are still seats available when the class begins then students from other colleges will be allowed in the class. The class is on Monday and Wednesday from 5:40 to 8:30. So if you are interested in this class please contact Rebecca Viles at 480-727-6510 or by e-mail at additional information please e-mail me at r.viles.work@asu.edu <mailto:r.viles.work@asu.edu>. HON 497 – The Embryo Project This seminar will introduce selected students to the National Science Foundation funded Embryo Project. Students will learn about the international network of scholars developing an exciting new online laboratory through a collaborator virtual laboratory working environment. Each student will write entries for the encyclopedia, which will be edited and entered into the database once they are accepted. Successful students will also be invited to write interpretive essays, in some cases in connection with research projects on honors theses, that will be reviewed and published as part of the project. Admission is limited, and students must apply for this unique experience. Typically, upper level students with experience in writing and with some research skills will feel most comfortable in this course. To apply, please visit the Center for Biology and Society in Life Sciences C-Wing room 284. HON 497 – Community Encounters (at Downtown campus) 22 This seminar provides opportunities to engage in and with our community. The course objective is to extend perspectives of community and urban life, through a series of visits with community leaders/organizations focused on improving quality of life. The course requires more than just participation: it also requires interpretation and integration of your experiences. Transportation will not be provided. HON 498 – Independent Study If you are doing Independent Study with a university professor and would like to earn credits for this class, please contact your Barrett advisor for information and permission to enroll. HON 499 – Teacher’s Assistant If you are doing a TA for a Barrett faculty member and would like to earn credits for your work, please talk to the faculty member for whom you TA and contact your Barrett advisor for information and permission to enroll. BLE 220 Foundations of Structured English Immersion In this introductory course, pre-service teachers will explore, critique, and reflect on the theoretical foundations of educating English language learners. Current educational practices and historical legal issues surrounding educating English language learners will be examined. The purpose of the course is to prepare pre-service teachers for linguistically diverse classrooms while providing them with the foundations for Structured English Immersion needed to meet the requirements for a provisional Structured English Immersion (SEI) endorsement. The course will cover the following required areas from the Curricular Framework for Augmented 45 hours Provisional SEI Endorsement: ELL Proficiency Standards, Assessment Objectives, Foundations of SEI, and SEI strategies. ENG 102 – First-Year Composition Description: Critical reading and writing; emphasizes strategies of academic discourse. Research paper required. Pre-requisites: Must have completed ENG 101 or 107 with a grade of C or greater ENG 440 – Contemporary U.S. Literature This course will examine contemporary US fiction produced since the 1980s, most of which has garnered literary prizes, entered the “canon” of contemporary US literature or received much critical attention. As we read works by John Barth, Octavia Butler, Cormac McCarthy, Anna Castillo, Louise Erdrich, and Jonathan F. Foer, we will focus on the reemergence of genre fiction (including speculative, thriller, and magical realist fiction) and its relationship to theories of contemporary literature. FMP 261 – Introduction to Screenwriting Basic skills of screenwriting including exercises in conflict and resolution, plot points, and theories of three-act structure and design. GCU 494 – Landscape, Place, and Memory Place and landscape are cardinal concepts in cultural geography, referring both to what we sense and experience, and to diverse ways of knowing. In this course we read and discuss humanistic, experiential, and critical theory accounts of place and landscape, and we explore the confluence of geography and memory, raising a series of questions: How are landscape and place interlaced in life experiences and meanings? What is 23 remembered and inscribed in cultural landscapes? What is forgotten? How are place and landscape critical in terms of contested histories and narratives? How is nostalgia potent in the making and remaking of place and landscape in the modern world? What are the implications for creating places and landscapes that are meaningful and sustainable? In addition to reading key works we view and discuss films relating to landscape, place, and memory. Students create three photo-essays during the course of the semester. The photo-essay prompts allow for differing styles of visualization, writing and expression. There are no prerequisites for the course. JMC 305 – Online Media Description: Focuses on the Internet from the perspective of the journalist--the best way to tell a story using words, photos, video, and audio. Fee. Pre-requisites: Journalism & Mass Communication student; JMC 201 with C or better; 2.5 cumulative GPA OR Graduate Mass Communication students. JMC 366 - Journalism Ethics & Diversity Description: Basic understanding of the operations of a broadcast station. Examines internal organization structure and the relationship between each department. Pre-requisites: Journalism & Mass Communication student; 2.50 minimum cumulative GPA; JMC 200 or MCO 200 with a C or better NTR 241 – Human Nutrition Emphasizes nutrient metabolism and the relationships between diet and disease. For pre-dietetics or other pre-professional majors. Prerequisite: CHM 101 (or its equivalent) SPE 222 – Orientation to Education of Exceptional Children This course provides an overview of the education of children with special educational needs from birth through age 21, and is intended to provide background to allow for the meaningful inclusion of diverse learners in educational environments. The course introduces the following concepts: • The history of special education, legal and ethical issues, and service delivery models • Survey of human exceptionality, including origins, nature and characteristics • Identification of individuals with disabilities, with needs and considerations during early childhood, school age, and adulthood • Implementation of IDEA across educational environments: early intervention, pre-school, K-12; considerations for post-secondary services • The role of educators in meeting the needs of all learners considering language, culture, age span, educational setting, and category of exceptionality • The impact of advocacy and leadership in addressing issues related to access and disability. TEL 494 Undergraduate Project and Research in Education This course is intended for Honors and Scholar’s Academy students that are planning and/or implementing theses or creative projects, but is open to all students. Course topics will include history of educational research, literature reviews, research methodology, resources, individual project ideas and the creation of a research prospectus. Students may also work in teams to complete theses or projects if their interests intersect. USL 216 Service Learning for Educators 24 This is a graded internship that allows students to integrate coursework with a hands-on service-learning experience.The central objective of this course is to examine of the effects of social justice issues on student achievement. Internships working with high needs children will be utilized to promote critical reflection to analyze community needs, the importance of civic engagement, and community issues affecting ethnic minorities and marginalized populations in contemporary American society particularly how it applies to our education system. Students dedicate a minimum of 70 hours at a pre-approved site (including Title I K-12 schools, youth programs, health services, social services, etc.) directly serving high needs youth. A weekly seminar, course readings, discussions, and reflection assignments facilitate critical thinking and a deeper understanding of cultural diversity, citizenship, how to contribute to positive social change in our community, and how to utilize these practices in the teaching profession to better serve all children. The course is also designed to provide “real-world” experiences that exercise academic skills and knowledge applicable to each student’s program of study and career exploration working with children, youth and families. Project Excellence Courses for Fall 2015 Through the program known as Project Excellence, Barrett juniors and seniors in good standing (at least 18 honors credits and 3.25 cumulative GPA) have the extraordinary opportunity to take selected classes in ASU's Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law. Pre-law students and other students interested in law should consider taking one of these classes. You should be aware that if you participate in Project Excellence, you will be taking an actual law school course; in most cases law students will form the large majority of each class. But past Project Excellence participants report that the professors in the law school are extremely free with advice and assistance for Honors students. Project Excellence Grading Policy PE students are required to take graduate law courses on the same grading basis as the matriculated law students. This policy means that PE students cannot take a course on a Pass/Not Pass basis where this option does not exist for law students. However, when grading PE students, faculty will grade PE students separately from the law students, and the law school curve. All HON 494 Project Excellence classes for the Fall 2015 semester must be taken for a letter grade. Class# Sec# CAMPUS COURSE 91532 1006 Tempe HON 494 91533 91535 1007 1009 Tempe Tempe HON 494 HON 494 91537 91538 1008 1010 Tempe Tempe HON 494 HON 494 91539 1011 Tempe HON 494 TITLE Biotechnology: Science, Law and Policy (LAW 691) Comparative Dispute Resolution (LAW 791) Election Law (LAW 691) Energy Law & Policy (LAW 691) FDA Regulation (LAW 667) Federal Indian Law I (LAW 632) DAYS BEGIN END INSTRUCTOR CAP CREDITS TTH 3:30p 4:55p Marchant 5 3 TTH TH 8:30a 5:30p 9:55a 7:25p Dauber Liburdi 4 5 3 2 MW M 1:30p 6:00p 2:55p 7:55p Rule Feigal, Shire 5 10 3 2 MW 10:00a 11:25a Miller 4 3 25 91540 1012 Tempe HON 494 91541 1013 Tempe HON 494 91542 1014 Tempe HON 494 91543 1015 Tempe HON 494 91544 91545 1019 1020 Tempe Tempe HON 494 HON 494 91548 1021 Tempe HON 494 91549 91551 91553 1022 1023 1024 Tempe Tempe Tempe HON 494 HON 494 HON 494 92262 1025 Tempe HON 494 First Amendment (LAW 791) Health Law and Policy (LAW 650) International Contracts (LAW 614) Law, Science & Technology (LAW 703) Private Property Rights (LAW 657) Public Int’l Law (LAW 615) Research Ethics and Law (LAW 791) Research Methods in Int’l Law (LAW 691) Sports Law (LAW 715) Water Law (LAW 643) Jurisprudence: Passions of Law T 3:30p 5:25p Winer 5 2 TTH 1:30p 2:55p Corbett 8 3 M 10:00a 11:55a Calleros 5 2 TTH 10:30a 11:55a Marchant 5 3 F TTH 8:30a 10:30a 11:25a 11:55a Birnbaum Fellmeth 10 3 3 3 M 4:00p 5:55p Feigal, Feigal 2 2 T T TTH 9:00a 6:00p 3:30p 9:55a 8:55p 4:55p DiFelice Jay Larson 3 10 10 1 3 3 W 1:30p 3:25p Murphy 3 2 Scroll down to view the course descriptions. Registration Instructions: Space is very limited for these classes department consent is required to enroll. Barrett juniors and seniors in good standing (at least 18 honors credits and 3.25 cumulative GPA) interested in enrolling in a particular Project Excellence course should email Sara Jarvie at Sara.Jarvie@asu.edu. Exceptions may be made for Barrett Upper Division admits who have less than 18 honors credits. In your email: Please include your name and 10-digit ASU ID number. Please list up to 3 choices of classes with your priorities in order 1-3. Example: 1. Water Law:, # 91553 2. Health Law and Policy, # 91541 3. Private Property Rights, # 91544 Once we have confirmed your eligibility to enroll in the class and given you an override, you’ll be sent a confirmation email and may register online. 26 If you later decide that you can no longer take the Project Excellence class it is important that you email Sara.Jarvie@asu.edu to notify us that the space is open. We will be running a waitlist for available seats and trying to place as many students as possible into these classes. Finally, there will be a required Project Excellence orientation session before classes start. By signing up for a class, you are also agreeing to attend the required orientation. Dates and times for the orientation session(s) are not established at this point, but you will be contacted over the break with that information. For students who have previously completed a Project Excellence course the orientation is optional, but strongly encouraged. Fall 2015 Project Excellence Course Descriptions: Biotechnology: Science, Law and Policy This course will examine the legal, regulatory, scientific, policy and ethical aspects of biotechnology, focusing on genetically engineered plants, animals, foods, drugs, vaccines, and other products. Among the issues to be covered include an overview of the scientific methods for genetically engineering plants and animals, the risks and benefits of genetically modified (GM) crops and animals, the regulation of GM foods and other products, labeling of biotechnology products, regulatory issues relating to biopharmaceuticals, liability issues, intellectual property issues, antitrust and business law issues, contamination issues, the role of the public in GM decision, state and local regulation, international regulation, international trade, bioprospecting/biopiracy, and bioterrorism. Comparative Dispute Resolution This course will explore processes in which third-parties from various countries and cultures help people resolve disputes. Through readings, discussion, simulation exercises and outside research, students will critically examine the roles of lawyers and other advocates negotiating on behalf of principals; mediators and neutral third parties facilitating the negotiation process; arbitrators, judges and clerics tasked with adjudicating disputes; and tribal councils and international tribunals involved in managing conflict. Classes will be designed to give students the theoretical framework to understand and evaluate dispute resolution processes in various contexts, as well as the skills to participate in the processes effectively. Election Law This course reviews the key federal and Arizona constitutional provisions, statutes, and court decisions governing such topics as the expansion of the franchise, presidential selection, redistricting, campaign finance reform, and direct democracy. Weekly lectures may include guest speakers who have participated in federal and state campaigns. Energy Law & Policy This course examines laws relating to the ownership, conservation, and use of natural resources, with particular emphasis on energy-related resources such as coal, petroleum, natural gas, hydroelectric power, sunlight, and wind. The course explores and analyzes laws that allocate interests in energy resources and regulate energy production and delivery strategies so as to promote economic efficiency and mitigate adverse impacts on the natural environment. 27 FDA Regulation This course will examine the regulation of drugs, medical devices, and biologics (e.g., vaccines) by the Food and Drug Administration. These categories of products are the primary products of the emerging biotechnology and genomics industry, as well as the traditional pharmaceutical industry, and therefore is critical for students who are interested in representing life science companies or medical research institutions. Federal Indian Law I American Indian Nations own 27% of the land within Arizona. This course provides a survey of the political and legal relationship of Native Nations to the United States government. The course provides a historical examination of the treaties and other instruments used to negotiate a political relationship between these separate governments and delves into a comprehensive examination of the legal relationship that developed between American Indian, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian peoples and the United States government. The emphasis of this course is on understanding the foundation of the contemporary relationship between Native Nations, the United States government, and the various state governments. Thus, particular attention is devoted to jurisdictional issues, including the framework for determining civil regulatory authority, and civil and criminal adjudicatory authority in Indian Country. The course requires a final exam, or a student may choose to write a paper in lieu of the exam. The professor must approve the topic selected. First Amendment This course on the First Amendment is based on a unique approach and materials developed by Prof. Vince Blasi at Columbia who has offered such a course with great success at several law schools for about twenty years. The main text is Blasi’s Ideas of the First Amendment ( West, Second Ed. 2012). Students wishing more information than is in this description should consult the text. The premise is to organize the course, as Blasi puts it, “around leading thinkers rather than doctrinal topics.” Thus Blasi’s materials are organized around “seven of the most eloquent and historically significant articulations of the reasons for a strong free speech principle.” These seven classic writings range from political polemics (Milton and Madison), to philosophical essays (Mill and Meiklejohn), to “judicial opinions of unusual intellectual ambition and insight” (Hand, Holmes and Brandeis).This juxtaposition of perspectives prepares students to broadly examine and critically evaluate traditional doctrinal categories of First Amendment jurisprudence. And, as Blasi suggests, this approach also does better justice to the “majesty ...[and] complexity” of the First Amendment than a more traditional course focused on “pragmatic judgments of small compass” that emerge “by connecting the dots of numerous cases, presented in fragmentary form and organized according to problem area”. In the original Preface to his text, Blasi adds: “[I]t is the (more original) thesis of this book that such [doctrinal] questions are best studied not by examining, necessarily at a breathless pace, snippets of vast numbers of Supreme Court opinions that elaborate three- part tests and ever-proliferating doctrinal subcategories, but rather by engaging some of the greatest writings on the freedom of speech that have been generated in the Anglo-American tradition, and asking how those writings - some political polemics, some judicial opinions - might help one to think about the pivotal doctrinal questions.” Still, the course includes “most of the leading Supreme Court opinions interpreting the First Amendment,” and “virtually all of the traditional doctrinal categories are covered.” Blasi has refined his approach in the 2012 second edition of the text, which naturally is very up to date. The text, however, always will be supplemented as appropriate with the very latest Supreme Court opinions in the area. Another great benefit of studying the First Amendment in this fashion is that students will be forced to closely examine “how some of the finest practitioners of the art of persuasion went about building their arguments.” The course therefore is also a superb course in legal advocacy and rhetoric. By reading and studying virtually unedited selections by great writers (“well elaborated masterpieces of advocacy”), students should improve their own writing. Students often have difficulty “getting started” on a paper choosing an interesting and manageable topic, developing an appropriate thesis, and the like. So, to assist this process, in consultation with the Instructor each student will be required to write an extended critique of one of the canonical writings (of the student’s choice) around which the course is built and apply his or her critique to a doctrinal issue or case. Students wishing to earn an additional credit by writing a more substantial 28 paper may sign up for a related 1- credit Independent Study with Prof. Winer. Interested students should address any questions to Prof. Winer via email at lhwiner@asu.edu. Health Law and Policy This course explores major aspects of U.S. health care law and policy, including national health care reform initiatives; access, costs, and quality of care; informed consent; health information privacy; and professional licensure and liability. Additional topics are also examined depending on national or regional trends leading up to and during the semester. International Contracts This course will explore the laws applicable to international contractual relations, focusing heavily on the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods. Along the way, we will touch on a few other topics, such as choice of law rules, a comparison of selected UCC sections with CISG provisions, and a comparison of the contract law of selected foreign nations with that in the United States, and --time permitting- a brief introduction to international commercial arbitration. The final grade will be based primarily on a final exam and secondarily on possible periodic quizzes. Law, Science & Technology Nearly every field in the practice of law now involves some interaction between law and science and technology -- whether it be litigation, administrative law, environmental law, constitutional law, telecommunications law, health law, corporate law, employment law, contract law, property law and many others. Lawyers who are knowledgeable and comfortable in dealing with the scientific and technological aspects underlying many legal issues are in great demand at law firms, companies, government agencies and other providers of legal services. This survey course is intended to provide the student with an introduction to the various ways in which the legal system interacts with science and technology, and the skills and knowledge necessary to address such issues. The course will examine the interactions and conflicts between law and science using a series of illustrative case studies addressing current issues such as the internet, cloning, air pollution, the Daubert standard for admission of scientific evidence, tobacco research, the Microsoft antitrust case, electric vehicles, digital copyright, genetically modified foods, nanotechnology, anti-terrorism technology, global warming and privacy. No special background or expertise in science or technology is required to benefit from this course. Students can elect to take a take-home exam or write a research paper (20-30 pp.) for the course. This course qualifies as a “core course” for the LS&I Certificate program. Private Property Rights This course will focus upon one of the most controversial topics in the law and a subject which has received considerable attention from the United States Supreme Court in recent years: the conflict between private property rights and the right of the government to acquire private property for public use or to regulate the use of private property in a manner which substantially limits its economic potential. The course will include a detailed review of the most important United States Supreme Court decisions (e.g., Penn Central, Nollan, Lucas, Dolan, Palazzolo,Tahoe and Lingle) which, in the context of so-called "regulatory takings” disputes, explore the circumstances in which government action may go "too far" and constitute a taking of private property without just compensation. The eminent domain process will also be discussed, including the United States Supreme Court's recent decision in Kelo v. City of New London. In addition, a unique section of the course will utilize the land acquisition litigation arising from the planning and construction of the Bank One Ballpark/Chase Field project (Phoenix, Arizona) as a case study. Pleadings from the appellate proceedings will supplement course materials and will focus on the purposes for which private property may be condemned. The course instructor 29 was the principal trial and appellate attorney for the Maricopa County Stadium District. The course will also examine the nature and history of title insurance and the role of title insurance in protecting private property rights. Unlike other courses which focus solely on a limited area of substantive law or, alternatively, on procedural or evidentiary considerations, this innovative course explores all aspects of "takings" law from the evolution of the substantive law through the tactics and strategies often employed at trial and in land use planning decisions. The format will be principally lecture, with lively group discussion anticipated. The course is recommended for future trial attorneys (government and private), for prospective real estate and land use lawyers, and for others with an academic interest in understanding the law and history behind the headlines. Public Int'l Law This course is an introduction to public international law, which is generally the law governing relations among states. Most fundamentally, the course will explain how international law has developed, how modern international law is made, and how it is enforced. As a survey course, we will also examine a variety of subjects regulated by international law, including among many others, how international disputes are resolved; the law of the sea; state conduct during wars; international human rights law; and the activities of major international organizations and tribunals such as the United Nations and the International Court of Justice. Research Ethics and Law This seminar is designed to give students a broad understanding of research ethics, regulation and law. In this course we explore a selection of topics in research involving human subjects. We begin with a brief introduction to the basics of normative ethics, including theories of justice and human rights and the foundations of the law covering research ethics, and then explore specific ethical and legal issues associated with biomedical research. Grading: Paper: Forty (40) percent of the student’s grade will be based on a research paper on a topic of the student’s choice with instructor approval. Students may elect to write their paper on or related to the topic of their in-class presentation (see below). Students should write a paper of 8-10 double-spaced pages. Final papers are due on December 3. All students should notify the instructors of their topic before October 5. Class Presentation: Each student will select a case study to present in class. This presentation will count for twenty (20) percent of the grade. The presentation will include: (i) identifying at least one week prior to the presentation one or more readings (<20 pages) on the case for the other students; (ii) a presentation on the case study; and (iii) identifying 3-5 key questions the case presents and leading a class discussion on those questions. Midterm: A multiple-choice/short answer take-home midterm will count for thirty (30) percent of the grade. The midterm will be provided on October 12, and will be due by October 19. Class Participation and Attendance: The remaining ten (10) percent of the grade will be based on class participation, other interactive discussions via Blackboard, and attendance. Research Methods in Int'l Law This course will teach students how to research international and foreign law. As a course project, students will prepare a bibliography on an international law topic of their choice. 30 Sports Law Sports Law is a course that deals with the legal issues relating to the structure and operation of the sports industry. The course reviews various principles applicable to sports including antitrust, labor, intellectual property, league policies, NCAA regulations, and general business operations. Various other legal issues relating to professional and amateur sports will be covered. Water Law This course will address the basic legal principles involved in acquiring, maintaining, transferring, and adjudicating property rights in water. Some attention will be paid to riparian (eastern) doctrines, but main emphasis will be placed on the prior appropriation systems common in the west. The course will also cover groundwater law (with a focus on Arizona and doctrines in other western states), developments of new water supplies, instream flow protection, interstate disputes and allocation (with focus on the Colorado River), federal and Indian water rights, and federal- state relations in water management. Jurisprudence: Passions of Law A full understanding of law requires an exploration of the passions (emotions) that can generate or be engaged by the law. Consider criminal punishment. Many like to say that they support punishment because of their sense of justice--the desire that justice be done. Nietzsche, however, argues that this is simply a self- serving covering rationale for what is really going on: using the law to institutionalize such base passions as cruelty, envy, malice, and spite--the cluster of passions that Nietzsche calls ressentiment. Small wonder, then, that he wrote: "Mistrust all those in whom the urge to punish is strong." In addition to the Nietzschean worry raised above, we will explore a variety of passions with possible legal relevance. Guilt and shame are obvious examples. Some other examples: Should any legal doctrine be driven by disgust? Does love (agape/caritas) have any legitimate role in law? How should law respond to various forms of sexual desire? Should the law seek to satisfy the vindictive passions of those who believe that they have been wronged? Should strong passions--e.g., sexual jealousy--excuse or diminish responsibility for conduct? Should forgiveness (overcoming the emotion of resentment) or mercy (leniency grounded in compassion) have a place in the law? Is a crime motivated by hatred worse than a crime not so motivated? What is the fear of death and what is its role in the death penalty? Students interested in the seminar will need to first have permission from Professor Murphy the course instructor before a course override is issued. He can be reached at (965-5856) or email (jeffrie.murphy@asu.edu) and will set up a time to meet. Approved overrides will then be issued by Sara.Jarvie@asu.edu HONORS CONTRACTS AVAILABLE – FALL 2015 UPDATED 2/18/2015 31 This is NOT a comprehensive list, but includes courses and class sections which departments have specifically asked us to advertise as available to take for honors credit via honors contract. Individual instructors (of courses on and off this list) always have the right to decide whether or not to enter into an honors contract with a student. Please keep in mind that it is still your responsibility to verify that the instructor meets the eligibility requirements to facilitate an honors contract. PURPLE classes: expected to offer honors contracts in any semester in which the course is offered (not every course will be offered every semester). GREEN classes: classes offering honors contracts only for Fall 2014 ART 351/451 with Hood ART 364, 394 with Chung ART 403, 494 with Marc ART 410, 494 with Klett ART 431, 494 with Neubauer ART 438 with Harp ART 456, 494, 498 with Risseeuw ASB 202 section 1001 ASB 322 ASB 330 with Carr ASB 337 ASB 338 with Spielmann ASM 300 with Gilby ATE 451, 452 BCH, all courses BCS, all courses taught by regular faculty BIO 100 section 1001 BIO 201/202 with Washo-Krupps BIO 311 Laubichler BIO 312 with McGregor BIO 318 with Hurlbut, Maienschein, Laubichler BIO 322 BIO 324 with Minteer BIO 325 with Neuer BIO 351 with Kusumi BIO 352 with Rawls BIO 361 BIO 370 ADE 322 AEE 415 with Mignolet AEE 463 with Dahm AEE 465 section 1001 AEP 501 AFR 200 with Cox AFR 210 with Cox AFR 375 with Cox AFR 394 section 1001 APA 200 with Rondilla APA 340 section 1001 ARE 486, 494 with Young ARS 250 with Fahlman ARS 302 ARS 362 ARS 430 ARS 473 with Brown ARS 469 ARS 485 section 1001 ARS 498 ART 201, 202, 494 with Anand ART 205 with Jenkins ART 223, 494 with Pessler ART 227, 327 with Messinger ART 253, 354 with Maxwell ART 274, 374/474, 394/494 with Eckert ART 294, 443 with Ellsworth ART 311, 411 with Pittsley 32 CST 359 CST 488 CST 489 CST 481 CST 482 EEE, all courses with regular faculty EGR 399 Robotics 1 and 2 EGR 445 EGR 494 Environmental Engineering ENG 221, 222, 241, 312, 314, 356, 369, 414, 421, 434, 445, 457, 461 BIO 386 with Franz BIO 415 with Pratt BIO 420 with Blattman BIO 421 with Wu BIO 427 with Pyne BIO 435 with Rutowski BIO 474 with Holycross BIO 498 with Maienschein CDE 232 with Ladd CDE 430 with Jimenez CEE, all courses CHM, all courses CIS, all courses CON 101 with Knutson CON 424 with Ernzen CPI 101 section 1001 CRJ 100 with Johnston, Fradella, or Hepburn CRJ 201 with Johnston or Chamberlain CRJ 225 with Reisig CRJ 240 with Wright CRJ 302 with Reisig, Hepburn, or Talbot CRJ 303 with Wang or Sweeten CRJ 305 with Decarolis CRJ 306 Decarolis or Brooks CRJ 308 with Ready or Reisig CRJ 404 with Brooks CRJ 461 with DeCarolis CRJ 462 with Katz CRJ 494 with Wallace or Johnston CSE, all courses CST 230 CST 335 CST 494 (soon to be CST460) Intro Appl Comp Graphics CST 386 FAS 264 with Bellis FAS 332 with Christopher or Brougham FMP 250 with Scott FSE 100, all sections GCU 121 GCU 325 GCU 326 GCU 421 GCU 426 GPH, all courses taught by regular faculty GIT, all courses taught by regular faculty GRK 101 with Tueller HPS 314 with Armendt HPS 340 with Laubichler HPS 498 with Maienschein HST 305 HST 331 HST 375 HST 375 HST 376 HST 377 HST 378 33 MIC 379 with Haydel MIC 420 with Blattman MIC 421 with Lake MIC 441 Shi MIC 445 with Muralinath MIC 446 with Muralinath MIC 461 with Garcia-Pichel MIC 485 with Hogue MKT 300 with Eaton MKT 311 with Barrie MKT 352 with Park or Ketcham MKT 365 with Gray MKT 370 with Ruggiero MKT 390 with Spiers MKT 395 with Gray MKT 397 with Kumar MKT 402 with Samper MKT 410 with Dietrich MKT 425 with Kumar MKT 430 with Bagnato MKT 431 with McIntosh MKT 435 with Denning MKT 440 with Giles MKT 452 with Spiers MKT 455 with Montoya MKT 460 with Iaquinta MSE, all courses taught by regular faculty MUP 111 with Buck or Schuring MUP 127 with Buck or Schuring MUP 311 with Buck or Schuring MUP 327 with Buck or Schuring MUP 451 with Buck MUP 481 with Schuring MUP 527 with Buck or Schuring HST 379 HST 380 HST 443 HST 445 HST 446 HST 447 HST 447 HST 366 with Warnicke HST 387 with Thornton IEE 305 with Ye JUS 207 sections 2001 or 3001 JUS 222 with Henderson JUS 360 with Cavender JUS 374 sections 2001 or 3001 JUS 385 with Henderson JUS 394 with Adelman JUS 420 section 1001 JUS 427 with Henderson JUS 435 sections 2001 or 3001 JUS 494 with Lauderdale KIN, all courses except for KIN 100 LAT 101 with Poudrie or Arena LAT 201 with Arenas LAT 421 with Haberman MAE 318 section 1001 MAE 384 sections 1001 or 1002 MAE 455 with Krause MBB 343 MBB 445 with Muralinath MBB 446 with Muralinath MEE with Chen or Miner MIC 205 with Kapoor MIC 206 all sections MIC 360 with Misra 34 TCL 303 with Martinez TCL 314 with McConnell TCL 321 with Martinez TCL 332 with Escobar TCL 340 with Magana TCL 342 with McConnell TCL 363 with Sanchez TCL 394 with Magana or Casanova or O’Connor TCL 444 with Cruz-Torres TCL 447 with Cruz-Torres TCL 485 with Danielson THE 426 THP 260 with Shineman THP 307 with Partlan URB 220 section 1001 at DTPHX URB 300 section 1001 at DTPHX URB 305 section 1001 at DTPHX USL 210 or 410 WST 100 WST 300 WST 313 WST 360 WST 365 WST 377 WST 378 WST 380 WST 394 WST 447 WST 460 WST 470 WST 477 WST 484 WST 498 MUP 551 with Buck MUP 581 with Schuring MUP 727 with Buck or Schuring PHI 314 with Armendt PHI 420 with Reynolds PHY 111, 112, 121, 131 PLB 302 with Pigg PLB 306 with Pigg PLC, all courses taught by regular faculty POL 453 POL 454 POR, all courses taught by regular faculty POS, all courses PUP 190 with Pijawka REL 332 REL 430 REL 498 RUS, all courses taught by regular faculty SCM, all courses except for 300 and 394 SGS, all courses SHS 202 and above, except 498 and 485 SLV, all courses taught by regular faculty SOC 264 with Bellis SOC 334 with Watson SOS 111 with Pijawka SOS 320 section 1001 SOS 322 with Manuel-Navarrete SOS 324 with Fraser SOS 325 with Abbott SPA, all UD courses taught by regular faculty (except: 313, 314, 412 and 413) TCL 101 with Velez-Ibanez TCL 201 with Escobar TCL 220 with Danielson 35