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PHED 6200 - Elementary and Secondary PHED A study and practicum in the objectives, needs, methods, and materials of elementary and secondary school children involved in a modern day physical education program.
Hours: 3
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PHED 6500 - Exercise Physiology A study of the function of the human body as it relates to physical performance. Lecture and laboratory experiences.
Hours: 3
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PHED 6900 - Health Education A study of the current issues in the dynamics of health including but not limited to mental health, nutritional health, exercise and weight control, drugs and health, human sexuality, etc.
Hours: 3
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PHED 7150 - History of Physical Education A study of the historical background of physical education, including the Greek, Roman, Renaissance, and Reformation periods. While emphasizing current principles of European and American physical education, special emphasis will be given to the importance of physical education in all aspects of American life.
Hours: 3
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PHED 7800 - Independent Study in PHED The study of a topic or problems in Physical Education significantly related to the student’s interest. (By approval of student’s advisor and department head.)
Hours: 3
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PHED 6600 - Kinesiology and Therapeutics A study of the basic mechanics of human motion including action of the joints and muscles, and the application of kinesiology to physical education and sport activities.
Hours: 3
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PHED 6050 - Materials & Methods in PHED The study of the administrative processes and methodology needed to develop a thorough understanding of desirable standards and program implementation in physical education.
Hours: 3
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PHED 6002 - Measurement & Evaluation in PE A course designed to study measurement theory and statistics used in the evaluation of health and human performance, with special focus on the analysis and interpretation of data in various environments.
Hours: 3
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PHED 7200 - Movement Education A study of how the body moves and how one learns to move. Special emphasis is placed on movement exploration and discovery which provides a basic understanding of the evolution, nature, and purpose of movement. Various teaching methods are examined in order to enhance one’s ability to provide positive movement experiences for children.
Hours: 3
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PHED 7050 - Prevent/Treatment Ath Injuries This course deals specifically with the immediate care and long term prevention, treatment and rehabilitation of injuries occurring from sports and physical activities.
Hours: 3
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PHED 7250 - Public Relations HPER/Wellness An advanced study of the importance of public relations and its relationship in successful program development in health, physical education, wellness and athletics.
Hours: 3
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PHED 6001 - Research Methods in PHED A course designed to survey the basic types of research methods often found in health, physical education, sport science and recreation. Various research problems as they relate to these fields are discussed for the purpose of identifying the broad and diverse nature of the research.
Hours: 3
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PHED 7040 - Scientific Aspects of Exercise A consideration of the effect of exercise on the functions of the organic systems of the body with particular emphasis on the physiological changes occurring from sports and physical activities.
Hours: 3
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PHED 6000 - Sex and AIDS Education A study of the attitudes and standards of the physical, emotional, and behavioral aspects of sex and AIDS education. This is a teacher education course in which the learner becomes familiar with the how, when, where, and why of presenting SEX and AIDS education to varying age groups.
Hours: 3
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PHED 7230 - Theories of Coaching A focus on why athletes and spectators behave the way they do in various athletic and physical activity settings and how said scope encompasses the major psychological dimensions underlying such behavior.
Hours: 3
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PHED 6950 - Wellness This is a lifestyle course solving the many facets of wellness and its relationship to improving both the quantity and quality of life. Topics include, but are not limited to self-responsibility, nutritional awareness, environmental sensitivity, stress management, and personal fitness.
Hours: 3
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PHYS 7013 - Cur Study Phys/Phy Sci/Astr These courses are designed to acquaint the student with some of the problems encountered in teaching these subjects at the secondary level. A variety of instructional techniques will be used to introduce students to current curriculums in Physics, Physical Science and Astronomy.
Hours: 3
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PHYS 7023 - Cur Study Phys/Phy Sci/Astr These courses are designed to acquaint the student with some of the problems encountered in teaching these subjects at the secondary level. A variety of instructional techniques will be used to introduce students to current curriculums in Physics, Physical Science and Astronomy.
Hours: 3
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PHYS 6623 - Teaching/Modern Science (P-12) Five hours of ‘hands-on’ class activity per week designed to familiarize the student with modern Junior High and Secondary Physical Science Programs and how to teach them.
Hours: 3
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PHYS 6613 - Teaching/Modern Science (P-8) Five hours of ‘hands-on’ class activity per week designed to familiarize the student with modern Elementary School Science Programs and how to teach them.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7810 - Administrative Law Study of the basic legal framework of administrative organization and the rules governing administrative powers and their exercise. The legal procedures for the enforcement of bureaucratic responsibility in a democratic state will be examined.
Prerequisite/Corequisite: POLS 7200 with C or greater
Hours: 3
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POLS 7290 - Ethics for Public Service A study of ethical and unethical behavior in the public service. Topics will include legal standards, mores affecting ethical behavior, corruption, whistle-blowing, privacy, equity, and the countervailing demands for government activism and individualism.
Prerequisite/Corequisite: POLS 7200 with C or greater
Hours: 3
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POLS 7210 - European Security Issues The purpose of this course will examine the environment and emerging security structures within Europe. It will examine the changing nature of the European security environment since creation of NATO, the fall of the Soviet Union, and the development of a separate EU structure. This course will look at the institutional structures along with the internal and external influences which drive European security issues.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7014 - Foreign Policy Process Foreign policy is a historically based, dynamic process with many individual actors, global causes and overlapping concepts. We will study the Presidency and Congress, the State Department and Intelligence Community, the Economic Bureaucracy. Public Opinion and the Media, and issues such as the theoretical bases of policy-making and the tension between national security and democracy. This course explores how each of these operates and contributes to the making of U.S. foreign policy.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7105 - Global Governance Although the absence of any overarching political authority characterizes world politics as anarchical, states and other international actors have coordinated their actions over the centuries. This course focuses on such cooperative efforts. It assesses different theories of international relations and discusses why states succeed or fail at creating institutions and rules for global governance and what effects those institutions and rules have. The course examines how international organizations attempt to accomplish cooperation. The major emphasis will be on the experience of the United Nations system. Yet it also takes a closer look at regional and specialized agencies and analyzes a broad range of issue-areas with which these organizations try to deal: collective security, economics, environment, social welfare, and human rights.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7250 - Government and Business A study of the impact that the public and private sectors exert on one another. The seminar will focus on governmental regulation of business, government’s role as referee of commercial disputes, business’s influence on public policy making, and the opportunity for the rank and file of the public and labor to influence decision making by elected officials and management.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7350 - Grand Strategy and Strategic Thought This course examines strategic thinking in the international system from both a security and policy standpoint. Students will be exposed to such classic strategic thinkers as Clausewitz, Sun-Tzu, Mahan, and Jomini along with modern strategists as Colin Gray and Edward Luttwak. This course will also focus on how states create and use statements of grand strategy and the role of strategic culture for influencing how states act in the system
Hours: 3
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POLS 7950 - Independent Study The student will conduct original research in an area of inquiry in political science under the supervision of a faculty member. An analytical, comprehensive research paper is required.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7940 - Independent Study in Public Administration Research conducted by a student under the supervision of a faculty member, with regular conferences between instructor and student. A written research report is required; a copy must be filed in the office of the MPA Program Coordinator before a final grade is recorded.
Hours: 1 - 9
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POLS 7660 - Information & Operations Management This course presents two approaches to operating a public or nonprofit agency productively. One approach involves the use of information technology with such software as Microsoft Excel and Microsoft Access. The other approach involves the application of operations management for optimizing the efficiency of the agency. Operations- management methods include linear programming, computer simulation, job design, facility location, forecasting, aggregate planning, inventory control, scheduling and quality assurance.
Prerequisite/Corequisite: POLS 7600 with C or greater
Hours: 3
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POLS 7640 - Information Technology for Public Management Study of the use of computer technology in public management. Topics include operating systems, word processing, spreadsheet applications, statistical applications and the role of computers in such public-management functions as capital and human resource management. The impact of computers on management, labor and clients will be examined.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7015 - International Affairs Capstone This course is designed a capstone experience for the international affairs masters degree. The course will require the student to adopt an in-depth focus regarding their particular regional or policy focus in the field of International Affairs.
Hours: 6
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POLS 7244 - International Political Violence The purpose of this course is to introduce students to the impacts of terrorism and political violence on the world system. The pressures of globalization have caused significant changes in the abilities of terrorists to take on action of global importance.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7201 - International Security Issues This course is designed as an examination of both traditional and non-traditional security concerns. The course will highlight the importance of context and the development of decision-making skills by those that craft foreign policy and military missions. All elements of security will be examined: military security, environmental security and resource security. The graduate portion of this course will expand discussions beyond traditional national borders to examine regional and global trends in security studies. The graduate student will be expected to synthesize the activities of their particular state within both regional and international security structures.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6485A - Internship A part-time professional experience in a government agency, law office, or similar political environment. A research paper on a topic related to the theme of the internship is required.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6485B - Internship A part-time professional experience in a government agency, law office, or similar political environment. A research paper on a topic related to the theme of the internship is required.
Hours: 6
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POLS 6485C - Internship A full-time professional experience in a government agency, law office, or similar political environment, possibly for a period exceeding one academic term. A research paper or thesis on a topic related to the theme of the internship is required.
Hours: 9
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POLS 7980 - Internship in Public Service The advanced MPA student once obtaining a placement in a public service organization, will gain on-site experience an utilize skills obtained in the academic setting. The placement will involve a minimum of 10 weeks of full-time activity under supervision by a qualified manager. Co-requisite: POLS 7890
Hours: 3
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POLS 6150 - Law and Society A general overview of how laws can affect society and how people’s attitudes can affect the law. It will deal with several landmark cases and laws including Brown v. Board of Education (desegregation), Roe v. Wade (abortion), prohibition laws, drug abuse laws, and laws against Homosexuality.
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POLS 7200 - Leadership & Organizational Theory This course examines how people behave in organizations and how organizations function. We assume that the behavior of people in an organization ultimately determines the success or failure of that organization.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7460 - Local Government Administration An examination of the characteristic managerial problems of the several functions of local government such as police, fire, health, social services, transportation, traffic, public works, parks, recreation, and zoning.
Prerequisite/Corequisite: POLS 7200 with C or greater
Hours: 3
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POLS 6380 - Marketing for Nonprofit Organizations This course examines marketing concepts, methods, and activities as they are applied in public and nonprofit organizations.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7230 - National Security Policy of the United States The aim of this course is to provide students with an understanding of the U.S. national security process and how it develops, executes and implements policy for the issues that face America in the 21st century. We will spend significant amounts of time discussing the major actors in the National Security Establishment (the Presidency, National Security Council, Congress, the Military, the Intelligence community, the judiciary, public and media) and how they participate in a process your textbook author Sam Sarkesian calls ?somewhat of a mystery or `muddling through? (181). Structure and theory are applied to organize, clarify and understand this process, and historical and modern-day examples are used in extensive class discussion to connect process to policy. A semester-long research project affords the student an opportunity to apply this process to a topic of specific interest in U.S. national security policy.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6302 - Pol Socialization/Publ Opinion A survey of political socialization, the process through which a citizen acquires knowledge, opinions, and behavior about politics and government. The course explains how public opinion develops and evaluates whether public opinion influences public policy.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6310 - Political Leadership This course will focus on a variety of historical and contemporary figures to determine how their leadership styles and ideas on leadership have influenced and motivated both individuals and groups of people in the political sense. Assignments and discussion will center on what strategies, motivations, tactics, and actions constitute an effective political leader.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6122 - Political Parties and Election A study of U.S. political parties, including their development, functions, and significance as democratic institutions and policy making instruments. The election process and voter behavior are also examined.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7730 - Political Science Seminar A seminar on a contemporary topic or a topic of specialized interest. The topic varies in light of current political events and literature.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7220 - Politics and Bureaucracy A survey of the political relationships that permeate bureaucratic organizations, especially government bureaucracies. The course will focus on relationships among levels and branches of government, government agencies, political parties, news media, and interest groups. Uses of power by government agencies, the role of expertise in enhancing administrative influence, the implications of governmental organization and reorganization, and ethical and unethical behavior in public service will be examined.
Prerequisite/Corequisite: POLS 7200 with C or greater
Hours: 3
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POLS 6330 - Pub.Policy Planning & Analysis An analysis of major policy decisions and the impact of these decisions on the American political system.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6104 - Public Administration An analysis of the theory, basic principles, and practices o public administration in the U.S. through a study of organization, management, budgeting, personnel, administrative leadership, and characteristics of modern bureaucracies.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7300 - Public Budgeting An examination of the development and structure of the public financial sectors, the principles and roles of operating and capital budgets in public organizations, and the relationships between funding mechanisms and public policy. The course includes an introduction to public economics and financial reporting.
Prerequisite/Corequisite: POLS 7200 with C or greater
Hours: 3
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POLS 7890 - Public Management Completion of other core courses and courses in concentration. A capstone course which integrates the study of managerial techniques to develop professionals who are capable of managing public service organizations effectively and ethically. Discussion and practice in strategic planning and financial reporting are included.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7380 - Public Personnel Administration Study of systems of employee recruitment, appointment, career development, reductions in force, and termination of employment in the public service. Employee-management relations, including public-employee unions, will be examined. Fair employment practices will be discussed.
Prerequisite/Corequisite: POLS 7200 with C or greater
Hours: 3
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POLS 7320 - Public Policy Analysis A study of models explaining the development of public policies and of empirical methods of analyzing and evaluating public policy. The course includes discussions of principles of strategic planning and public economics, designs for conducting policy research, and ethics as a criterion of sound public policy.
Prerequisite/Corequisite: POLS 7600 with C or greater
Hours: 3
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POLS 7580 - Raising Funds & Attracting Grants A survey of methods and strategies of implementing a fund-raising program and applying successfully for grants. Students are encouraged to complete POLS 6380 before or while taking POLS 7580.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7020 - Rdngs & Rsrch Am Pol Thought This is a seminar in which students study influential monographs in the subfield of American political thought and conduct related research.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7050 - Rdngs & Rsrch Comparative Govt This is a seminar in which students study influential monographs in the subfield of comparative government and conduct related research.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7080 - Rdngs & Rsrch East Eurpn Stud This is a seminar in which students study influential monographs in the subfield of Eastern European politics and conduct related research.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7000 - Rdngs & Rsrch in Am Pol System This is a seminar in which students study influential monographs in the subfield of American government and conduct related research.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7030 - Rdngs & Rsrch in Const Studies This is a seminar in which students study influential treatises and cases concerning constitutional development and constitutional law and conduct related legal research.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7070 - Rdngs & Rsrch in Pol Thought This is a seminar in which students study influential monographs and original sources in the subfield of political philosophy and conduct related research.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7060 - Rdngs & Rsrch Int’l Relations This is a seminar in which students study influential monographs and original sources in the subfield of international relations and conduct related research.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7040 - Rdngs & Rsrch Latin Am Studies This is a seminar in which students study influential monographs in the subfield of Latin American politics and conduct related research.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7010 - Rdngs & Rsrch State/Local Govt This is a seminar in which students study influential monographs in the subfield of state and local government and conduct related research.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7800 - Readings Civil Lib&Jud Process This course is designed to further a student’s knowledge of constitutional law and judicial processes. It assumes a basic understanding of these areas. Most work is conducted on an independent basis with guidance from the instructor.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6660 - Religion and Politics The course is designed to analyze the ways religion and politics influence one another. The course presents a history of religion in America, outlines the major religious traditions, and investigates how religious beliefs motivate individual political behavior.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7013 - Research Methods for International Affairs The purpose of this course is to introduce the student to the methods used by scholars of international affairs to study political events. This course will teach the student to properly frame a research question and create an effective research design to carry out original research.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6601 - Research Methods in Social Sci A basic introduction into the area of research methods. The main areas of social research will be examined. Field survey evaluation, experimentation and content, and pragmatic and theoretical considerations will also be examined. A research project will be required of all students.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7420 - Seminar in Intergovernmental Administration Seminar examining the laws, regulations, processes, and results that are involved in administering programs jointly involving the various levels of government in the United States.
Prerequisite/Corequisite: POLS 7200 with C or greater
Hours: 3
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POLS 6590 - Special Topics in Pol. Science The topic of this course will vary depending on timeliness and on instructor and student interest.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7900 - Special Topics in Public Administration Determined by course content. A seminar on topics which will vary according to instructor and student interest. With a change in topic, this course may be repeated for credit.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7241 - Special Topics in Regional Political Systems The course is a survey of the political systems of a particular region of the world (Latin America, Eastern Europe, Western Europe, Central, Asia, East Asia, Middle East, etc.). The course content is variable. The course will consider the unique political issues affecting a region of the world, but also explain how and why countries within that region differ from each other in significant ways. Some sections of the course will compare and contrast a region’s political systems in general, whereas others may be more specialized topically. Theoretical foci include political economy, institutions, policymaking, development, foreign policy, and political culture.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7240 - Special Topics in Regional Security Issues The course focuses on security issues of a particular region of the world (Latin America, Eastern Europe, Western Europe, Central, Asia, East Asia, Middle East, etc.). The course content is variable. The course is designed to investigate sources and causes of security issues of a particular region of the world, the factors that influence them, and what policy responses can be proposed to address them. The course addresses the theoretical perspectives concerning security issues of a region of the world. The course focuses on political violence, civil war, insurgency, terrorism, drug trafficking, nuclear proliferation, or related security issues.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6106 - State and Local Government Study of the laws and traditions that determine the structures and operations of state and local governments in the U.S.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7600 - Statistics for Public Management Study of quantitative methods oriented toward decision- making in the public sector. Probability and statistical inference will be introduced. Methods for determining associations between interval-, ordinal-, and nominal- level variables will be presented, including chi-square, gamma, lambda, and linear regression. Research methods and forecasting will be discussed.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6602 - Statistics for Social Sciences A brief review of the basis for inferential and descriptive statistics; statistical inference and the assumption of causality through specific techniques and procedures including correlation, regression, etc. Emphasis will be placed on understanding the concepts behind the techniques as well as the mechanical skills involved.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6610 - Stud in East Eurpn Govts This is a seminar about the governmental systems and philosophical perspectives in the nations of Eastern Europe.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6600 - Stud in Internat’l Relations This is a seminar about diplomatic and other processes in which sovereign governments interrelate to defend and promote their national interests.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6620 - Stud in Russian Frgn Policy This is a seminar about the development of the foreign policy of Russia from the czarist monarchical period, through the era of Soviet communism, to the post- Soviet period.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6550 - Studies American Const System This is a seminar about the institutions established by the U.S. Constitution, the interrelationships among those institutions, and the rules and processes under which they operate.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6560 - Studies in Am Political Inst This is a seminar about the processes by which U.S. governmental institutions–including executive departments, regulatory agencies, legislative agencies, and the court system–operate. Roles and behaviors of those who manage and staff these institutions will also be examined.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6570 - Studies in Amer Pol Thought This is a seminar about the political philosophies and ideologies that have predominated in American society from the colonial period to the modern period. The European underpinnings of these ideologies will be examined, with focus on the development of those foundations into a unique American political thought.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6630 - Studies in Comparative Gov’t This is a seminar about the analytical approaches by which the governmental systems of nations can be compared in order to find common denominators and to distinguish their governmental formats.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6112 - The Judicial Sys/Judicial Proc A systematic study of the judicial system and its role in the administration of justice.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6113 - The Legislative Process This course examines the formulation and implementation of legislation in the United States Congress and/or American state legislatures. The aim is to gain an insight into the legislative process and how the structure and dynamics of political institutions affect it.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6111 - The Presidency This course provides students with both a historical and analytical perspective of the American presidency. The president’s roles as chief executive, ceremonial head of the U.S. government, chief diplomat, titular head of his party, and others are examined. The president’s relationship and interaction with the legislature are examined. The president’s relationship and interaction with the legislative and judicial branches, other governmental institutions, interest groups, and the electorate will be studied.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6110 - The United States Congress This course covers the U.S. Congress as an institution and explores its place in the political process. The goal is to provide the student with both a historical perspective asking. ‘What was Congress intended to be?’ and ‘How has it evolved?’, as well as a contemporary view asking, ‘What is Congress today?’
Hours: 3
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POLS 7100 - Theories of Comparative Politics This course is designed to introduce students to the main concepts, topics, and theoretical perspectives in comparative politics-one of the major sub-disciplines of political science. It provides the basis for subsequent coursework and research in comparative politics. The course also reviews major topics within comparative politics, such as elections and political parties, regime types, democratization, and political participation.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7012 - Theory of International Political Economy This is one of the core seminars in the M.A. in International Affairs program. The course focuses on the theories, analytical approaches, historical evolution, and issues of international political economy (IPE). Economic theories of international trade and finance tell us that there are numerous benefits to be had from international economic exchange. Such exchange, however, creates ‘winners and losers’ internationally and domestically. Those actors that are hurt seek redress through political channels. Thus, we also need to use political theory to understand and explain the patterns of global economic activity that we observe.
Hours: 3
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POLS 7011 - Theory of International Relations This seminar will provide an introduction to the theories of international relations. This course will serve as one of your foundational courses on which the rest of the program will be built. It will introduce students to the major theoretical areas including an overview of the role of theory, realism, liberalism, constructivism, the democratic peace, deterrence, cooperation, and domestic sources of international relations.
Hours: 3
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POLS 6160 - Women and Politics This course examines the role of women in politics, focusing on how and to what extent women participate in politics, barriers to women’s involvement in politics, and how the political system treats women’s issues. Specific topics include the history of the women’s suffrage movement, feminism, the impact of gender on elections and the dynamics of legislatures, and public-policy issues relevant to women.
Hours: 3
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PSYC 6530 - Abnormal Psychology Introduction to the study of the mental disorders as presented in the current version of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. Current and historical approaches to conceptualization and treatment will be included.
Hours: 3
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PSYC 6200 - Advanced Developmental An in-depth study of the physical, social, behavioral, self concept, language, cultural, and cognitive aspects of human development across the life span. Research, methodology, and applications will be emphasized.
Hours: 3
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PSYC 7560 - Counseling Children This course will provide the student with an introduction to the field of counseling children, emphasizing the intervention of play therapy.
Hours: 3
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PSYC 6840 - Counseling/Clinical Theories An introduction to contemporary counseling and clinical treatment models and theoretical approached. Students will also explore current interventions in context. Current issues, developments, and reactions will be explored in relation to research and application. Pre-requisite: PSYC 6530 or PSYC 3530
Prerequisite/Corequisite: PSYC 6530 with C or greater or PSYC 3530 with C or greater
Hours: 3
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PSYC 6650 - Group Dynamics The study of the psychology of small group behavior. The topics covered include: situational, physical, and personality factors as they relate to group formation, interaction, and performance.
Hours: 3
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PSYC 6060 - Health Psychology A survey of the role of psychological factors in the promotion and maintenance of health, the prevention and treatment of illness and dysfunction, and in the operation of the health care system.
Hours: 2
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PSYC 6090 - History and Systems An integrative course emphasizing the origins and background of the science of behavior. Important contributors and their schools of thought will be studied and related to the present systematic developments.
Hours: 3
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PSYC 6970 - Honors Thesis Minimum 3.0 GPA in psychology. The student develops, collects data/information, assimilates information, and then writes the senior thesis presenting the results.
Hours: 3
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PSYC 6950 - Independent Study/Psychology Applied or practical experiences in the area of the student’s interest under the supervision and approval of the Department of Psychology.
Hours: 3
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