Davis Honors Challenge >> DHC Students >> Courses and Honors Challenge Sections >> 2000-2001


Spring 2001

Art History 1C Baroque to Modern Art (4)
Dianne Macleod
Lecture: TR 10:30-1:50 am-Everson 176
Honors Challenge section: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-01 (1 unit) T 4:10-5:00 pm-Art 210
AHI 1C-(4 units)Lecture--3 hours; lecture/discussion--1 hour. Survey of developments in western art and visual culture from 1600?present. Major artists and movements, theories of visuality, focused study on changing interpretations of class, gender, sexuality, and ethnicity from the Baroque period through modernism, to the present. May be repeated for credit. GE credit: ArtHum, Div.

Asian American Studies 1 Historical Experience of Asian Americans (4)
Kent Ono
Lecture: TR 9:00-10:20 am -Wellman 2
Honors Challenge section: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-02 (1 unit) T 11:00-11:50 am -3104 Hart Hall
ASA 1-(4 units) Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Introduction to Asian American Studies through an overview of the history of Asians in America from the1840s to the present within the context of the development of the United States. GE credit: SocSci, Div, Wrt.

Biological Sciences 1A Introductory Biology (5)
Karen Gerhart
Lecture: MTWR 3:10-4:00 pm-1100 SocSci/Hum
Discussion: Choose from sections B01-B16 ONLY from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-03(1 unit) M 1:10-200 pm-119 Wellman
BIS 1A-(5 units)-Lecture--4 hours; discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite: Chemistry 2B (may be taken concurrently). Introduction to biological molecules, bioenergetics, cell structure and function, elements of molecular biology and genetics, and viruses. Interdisciplinary course for majors in the biological sciences.

Biological Sciences 1C Introductory Biology (5)
Deborah Cannington
Lecture: MTWR 9:00-9:50 am-100 Hunt
Discussion: Choose from sections A01-A08 ONLY from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-04(1 unit)M 3:10-4:00 pm-Robbins 283
BIS 1C-(5 units)Lecture--4 hours; laboratory--3 hours. Survey of diversity within the plant, protista, and fungi kingdoms, emphasizing flowering plant structure, function, evolution, and ecology. Ecological principles, includingpopulation dynamics, life history patterns, community interactions and composition, ecosystems, and world biomes. GE credit: SciEng, Wrt.

Communication 1 Introduction to Public Speaking (4)
Alisa Shubb
Lecture: M 4:10-5:00 pm-1322 Storer
Discussion: Choose any section EXCEPT A07 from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-11 (1 unit) M 5:10-6:00 pm-1344 Storer
CMN 1-(4 units) Lecture--1 hour; discussion--3 hours. Practice in the preparation and delivery of speeches based on contemporary principles and strategies of informing and persuading audiences. GE credit: Wrt cannot be used to satisfy a college or university composition requirement and GE writing experience simultaneously).

English 3 Introduction to Literature (4)
Marlene Clark
Lecture: TR 10:00-11:50 am-70 SocSci/Hum
This course is a combined Lecture/DHC Discussion Section
ENL 3-(4 units) Lecture--2 hours; discussion--2 hours. Prerequisite: completion of Subject A requirement. Introductory study of several genres of English literature, emphasizing both analysis of particular works and the range of forms and styles in English prose and poetry. Frequent writing assignments will be made. GE credit: ArtHum, Wrt (cannot be used to satisfy a college or university composition requirement and GE writing experience simultaneously).

Geology 36 The Solar System (4)

Dave Osleger
Lecture: MWF 1:10-2:00 pm-11:50 am-66 Roessler
Discussion section: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-05 (1 unit) R 11:00-11:50 am-195 Physics/Gel
GEL 1-(4 units)Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Nature of the sun, moon, and planets as determined by recent manned and unmanned exploration ofthe solar system. Comparison of terrestrial, lunar, and planetarygeological processes. Search for life on other planets. Origin and evolution of the solar system. (Former course 113-113G.) GE credit: SciEng, Wrt.

History 9A History of East Asian Civilization (4)

Don Price
Lecture: TR 9:00-10:20 am-179 Chem
Discussion: Choose a section from the Class Schedule.
HNR 90X-7 (1 unit) T 3:10-4:00 pm-276 Gym
HIS 9A-(4 units)Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Surveys traditional Chinese
civilization and its modern transformation. Emphasis is on thought and religion, political and social life, art and literature. Perspectives on contemporary China are provided. GE credit: ArtHum, Div, Wrt.

Mathematics 16B Short Calculus (3)
Ali Dad-Del
Lecture:MWF 12:10-1:00 pm-1100 SocSci/Hum
HNR 90X-08 (1 unit)
W 3:10-4:00 pm-208 Wellman
MAT 16B-(3 units)Lecture--3 hours. Prerequisite: course 16A or 21A. Integration; calculus for trigonometric, exponential, and logarithmic functions; applications. Not open for credit to students who have received credit for course 21B. GE credit: SciEng.

Mathematics 16C Short Calculus (3)
Lawrence Marx
Lecture/discussion: Choose from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-12 (1 unit)
R 1:10-2:00 pm-176 Kerr
MAT 16C-(3 units)Lecture--3 hours. Prerequisite: course 16B or 21B. Differential equations; partial derivatives; double integrals; applications; series. Not open for credit to students who have received credit for course 21C. GE credit: SciEng.--I, II, III. (I, II, III.)

Mathematics 21C Calculus (4)
Lecture/discussion: Choose from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-09 (1 unit) Duane Kouba
W 10:00-11:50 am 25 Wellman
MAT 21C-(4 units)Lecture--3 hours; discussion; 1 hour. Prerequisite: course 21B or 21BH.
Continuation of course 21B. Sequences, series, tests for convergence, Taylor expansions. Partial derivatives, total differentials. Applications to maximum and minimum problems in two or more variables. Definite integrals over plane and solid regions in various coordinate systems. Applications to physical systems. GE credit: SciEng.

Political Science 1 American National Government (4)
Brian Sala
Lecture: TR 10:30-11:50 am-11 00 SocSci/Hum
HNR 90X-10 (1 unit) R 3:10-4:00 pm-27 Wellman
POL 1 (4) Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Survey of American national government, including the constitutional system, political culture, parties, elections, the presidency, Congress, and the courts. GE credit: SocSci, Wrt.

Sociology 1 Introduction to Sociology (5)

David Kyle
Lecture: TR 10:00-10:50 am-100 Hunt
Discussion section: Choose from sections A01 thru A07 ONLY from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-11 (1 unit) R 2:10-3:00 pm-1038 Wickson
SOC1-(5 units)Lecture--4 hours; discussion--1 hour. Principles and basic concepts of sociology. The study of groups, culture, collective behavior, classes and caste, community and ecology, role, status, and personality.

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Winter 2001

American Studies 1C (American Lives through Autiobiography)
Julia Klimek
Lecture: TR 2:10-3:30 pm -TempClass 3
Discussion: TR 3:40-4:00 pm-TempClass 3
HNR 90X-01 (1 unit) R 11:00-11:50 pm-Kerr 176
AMS 1C-(4 units)Lecture--2 hours;discussion--2 hours. American culture as understood through the individual life stories told by Americans, with attention to the roles of gender, race, ethnicity, social class, and sexual orientation in the individual's life course.{GE credit: ArtHum or SocSci, Div, Wrt.}

Art History 1B (Medieval and Renaissance Art)
Jeff Ruda
Lecture: TR 12:10-1:30 pm-Everson 176
Discussion section: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-02 (1 unit) W 12:10-1:00 pm-Art 210
AHI 1B-(4 units)Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Christian, Barbarian, Moslem, and Classical traditions in European Art from the fourth through the sixteenth centuries. {GE credit: ArtHum}

Asian American Studies 2 (Contemporary Experience of Asian Americans)
Steffi San Buenaventura
Lecture: TR 10:30-11:50 am -Wellman 2
Discussion section: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-03 (1 unit) R 1:10-2:00 pm -Wellman 5
ASA 2-(4 units) Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Introduction to Asian American Studies through analysis of relationships between ethnicity, race, and culture. Identity development of Asian Americans and their communities in the context of contemporary American institutional practices. {GE credit: SocSci, Div, Wrt.}

Biological Sciences 1B (Introductory Biology)
Robert Kimsey
Lecture: MWF 8:00-8:50 am-Young 198
OR-MWF 9:00-9:50 am-Young 198
Discussion/laboratory section: Choose from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-04 (1 unit) M 4:10-5:00 pm-Olson 267
BIS 1B-(5 units)-Lecture--3 hours; laboratory--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Introduction to evolution and animal diversity, including transmission and population genetics, micro and macroevolution, systematics, classification, and a survey of major animal groups.

Chicano Studies 50 (Chicana and Chicano Culture)
Sergio De La Mora
Lecture: TR 10:00-11:20 am -Olson 261
Discussion: TR 11:30-11:50 am -Olson 261
HNR 90X-09 (1 unit) W 10:00-10:50 am-Kerr 176
CHI 50-(4 units) Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Interdisciplinary survey of Chicana/o cultural representation in the 20th century. Examines Chicana/o culture within a national and transnational context. Explores how Chicano cultural forms and practices intersect with social/material forces, intellectual formations and cultural discourses. (Former course 20.) {GE credit: Div}

Comparative Literature 1 (Great Books of Western Culture: The Ancient World)
Brenda Schildgen
Lecture: TR 10:00=11:50 am-Soc Sci 80
This course is a combined Lecture/DHC Discussion Section
(DHC office will issue permission to add numbers)
COM 1-(4 units) Lecture/discussion--4 hours. Prerequisite: completion of Subject A requirement. An introduction,through class discussion and frequent written assignments, to some of the great books ofwestern civilization from The Epic of Gilgamesh to St. Augustine's Confessions. {GE credit:ArtHum, Wrt (cannot be used to satisfy a college or university composition requirement and GEwriting experience simultaneously)}

Engineering 6 (Engineering Problem Solving)

Larry Lagerstrom
Lecture: MWF 10:00-10:50 am-Everson 176
Discussion section: Choose from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-11 (1 unit)-F 2:10-3:00 pm-Bainer 1128
ENG 6- (4 units) Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite: Mathematics 16B or 21B (may be taken concurrently). Methodology for solving engineering problems. Engineering computing and visualization based on MATLAB. Engineering examples and applications.

Geology 1 (The Earth)
Class Web Page
Rob Zierenberg
Lecture: MWF 11:00-11:50 am-Haring 2205
Discussion section: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-05 (1 unit) F 2:10-3:00 pm-Hart 1116
GEL 1-(4 units)Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Introduction to study of the Earth for those not majoring in geology or associated sciences. Not open for credit to students who have taken course 50. {GE credit: SciEng.}

Landscape Design 2 (Place, Culture and Community)
Dean MacCannell
Lecture: MW 1:10-3:00 pm-Haring 1204
HNR 90X-6 (1 unit) M 11:00-11:50 am-Hart 1106
LDA 2-(4 units)Lecture--4 hours. Introduction to the relationship of social and spatial arrangements. Basic social-science concepts such as class, status, role, kinship, ritual, myth, alienation, etc., introduced through site-specific case studies of both historical and contemporary communities.{GE credit: SocSci, Wrt.}

Mathematics 21B (Calculus)
Lecture/discussion: Choose from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-14 (1 unit) Lawrence Marx
R 12:10-1:30 pm-Kerr 593
MAT 21B-(4 units)Lecture--3 hours; discussion; 1 hour. Prerequisite: course 21A or 21AH. Continuation of course 21A. Definition of definite integral, fundamental theorem of calculus, techniques of integration. Application to area volume, arc length, average of a function, improper integrals, surface of revolution. Only two units of credit will be allowed to students who have received credit for course 16B or 16C.{GE credit: SciEng}

Mathematics 21C (Calculus)
Lecture/discussion: Choose from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-12 (1 unit) Duane Kouba
F 12:10-2:00 pm-Wellman 202
MAT 21C-(4 units)Lecture--3 hours; discussion; 1 hour. Prerequisite: course 21B or 21BH. Continuation of course 21B. Sequences, series, tests for convergence, Taylor expansions. Partial derivatives, total differentials. Applications to maximum and minimum problems in two or more variables. Definite integrals over plane and solid regions in various coordinate systems. Applications to physical systems.{GE credit: SciEng}

Physics 7A (General Physics)
Larry Coleman
Lecture: R 7:30-8:50 am-Roessler 66
Discussion/Laboratory section: Choose from SECTIONS A1-A21 ONLY in the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-07 (1 unit) T 1:10-2:00 pm-139 Hunt
PHY 7A-(4 units)Lecture--1.5 hours; discussion/laboratory--5 hours. Prerequisite: Mathematics 16B (may be takenconcurrently). Introduction to general principles and analytical methods used in physics forstudents majoring in a biological science. Only two units of credit allowed to students who havecompleted course 9B, 5B, or 1B.

Psychology 1 (General Psychology)
Jim Biardi
Lecture: TR 8:00-9:50 am pm-Young 198
HNR 90X-13 (1 unit) T 3:10-4:00- Wellman 125
PSC 1 (4 units) Lecture--4 hours. Introduction emphasizing empirical approaches. Focus on perception, cognition, personality and social psychology, and biological aspects of behavior. Only 2 units allowed to those who have taken course 15 or 16; no crediti allowed to those who have taken both courses 15 and 16. {GE credit: SocSci}

Sociology 3 (Social Problems)
Bill McCarthy
Lecture: TR 1:40-3:00 pm-Young 198
Discussion section: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-08 (1 unit) T 11:00-11:50 am-Kerr 176
SOC 3-(4 units)Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. General sociological consideration of contemporary social problems in relation to sociocultural change and programs for improvement. {GE credit: SocSci,Wrt.}

Statistics 13 (Elementary Statistics)

Christiana Drake
Lecture: MWF 3:10-4:00 pm-SocSci 1100
Discussion section: Choose from sections D1 thru D4 in the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-11 (1 unit) W 4:10-5:00 pm-Kerr 176
STA 13-(4 units)Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite: two years of high school algebra or theequivalent in college. Measures of central tendency and dispersion; binomial, normal, Student-t,and chi-square distributions; testing hypotheses; confidence intervals, regression and correlationanalysis. Not open for credit to students who have completed any statistics course numbered higher than 13, except for course 102. {GE credit: SciEng.}


Fall 2000

American Studies 1A (Technology, Science, and American Culture)
Jay Mechling
Lecture: M 6:10-9:00pm Wellman 2
Discussion section: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-01 (1 unit) M 3:10-4:00pm Kerr 176
AMS 1A - (4 units)Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. American science and technology as cultural systems, mutual influence and interaction of those systems with other cultural systems, including religion, social thought, art, architecture, literature, music, and common sense. {GE credit: ArtHum or SocSci, Div, Wrt.}

Animal Science 1 (Domestic Animals and People)
Tom Famula
Lecture: MWF 9:00-9:50am Young 198
Laboratory section: Choose a lab section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-02 (1 unit) F 1:10-2:00pm Olson 117
ANS 1- (4 units) Lecture--3 hours; laboratory--3 hours. Animal domestication and factors affecting their characteristics and distribution. Animal use for food, fiber, work, drugs, research and recreation; present and future roles in society. Laboratory exercises with beef and dairy cattle, poultry, sheep, swine, laboratory animals, fish, horses, meat and dairy products. {GE credit: SciEng, Wrt.}

Anthropology 1 (Human Evolutionary Biology)
Henry McHenry
Lecture: TR 9:00-10:20am Chemistry 194
Discussion section: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-03 (1 unit) R 10:30-11:20am Young 210
ANT 1 - (4 units) Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Processes and course of human evolution; primatology; biological and social diversity within Homo Sapiens; human paleontology. {GE Credit: SciEng, Div, Wrt.}

Biological Science 1A (Introductory Biology)
Karen Gerhart
Lecture: MTWR 8:00-8:50am Haring 2205
Discussion: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-04 (1 unit) W 10:00-10:50am Wellman 111
BIS1A. (5 units) Lecture--4 hours; discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite: Chemistry 2B (may be taken concurrently). Introduction to biological molecules, bioenergetics, cell structure and function, elements of molecular biology and genetics, and viruses. Interdisciplinary course for majors in the biological sciences.

Bio Sci 10 (General Biology)
Jack Goldberg
Lecture: MWF 8:00-8:50am Storer 1322
Discussion: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-05 (1 unit) M 3:10-4:00pm Hunt 139
BIS 10 - (4 units ) Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Consideration of the main features and principles of biology, with emphasis on biological processes and special reference to evolution, heredity, and the bearing of biology on human life. Designed for students not specializing in biology. Not open for credit to those who have had course 1A. {GE credit: SciEng, Wrt.}

Classics 1 (The Ancient Near East and Early Greece: 3000-500 B.C.E.)
Instructor: Bruce Rosenstock
Lecture: MWF 2:10-3:00pm Olson 146
HNR 90X-06 (1 unit) W 3:10-4:00pm Kerr 176
CLA 1 - (4 units) Lecture--3 hours; term paper. Introduction to the literature, art, and social and political institutions of ancient Mesopotamia, Egypt, Palestine, and early Greece from 3000 to 500 B.C.E. {GE credit: ArtHum, Wrt.}

Classics 10 (Greek, Roman, and Near Eastern Mythology)
Instructor: Charlayne Allan
Lecture: MWF 1:10-2:00pm Everson 176
HNR 90X-07 (1 unit) W 4:10-5:00pm Wellman 201
CLA 10 - (3 units) Lecture--3 hours. Examination of major myths of Greece, Rome, and the Ancient Near East; their place in the religion, literature and art of the societies that produced them; their subsequent development, influence and interpretation. {GE credit: ArtHum.}

Communication 1 (Introduction to Public Speaking)

Instructor: Alisha Shubb
Lecture: M 4:10-5:00pm Hunt 100
Discussion: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-25 (1 unit) M 5:10-6:00pm Hunt 139
CMN 1 - (4 units) Lecture--1 hour; discussion--3 hours. Practice in the preparation and delivery of speeches based on contemporary principles and strategies of informing an persuading audiences. {GE credit: Wrt. (cannot be used to satisfy a college or university composition requirement and GE writing experience simultaneously)}

Comparative Literature 3 (Great Books of Western Culture: The Modern Crisis )
Instructor: Donna Reed
Lecture: MW 2:10-4:00pm (Sec. 1) Wellman 205
This course is a combined Lecture/DHC Discussion Section
(DHC office will issue permission to add numbers)
COM 3. - (4 units) Lecture/discussion--4 hours. Prerequisite: completion of Subject A requirement. An introduction, through class discussion and frequent written assignments, to some of the great books of western civilization from Goethe's Faust to Beckett's Waiting for Godot.{ GE credit: ArtHum, Wrt. (cannot be used to satisfy a college or university composition requirement and GE writing experience simultaneously)}

Dramatic Arts 20 (Introduction to Dramatic Art)
Instructor: Karen Shimakawa
Lecture: TR 9:00-10:20am Wyatt Pavilion
Discussion section: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-08 (1 unit) W 11:00-11:50am Wellman 5
DRA 20 - (4 units) Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Understanding and appreciation of both the distinctive and collaborative contributions of playwright, actor, director, and designer to the total work of dramatic art. Study of plays from the major periods of dramatic art in their cultural contexts. {GE credit: ArtHum.}

English 3 (Introduction to Literature)
Elizabeth Davis
Lecture: TR 12:10-2:00pm (sec. 24) Social Science 90
This course is a combined Lecture/DHC Discussion Section
(DHC office will issue permission to add numbers)
ENL 3 - (4 units) Lecture--2 hours; discussion--2 hours. Prerequisite: completion of Subject A requirement. Introductory study of several genres of English literature, emphasizing both analysis of particular works and the range of forms and styles in English prose and poetry. Frequent writing assignments will be made. {GE credit: ArtHum, Wrt. (cannot be used to satisfy a college or university composition requirement and GE writing experience simultaneously)}

Environmental Science and Policy 10 (Introduction to Environmental Studies)
Instructor: Mark Schwartz
Lecture: TR 10:30-11:50am Olson 158
Discussion section: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-09 (1 unit) R 3:10-4:00pm Wellman 111
ESP 10 - (4 units) Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite: elementary biology recommended. Survey of the importance of ecology and systems behavior for man-environment relationships and management problems. Resources, environmental quality, urban dynamics, environmental perception, and conservation are covered. Includes several integrative case studies, and features individual reading in environmental problems. Not open for credit to students who have taken course 1. {GE credit: SciEng, Wrt.}

French 50 (French Film)
Instructor: Elizabeth Constable
Lecture: TR 3:10-4:00pm
Discussion: T 4:10-6:00pm 1130 Hart
HNR 90X-010 (1 unit) W 3:10-4:00pm Wellman 123
FRE 50 - (4 units) Lecture--1 hour; discussion--2 hours; term paper. Introduction to the tradition of French cinema from its invention by Méliès and the Lumière brothers through New Wave (especially the works of Truffaut and Godard) and more recent developments in French and Francophone film. Taught in English. Offered in alternate years. {GE credit: ArtHum, Wrt.}

Geology 1 (The Earth)
Instructor: Richard Cowen
Lecture: MWF 11:00-11:50am Haring 2205
Discussion section: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-11 (1 unit): T 12:10-1:00pm Wellman 5
GEL1- (4 units )Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Introduction to study of the Earth for those not majoring in geology or associated sciences. Not open for credit to students who have taken course 50. {GE credit: SciEng.}

History 15 (Introduction to African History )
Instructor: Cynthia Brantley
Lecture: TR 1:40-3:00pm Olson 217
Discussion section: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-12 (1 unit) T 3:10-4:00pm Kerr 176
HIS 15 - (4 units )Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Examination of the long-range historical context as background to current conditions in Africa. Includes the early development of African civilizations, the slave trade and its abolition, 20th century colonization, and African independent states. {GE credit: ArtHum, Div, Wrt.}

Linguistics 1 (Introduction to Linguistics)
Instructor: Will Benware
Lecture: MWF 11:00-11:50am Storer 1322
Discussion section: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-13 (1 unit) R 1:10-2:00pm Wellman 5
LIN 1 - (4 units) Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Introduction to the study of language; its nature, diversity, and structure. {GE credit: ArtHum or SocSci, Wrt.}

Math 21B (Calculus)

Lecture/Discussion: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-24 (1 unit) Duane Kouba
F 10:00-12:00pm Wellman 202
MAT 21B - (4 units) Lecture/dsicussion--4 hours. Definition of definite integral, fundamental theorem of calculus, techniques of integration. Application to area, volume, arc length, average of a function, improper integrals, surface of revolution.{GE credit: SciEng}

Medieval Studies 20A (Early Medieval Culture)
Instructor: Kevin Roddy
Lecture: MWF 1:10-2:00pm Wellman 126
Discussion section: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-14 (1 unit) W 4:10-5:00pm Wellman 125
MST 20A - (4 units) Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Readings (in translation) in early medieval culture, such as the Codes of Justinian, the Confessions of Saint Augustine, The Consolation of Philosophy of Boethius, Beowulf, the Nibelungenlied, and the Song of Roland. {GE credit: ArtHum, Wrt.}

Molecular and Cellular Biology (Introduction to Human Heredity)
Instructor: Scott Hawley
Lecture: MWF 9:00-9:50am Kleiber 3
Discussion section: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-15(1 unit) T 9:00-9:50am Wellman 201
MCB 10 - (4 units) Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Topics in human heredity and human gene structure and function, including the genetic basis of human development, causes of birth defects, mental retardation, genetic diseases, sexual determination, development and behavior. {GE credit: SciEng, Wrt.}

Music 10 (Introduction to Musical Literature)
Instructor: Jonathan Elkus
Lecture: MWF 9:00-9:50am Main Theater
Discussion section: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-21 (1 unit) W 2:10-3:00pm Music 230
MUS 10 - Lecture -- 3 hours; discussion -- 1 hour. An introduction to composers and major styles of Western music. Lectures, listening sections, and selected readings. For non-music majors.{GE credit: ArtHum, Wrt}

Native American Studies 1 ( Introduction to Native American Studies)
Instructor: Victor Montejo
Lecture: TR 12:10-1:30pm Storer 1322
Discussion section: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-16 (1 unit) W 1:10-2:00pm Wellman 5
NAS 1 - (4 units) Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Introduction to Native American Studies with emphasis upon basic concepts relating to Native American historical and political development. {GE credit: SocSci, Div.}

Plant Biology 12 (Plants and People)
Instructor: Don Nevins
Lecture: MWF 9:00-9:50am Hunt 241
HNR 90X- 22 R 4:10-5:00pm Kerr 176
Prerequisite: high school biology
PLB 12 - (4 units) Lecture-- 3 hours. Plants as a resource for food, recreation, and environmental enhancement. Emphasis on how our relationship to plants has changed through history and how the growth and development of plants affect their utility. Not open for credit to students who have completed Plant Science 10. {GE Credit: SciEng, Div, Wrt}

Political Science 4 (Basic Concepts in Political Theory)
Instructor: Larry Peterman
Lecture: MWF 12:10-1:00 pm Kleiber 3
HNR 90X- 23 M 1:10-2:00pm Kerr 176
POL 4 - Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Analysis of such concepts as the individual, community, liberty, equality, justice, and natural law as developed in the works of the major political philosophers. {GE credit: SocSci, Wrt.}

Psychology 1 (Introduction to Psychology)
Instructor: Phil Shaver
Lecture: MW 10:00-11:50am Olson 6
HNR 90X-17 (1 unit) M 1:10-2:00pm Young 145
PSC 1 - (4 units) Lecture -- 4 hours. Introduction emphasizing empirical approaches. Focus on perception, cognition, personality and social psychology, and biological aspects of behavior. Only 2 units allowed to those who have taken course 15 or 16; no credit allowed to those who have taken both courses 15 and 16. {GE Credit: SocSci}

Sociology 4 (Immigration and Opportunity)
Instructor: James Cramer
Lecture: TR 3:10-4:30pm Olson 6
Discussion section: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-18 (1 unit) T 5:10-6:00pm Wellman 109
SOC 4 - (4 units) Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour or term paper. Social and demographic analysis of immigration: motives and experiences of immigrants; immigration and social mobility; immigration, assimilation, and social change; multicultural societies. Detailed study of immigration into the U.S., with comparative studies of Europe, Australia, and other host countries. {GE credit: SocSci, Div, Wrt.}
 
Viticulture 3 (Introduction to Winemaking)

Instructor: Andy Waterhouse
Lecture: TR 10:30-11:50am Social Science 1100
HNR 90X-19 (1 unit) R 12:10-1:00pm Wellman 5
VEN 3 - (3 units) Lecture--3 hours. Overview of the history of wine, viticulture, fermentation, winery operations, the physiology of wine consumption, wines produced in California and other major wine-producing regions and the sensory evaluation of wine. {GE credit: SciEng or SocSci.}
 
Wildlife Ecology and Conservation 10 (Wildlife Ecology and Conservation)
Instructor: Douglas Kelt
Lecture: MWF 12:10-1:00pm Wellman 2
Discussion section: Choose a section from the Class Schedule
HNR 90X-20 (1 unit) F 2:10-3:00pm Olson 263
WFC 10 - (4 units) Lecture--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Introduction to the ecology and conservation of vertebrates. Complexity and severity of world problems in conserving biological diversity. {GE credit: SciEng, Div, Wrt.}

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