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Students enrolled in the School of Liberal Arts at Indianapolis who wish to attend other Indiana University campuses should report to the Office of the Registrar, School of Liberal Arts, Room 401, Cavanaugh Hall, 925 West Michigan Street, to secure a intercampus transfer. All transfer credit evaluation will be determined where possible based on the School of Liberal Arts bulletin.

FINANCIAL AIDS

VETERANS' INFORMATION

CAMPUS FACILITIES Libraries

The Faculty of Liberal Arts has established the following graduation requirements. Application for graduation must be filed in the Office of Records, School of Liberal Arts.

English Composition

All degree candidates' credits, other than those for the current semester, must be recorded at least six weeks prior to the awarding of degrees. For this reason, Areas I, n and 1lI (departmental distribution requirements) are considered essential elements of the B.A.

Foreign Languages

Third semester course: Through CEEB placement or consultation with the appropriate language department, students who place in and take a third semester language course as designated by the language department and receive an A, B, or C will receive 10 credit hours for course numbers 101 and 102 with a grade of S .Through CEEB placement or consultation with the appropriate language department, students who place and take a second semester language course as designated by the language department and receive a grade of A, B, or C. will receive five credit hours for course number 101 with a grade of S.

A: Additional Foreign Language/Foreign Culture

FRANCE

Students who receive a D in any of the above cases may apply to the appropriate language departments to establish a means by which proficiency in 100-level language courses can be recognized and credit granted. It is the student's responsibility to request that the language department forward this information to the Office of the Registrar, Room 401, Cavanaugh Hall, School of Liberal Arts.

WESTERN EUROPE History

GERMANY German Literature

Distribution Requirements

4 courses in social and behavioral sciences (not more than two courses in one course) 2 courses in biological sciences. The student may concentrate in either the arts and humanities or the social and behavioral sciences, as follows:.

Minor

Graduate students in other IUPUI schools and divisions may choose to minor in the School of Liberal Arts. Through it, a student in the School of Liberal Arts may enroll in courses not offered by IUPUl but offered at another member college.

Major Requirement

ACADEMIC REGULATIONS

It is the student's responsibility not only to refrain from cheating, but also to avoid apparent cheating and to safeguard against making it possible for others to cheat. If the faculty member finds the student guilty, the faculty member imposes a penalty within the subject and immediately reports the case in writing to the school's dean or corresponding head of the academic unit.

ACADEMIC STANDING OF STUDENTS

For further regulations, students are referred to the IDPUI A Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities, Section 1.13, and to the Student Statement of Rights and Responsibilities of the Indiana University Board of Trustees, Sections a) (3), (c), (d), and (el, 3.1, 3.3 and 3.4.

SPECIAL OPPORTUNITIES FOR STUDENTS

Special awards presented at this reception are: 11 Cavanaugh Awards, established by the late Robert E. Cavanaugh, former director of LU. It was the hope of the founding faculty that the center would create a common bond between a wide range of disciplines and enrich the intellectual life of the university community. Black Student Union, Graduate and Professional Student Advisory Board, Handicap Student Organization, International Student Organization, National Organization for Women, Student Activity Board, Student Assembly, Student Life Council of the School of Liberal Arts.

IUPUI students are eligible to participate in study abroad programs established by the Indiana University system. A Dijon placement test is given at the time of interviews to determine each candidate's ability or placement in the appropriate sequence of courses. Selected students will stay at the University of Dijon in the center of the wine region in east-central France.

In addition to the two academic year programs, Indiana University, as a participating member of the Council on International Educational Exchange, offers a one-semester program in Seville, Spain for prospective high school Spanish teachers. Students interested in more information about any of the above programs should contact the Spanish Department Chair, Room SOlE, Cavanaugh Hall, or telephone 264-8206. Students should plan programs carefully with their departmental advisors and the School of Education certification advisor.

MILITARY TRAINING

Students may be required to demonstrate proficiency by passing a qualifying examination in the area in which students are required to teach; Program requirements vary slightly under current certification rules, so the student should plan carefully with an advisor in the main department and with a certification advisor in the School of Education in the Marott Building.

AMERICAN STUDIES

American Studies is an interdisciplinary program concerned with the ideas, institutions, and aesthetic forms that make up the American experience. With a broad spectrum of courses in American literature, history, philosophy, economics, political science, art, music, folklore and religious studies, American Studies looks at an integration of these diverse subjects that an appreciation of their common origins into a total American context. To that end, American Studies offers a two-semester "Introduction to American Studies" (AJOl-AJ021) in which an attempt is made to synthesize the various disciplinary appreciations of American thought and culture.

A301-A302: Introduction to American Studies I-II (3-3 cr.) An introduction to an interdisciplinary treatment of American culture, institutions, and ideas. Emphasis is placed on the search for national character, and a select group of representative topics are explored from a variety of perspectives.

ANTHROPOLOGY

Ethnographic study of cultural areas from the Arctic to Panama plus cross-cultural analysis of interrelationships between culture, geographic setting and language families. Issues include kinship perspectives on urbanism and urbanization, kinship and social networks, political-economic factors, and cultural pluralism. A cross-cultural study of human biocultural adaptation to health and disease, including a study of ecological, biological and psychosocial factors both in susceptibility to disease and in conception and treatment of disease.

E450 Folk Religions (3 cr.) Comparative analysis of religious beliefs and practices of illiterate societies with the aim of defining their nature and social functions. Individual variation within a cultural framework; techniques for exploring individual differences as opposed to techniques for delineating the structure of culture.

ECONOMICS

G301 History of the English Language (3 cr.) Historical and structural analysis of the English language through the stages of its development. LI05 Respect for literature (3 slides) The course emphasizes the enjoyment and humane values ​​of literature. L329 Major Romantic Writers I (3 cr.) Major romantic writers of the first generation, with emphasis on Blake, Wordsworth, and Coleridge.

L370 Black American Writing (3 cr.) A study of the major black American writers, with special emphasis on recent writing. L376 Youth Literature (3 ECTS) An examination of the nature and extent of youth literature. L613 (E511) Middle English Literature (excluding Chaucer) (4 cr.) Critical analysis of major writers from the twelfth to the fifteenth century.

L639 (ES22) English Fiction to 1800 (4 cr.) Critical analysis of the major novels, especially those of Richardson and Fielding. G331 Economic Geography (3 cr.) An investigation of the spatial dynamics and locational patterns of economic activities, behavior, and systems. G344 Urbanization: A Geographic Perspective (3 cr.) Study of the process of population concentration in urban centers on a global scale.

G355 Political Geography (3 cr.) An examination of the spatial organization of political systems and the interaction of geographic area and political processes. G382 The Age of Goethe and the Romantics in English Translation (3 cr.) No knowledge of German required.

PHILOSOPHY

P220 Society and the State in the Ancient World (3 cr.) An analysis of the origin, structure and function of the state in relation to the patriarchal social revolution. P433 Social Origins of Philosophy I (3 cr.) An interpretation of Western philosophy seen as originating in the overthrow of the traditional matriarchy by the new patriarchal social order. Y205 Elements of Political Analysis (3 cr.) Introduction to the most important approaches to and techniques of the systematic study of political science.

Y306 State Politics in the United States (3 cr.) A comparative study of politics in the American states. Y322 The American presidency (3 images) The presidency is one of the essential institutions of the American political system. Y339 Middle Eastern Political Systems (3 cr.) Comparative politics of the Middle East with emphasis on the types of political systems prevailing in the region.

Y374 International Organization (3 cr.) (pending approval) Examines assumptions about the causes, functions, results, structures of international (intergovernmental) organizations. Y381 History of Political Theory I (3 cr.) An exposition and critical analysis of the most important political philosophers and philosophical schools from Plato to Machiavelli. Y382 History of Political Theory IT (3 cr.) An outline and critical analysis of the most important philosophers and philosophical schools from Machiavelli to the present day.

RELIGIOUS STUDIES

RIl3 Religion and Culture (3 cr.) Introductory examination of the variety of possible relationships that exist between religion and culture. R234 Social Psychology (3 cr.) Sociological approach to human character with emphasis on the psychology of the individual in social situations. R345 Crime and Society (3 cr.) Examination of the creation, selection and disposition of persons labeled as criminals.

R356 Foundations for social theory (3 cr.) Examination of the basic issues and perspectives in classical social theories. R481 Evaluation Research Methods (3 cr.) A comprehensive study of research techniques and practical applications in the field of social program evaluation. R490 Sociological research methods (3 credits) The nature of science and the scientific method in relation to the research process.

S241 Golden Age literature in translation (DKK 3) Masterpieces of Spanish literature from the 16th and 17th centuries. 3 (4 cr.) An electrical engineering course cross-listed for telecommunications credit in Speech-Theatre-Communication. 3 (3 cr.) An electrical engineering course cross-listed for telecommunications credit in Speech-Theatre-Communication.

2 (4 cr.) Electrical Engineering Technology listed for Telecommunications credit in Speech-Theatre-Communications. C380 Organizational Communication (3 cr., Application of communication theory and research in the study of communication within a formal organization.

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