Students must, with the permission of the major department, petition the School of Liberal Arts from the University Division when they have completed 36 hours. Students transferring to the School of Liberal Arts from other undergraduate schools of the University must have a minimum cumulative grade point average of 2.0.
EXPENSES AND FINANCIAL AID
Transfers from other colleges and universities: Students with transfer credit from other colleges or universities may be admitted to the School of Liberal Arts provided they submit the following: 1) a minimum cumulative grade point average of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale (3.0 expected for nonresidents of Indiana), 2) a high school record showing satisfactory acceptable units, 3) evidence of good standing at the institution last attended, and 4) transcripts of credits and grades earned there all subjects. Credit from other institutions will be evaluated by the Office of Admissions and its applicability to degree requirements in the School of Liberal Arts will be determined by the department chair or advisor and the Dean's Office.
IUPUI FEE RATES
The spouse of a full-time (100% HE) employee is entitled to a courtesy fee of one-half of the resident undergraduate semester course fees up to a maximum of three (3) credit hours per semester or summer session.
RULES ON RESIDENCY
STUDENT FEE REFUND UPON WITHDRAWAL
HEALTH CARE AND INSURANCE
VETERANS'INfORMATION
PROGRAM PLANNING AND COUNSELING
Every student should be thoroughly familiar with the General Requirements for Baccalaureate degrees (See the following pages). Students must make appointments with the appropriate faculty advisors in their major departments before or on the dates determined by the university calendar for academic advising.
BACHELOR OF ARTS DECREE
In such conferences, students should make sure they understand graduation requirements set by the School of Liberal Arts, and especially note the area distribution requirements (see pages 12-18).
GENERAL REQUIREMENTS
With special permission from the dean's office, a maximum of 12 hours of courses offered by the Self-study department may be taken. A student who fails to complete a degree within six years from the time of initial enrollment may be required to take comprehensive examinations on the subjects in the major subject.
Class Standing
Normally, students residing at the University are not permitted to concurrently enroll in courses offered through the Independent Studies Department. An application for a degree must be submitted to the Office of the Recorder, School of Liberal Arts.
AREA REQUIREMENTS
All crediting of candidates for degrees, except for the current semester, must be registered at least six weeks before the conferment of degrees.
Area I: English Composition
However, students may register in advance to take this exam in an effort to test the course if they have an SAT verbal score of 500 or higher, an ACT composite score of 22, or a record of A and B on the have high school. English. A $10 fee is required and must be paid to the Bursar's Office before the special credit is awarded.
Area II: Foreign Languages
Those who receive a B or C will receive three credit hours for course number 298 with a grade of S, plus 10 credit hours for course numbers 101 and 102 with a grade of S. Third Semester Course: Through CEEB placement or consultation with the appropriate language department, they will students who enroll in and attend a third-semester language course as designated by the language department and receive an A, B, or C, receive 10 credit hours in course numbers 101 and 102 with a grade of S.
Area IIA: Additional foreign Language/foreign Culture
IBERIA-LATIN AMERICA Geography
WESTERN EUROPE English
ASIA Geography
Area III: Distribution Requirements
In the language departments listed above, only advanced courses of a literary character may be used for the division distribution. First and second year language courses may not be used to complete the distribution requirement.
Area IV: Major Requirement
Any course in which the student receives a grade below C may not be used to fulfill the requirements of the major. The three courses used to fulfill the foreign culture option may not be used in the major.
ACADEMIC REGULATIONS
The calculation of the grade point average based on retaken courses is done in the final year of IUPUI. If the professor finds the student guilty, he will impose a punishment within the scope of the course and immediately report the case in writing to the dean of the faculty or a comparable head of the study unit.
ACADEMIC STANDING OF STUDENTS
PLANS OF STUDY
SPECIAL OPPORTUNITIES FOR STUDENTS
In addition, a number of service fraternities and sororities, religious organizations, and special interest groups welcome School of Liberal Arts students. For complete information, School of Liberal Arts students should refer to the Student Activities Office, Room 322, Cavanaugh Hall, telephone 264-3931, and to the new I UPUI Student Handbook, available in student activities offices.
INDIANA UNIVERSITY FOREIGN STUDY PROGRAMS
Six weeks of intensive summer study in French language, literature and culture for students at each Indiana University campus is coordinated by IUPUI for the Indiana University system. Indiana University and IUPUI offer Spanish students several opportunities to live and study in a Spanish-speaking country.
EDUCATION
Students interested in more information about any of the above programs may contact the Chair of the Spanish Department, Room 50'1 E, Cavanaugh Hall, or telephone 264-8206.
Secondary Teachers' Certificates
However, it is open to undergraduate students from other disciplines who have a demonstrated ability in the use of Spanish.
CAMPUS FACILITIES
Ubraries
Instructional Media Systems
Due to the wide and increasing use of tapes in education (especially recorded class lectures), the Audio Learning Center offers a tape duplication service which is available to students at a nominal cost. As with the Audio Learning Center, students may be assigned mediated studies in the carrels outside of their regular classroom work, and Instructional Media Systems production staff are available to work with faculty in the planning and production of materials to be used by students.
Career Information and Job Placement
In specific cases, the local placement office works with the placement services at the Bloomington and Lafayette campuses. Another function of the Internship Office is to provide information about part-time and summer jobs for students.
Housing
Information for Foreign Students
Student 10 Cards
Evening Administration
On the 38th Street Campus, the Evening Administration Office is open daily from noon until most evening activities have concluded, Monday through Friday. It serves liberal arts students taking courses on that campus, in Herron and in the Marott Building, and is the communication link after 6 p.m.
AMERICAN STUDIES
Requirements for the Minor
ANTHROPOLOCY
ECONOMICS
Requirements For Majors
Courses
Money and banking system of the United States, including problems of money and the price level; proper organization and functioning of commercial banking and Federal Reserve systems, monetary standards and credit control. Survey of major theoretical developments since the beginning of the systematic study of economics in the 18th century.
ENGLISH
- MAJOR IN LITERATURE AND LANGUAGE (PRE-PROFESSIONAL)
- MAJOR IN LITERATURE AND LANGUAGE (GENERAL)
- MAJOR IN ENGLISH - FORPROSPEOIVE TEACHERS
- MAJOR IN COMPOSITION/JOURNALISM
The English department has organized the required courses in this area to coincide as much as possible with those required for certification to teach English in secondary schools. No specific coursework is required for the fifteen hours of literature, but I highly recommend it.
Language Program
Minimum requirements: Fifteen hours of courses in creative writing, nonfiction writing, or journalism, and fifteen hours in literature, for a total of thirty hours. The department offers courses in six areas: language, literature, reading, writing, comparative literature, and folklore.
Uterature Program
A study of twentieth-century American, English, and continental plays, novels, short stories, and poetry, with emphasis on close reading of individual works against the backdrop of significant historical and social events. Poetry and prose of the first half of the 18th century, with emphasis on Pope and Swift.
Reading Program
Writing Program
Comparative Literature Program
Folklore Program
GRADUATE STUDY
FRENCH
An introduction to the great writers of the XVIII century, the zeitgeist, the themes and the society of this century. An in-depth study of the historical background of French literature from its beginnings to 1750.
GEOGRAPHY
CERMAN
Program for Majors
Courses in German
Courses in English
Major works and writers of German literature from the turn of the century to the present, with an emphasis on Rilke, Thomas Mann, Kafka, and Brecht. Major works and writers of German literature from the turn of the century to the present day.
HISTORY
The collapse of Roman authority in the West; the Germanic monarchies; the growth of the Western Church and the development of German, Greek and Muslim empires; the Viking invasions;. The Neolithic Revolution; the development of civilization in Egypt, Mesopotamia and Greece; the Hebrews; Alexander the Great and the Hellenization of the East.
JOURNAUSM
Study of the principles of text editing, headline writing, graphic materials handling, layout planning, and page design, including practice in performing each of these editorial functions. A study of neighborhood, suburb, ethnic group, and specialty area weekly, biweekly, triweekly, and daily newspapers.
MUSIC
PHILOSOPHY
A study of the historical role of philosophy in Western culture and its influence on that culture. A focused study of the language of philosophy, philosophy of language, conceptual analysis, information theory, and some important problems arising from these considerations.
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Y335 Political Systems of Western Europe (3 cr.) Y337 Political Systems of Latin America (3 cr.) Y338 Introduction to African Politics (3 cr.) Y341 Totalitarian Political Systems (3 cr.). Y371 Workshop on International Issues and American Foreign Relations (3 cr.) Y380 Selected Topics in Democratic Governance (3 cr.).
RELIGIOUS STUDIES
The Academic Study of Religion
Cooperatively Planned Programs of Study
Others will find important links with related disciplines in the arts and sciences and may even cross the bridges between different schools and departments of the university.
Requirements
The origins, development and present status of faiths and institutions in the major religions of the West: Zoroastrianism, Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Readings in the major works of the 19th and 20th centuries, paying particular attention to the ways in which the forms, patterns, and conflicts of individual works are derived from or analogous to, or designed to address, the drives and motives of the religious. fantasy.
SOCIOLOGY
Requirements for the Major in Sociology
Minor in Medical Sociology
Emphasis on the theoretical developments of the twentieth century and the relationships of current theories with classical theories. A comprehensive study of research techniques and practical applications in the field of social program evaluation.
SPANISH
Program for Majors in Spanish
Minor Requirements
Teacher Certification
Undergraduate Study Abroad
Reading of representative 19th- and 11th-century novels and examination of the novel's development. P or equivalent, Subject chosen by the student with the department's consent.
SPEECH AND THEATRE
Theory and practice of public speaking; training in thought processes necessary to organize speech content for informative and persuasive situations. Basic principles and practice in the analysis and reading of selections from prose, poetry and drama.
RESIDENT
FACULTY
RESIDENT FACULTY
RHOME, FRANCES DODSON, University Affirmative Action Officer and Associate Professor of English (1969); B.A., University of California, Los Angeles, 1937; M.A., New Mexico State University, 1960; dr.
Emeriti Faculty
Adjunct Faculty