May 21, 2024  
Ohio University Graduate Catalog 2015-2017 
    
Ohio University Graduate Catalog 2015-2017 [Archived Catalog]

Courses


 
  
  • HIST 5560 - The Italian Renaissance



    Explores Italian urban life and culture, the courtly world of political elites, education reform and Humanism, religious expression and the Papal court, scientific and medical discovery, art and expressions of power in Italy, 1350-1550. It also examines the darker side of Renaissance culture - violence, sexual deviance, and social repression.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5562 - Muslims, Christians, and Jews in the History of Medieval Spain



    Covers the history of the Iberian peninsula from late antiquity to the Renaissance, focusing especially on the political cultural interactions of the Christians, Jews, and eventually Muslims under Visigothic Kings, the rise of the Cordoban Caliphate, and the process of Christian Reconquest. Particular attention is given to the internal state of “convivencia” - Living together of Christians, Jews and Muslims - as well as the relationship of Iberia to the wider European World.

    Requisites
    Graduate Status
    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5580 - Power and Revolution in Early Modern Europe, 1450-1650



    Explores major political, economic, social and religious developments in Europe from the Age of Discovery (the Americas) to the Thirty Years’ War. Will explore this period as one of ideological change through emphasis on “revoltuions” in world-view, religion, social structure, politics and science/medicine in Europe.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5581 - Politics, Power and People in Europe, 1650-1775



    Explores major political, economic, intellectual and social developments in Europe (particular attention given to France, Spain, Germany), 1650 to eve of French Revolution. Emphasis on absolutism & despotism, diplomatic revolution, competition for empire, Enlightenment and emergence of a ‘public’ as agent of change.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5600 - Women in Early Modern European History, 1400-1800



    Explores the social, cultural,political, and economic roles of women in Europe from the 15th- through the 18th- centuries. Students will examine women as monarchs, nobles and peasants; as actresses, musicians, and playwrights; as mothers, wives, and daughters; as Christians, Jews, and Muslims; as scientists and scholars; and as witches, prostitutes,and criminals. Key issues will include women’s political power and participation in politics; sexuality and the body; women’s spiritual and religious roles; and women’s interactions with men. The Early Modern period sets the stage for a changing history of women in Europe, and the class will thus underline the ways in which women’s roles evolved and changed over the course of early modern Europe.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5601 - Women in Modern European History, 1800-present



    Will explore the role of women in western European society from the French Revolution to the present. In addition to examining how women have affected and been influenced by social, cultural, and political currents, we will investigate the place of women in historical literature, and how this role has changed over time. Of interest will be key individuals and women’s groups, as well as a more general consideration of women’s (and men’s) everyday lives. Through lectures, discussions, and assignments, we will be particularly attentive to questions of how best to view women as part of a larger historical narrative as the field of women’s and gender history relates to trends not only in the field of history but also in domestic and political developments, including women’s movements, arguments about gender and sexuality,

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5610 - The French Revolution



    Examines the origins, course of events, and significance of the experience of the French Revolution, which has traditionally been seen as the dividing line separating the Old Regime from modern times.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5620 - Europe, 1814-1914



    Europe from Congress of Vienna to the First World War, including growth of liberalism and nationalism, revolutions of 1830 and 1848, Industrial Revolution, unification of Italy and Germany, social and intellectual movements. Development of Austria-Hungary, France, Italy, Germany, Great Britain, and Russia, including imperialism, background of WWI, and social and intellectual movements.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5640 - Europe Between World Wars, 1919-1939



    Fascism, Communism, World Depression, and 20-Year Armistice between 1919 and 1939. Economic and cultural approach.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5641 - Contemporary Europe



    Will consider key themes in the history of postwar Europe. We will explore Europe’s division and ethnic cleansing in 1945, efforts of pan-European State Socialist and Atlanticist integration, Europe’s imperial/colonial struggles and cultural-religious transformations. We will also consider the impact of the collapse of the Soviet Empire in Europe and the emergence of newly independent states in former Soviet spaces as well as the wars of Yugoslav disintegration and European integration. We will conclude with a survey of current issues in European political, cultural, and social life.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5650 - The Problem of Church and State in European History



    Devoted to the problem of the relationship between political and religious institutions and its impact on the course of European history. We will focus on four specific periods: 1) The High Middle Ages (1000-1300); 2)The Reformation; 3) The Age of Revolution; and 4) the 20th- century.

    Requisites
    Graduate Status
    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5660 - History of France in the 19th- Century



    Rise and fall of Napoleon; his impact on France and Europe; monarchist interlude; revolution of 1848 and election of Louis Napoleon; Second Empire, liberal and authoritarian; wars and transformation of Europe; fall of Napoleon and Paris Commune; Third Republic.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5661 - Modern France in the 20th- Century



    Dynamic and stagnant aspects; nostalgia and rejection of 20th- century; impact of 20th- century; democracy in France; European and colonial wars; communist movement from Popular Front to Common Program; anti-communism in France; French in changing world; De Gaulle, his predecessors, and his successors.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5680 - Germany in the 19th- Century



    Cosmopolitanism and movement to create national German state; rise of capitalism and decline of handicraft; liberation of German peasantry; revolution of 1848 and reaction; blood-and-iron chancellor; Germany’s rise to European predominance; rise of worker movement; German society at turn of century.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5681 - Modern Germany in the 20th Century



    Germany on eve of WWI; military fiasco and creation of Weimar Republic; Weimar, Berlin, Munich, and Dresden; attempt to forge democracy; Third Reich and transformation of German society; WWII and Final Solution; Communist Germany and Federal Germany; two societies and two states since 1945; unified Germany since 1990.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5682 - Nazi Germany



    Rise of Hitler to 1933; Hitler takeover; totalitarianization of Germany; Nazi foreign policy; WWII: Hitler’s war on Jews; Hitler’s fall; meaning of fascism.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5715 - Sex, Crime and Deviance in Europe, 1200-1800



    Explores sexuality, deviance and crime in early modern Europe, contrasting imaginary crimes, e.g. witchcraft, with “real” crimes such as highway robbery and infanticide. Examines impact of gender, sexual orientation, ethnicity, and class in process of criminalization in European history, 1200-1800. Traces long-term changes in the definition, incidence and prosecution of particular crimes to changes in economy, social structure, government, religion and culture.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5730 - Making of the Balkans 1354 - 1908



    Examines the history of the Balkans from the rise of the Ottoman Empire to the beginnings of the Ottoman collapse. We will study the Ottoman conquests and the creation of Ottoman institutions in the Balkans, collaboration and resistance to Ottoman rule among Balkan peoples, the region’s social, cultural, and religious development as well as the fate of the Balkan peoples and states caught between Ottoman, Hapsburg and Russian efforts at imperial expansion. We will conclude by considering the rise of Balkan nationalism after 1800, the growth of great power intervention, as well as the efforts of the Greek, Romanian, Serb, an Bulgarian people at state-building.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5731 - Balkan dreams and nightmares: Southeastern Europe from 1908 to the Present



    Focuses on the Balkans from the beginnings of the Ottoman Empire’s collapse to the present. We will examine the political, military, social and cultural history of the Balkans paying special attention to how the region’s people and states responded to the challenges of both World Wars, their brief interwar independence, their post-Second World War absorption into the United States and Soviet blocs. We will conclude by examining the collapse of Communism, the region’s post- 1989 transformation, and the sources and impact of Yugoslavia’s collapse and division as well as the efforts of other countries in the Balkans to take part in European integration.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5740 - European Strategy & Diplomacy 1815-1914



    Diplomatic and strategic history from Congress of Vienna to WWI, including age of Metternich, Italian and German unification, new imperialism, and prewar alliances and alignments.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5741 - Origins of World War II, 1914-1941



    International problems of peace and war, international organization and alliances.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5742 - The Cold War, 1941-1989



    International problems of peace and war on worldwide scale since 1939, international organization and alliances. Topics will include global balance of power and ideologies.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5750 - World War I



    Covers the course of the “Great War” including its origins, conduct and aftermath. We will consider the military, diplomatic, and cultural factors that led to the outbreak of the war as well as how and why European governments and peoples were willing and able to sustain and expand their war. In addition to an intensive focus on the fighting itself the war’s great battles as well as the experience of combat of ordinary soldiers special topics will include (among others) the Armenian genocide, the deployment of WMDs (including both poison gas and blockades), wartime technological and military developments, the war at sea, the break-up of multi-national empires and the changing understanding and representation of the war.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5770 - History of Jewish Holocaust



    The origins of anti-Semitism in the West, the development of Nazi genocide, the reactions, including resistance, of European Jews, and the actions and inactions of bystander groups.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5790 - History of Sea Power



    Examination the role of navies and maritime strategy in war, diplomacy, and the world economy from ancient times to the present. The focus is on the development of the British and American sea power: doctrine and operations; the impact of politics, culture, geography, finance, and technology; and the future of sea power.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5820 - History of Russia



    Russian origins, Greek and Mongol influences, expansion of Muscovy, Ivan the Terrible, Peter the Great, Catherine the Great, Russia as great power, and shapes of its 19th-century society.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5821 - Russia: Road to Revolution 1825-1917



    From czarist Russia to the communist revolution. Background for revolution: origins of Russian socialism, rapid social and economic change, 1905 Revolution, war and the collapse of the Romanov dynasty in 1917.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5822 - Soviet Union



    Soviet Union since the 1917 Revolution. Stalinism, WWII and expansion, Krushchev, Brezhnev. Emphasis on internal affairs.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5823 - The USSR in World War II



    History of the Soviet Union during WWII. Topics include wartime diplomacy, espionage, social and political history of the USSR during the war, the creation of the communist states in Eastern Europe after the war, and the origins of the cold war.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5830 - History of Poland, 966-1905



    Poland from earliest times to 1905. The rise of the Piast Polish state, its eastward expansion, conflict and cooperation with the Teutonic knights and German settlers and the union with Lithuania in the 14th- century that created the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The commonwealth’s politics, culture, and multinational make-up, its struggles with its neighbors and partition. Political, social, and cultural life under foreign rule in the 19th- century and the struggle for Polish independence.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5831 - Modern Poland: War, Revolution and Peace from 1905 to the Present



    Explores developments in Poland from partition to independence; Polish struggles for sovereignty and imperial expansion in Eastern Europe; politics and culture in a multinational Poland, the tragedies of World War II, the Holocaust and subordination to the Soviet Union; the popular struggle to build a new, ethnically cleansed Poland and win autonomy with the eastern bloc; the vitality of religious life and nationalism; Poles’ successful struggle to free their country from Soviet control and Poland’s renewed independence after 1989. We will conclude by studying Poland’s contemporary society and politics.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5840 - Ethnic Cleansing in Modern European History



    Studies ethnic cleansing as a central issue in European history - including Europe’s colonies. Ethnic cleansing (for much of the 20th century termed “population transfer” or “expulsion”) was a policy initiated by numerous great and minor powers from the beginning to the end of the 20th century and provides important perspective on the development of human rights law and state and nation building (and empire breaking) throughout this time. Also considers how the legacy of ethnic cleansing lives on in international relations, politics, the arts, and the popular attitudes and culture of the victims and perpetrators of ethnic cleansing, and their relations toward one another and in the broader international community.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5860 - Shakespeare’s England, 1450-1603



    Surveys English history from the Wars of the Roses until the death of Queen Elizabeth I in 1603. During this period, England went from a country ravaged by internal war and depression to one characterized at home by peace, law and order, a rising prosperity, artistic and intellectual excellence, and abroad by war as its people and power spread beyond the shores of the British Isles. Major themes to be considered include the establishment of legal and social order in the wake of the Wars of the Roses; the Tudor ¿revolution in government; the Henrician and Protestant Reformations and their effects on English political, social, and cultural life; the economic disaster of the mid sixteenth century; overseas exploration; the flowering of English culture and the arts; war with Spain; relations with Scotland and Ireland; and the ways in which England was governed.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5861 - Revolutionary Britain, 1603-1702



    Surveys English history during the reign of the Stuarts. Major themes to be considered include the union of the crowns of England and Scotland and the problems of multiple monarchies; the nascent British empire; the nature of religious life in a post-Reformation world; the often fractious relationship between religion and politics; radicalism during the Civil War and Interregnum and its lasting effects on English political, religious, intellectual, and cultural life; and England’s roles on the European and world stages.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5863 - English History to 1688



    Surveys the social, political, religious, and constitutional history of England from its first settlement until the end of James II’s reign. Major topics to be considered include the impact of the Roman, Christian, Viking, and Norman conquests of England; the demographic, social, and political crises of the late medieval period; religious reformation during the 16th- century; and England’s relationship to Britain, Europe, and the world.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5864 - Making Modern Britain, 1702-1815



    Surveys Britain’s history between the War of the Spanish Succession and the end of the Napoleonic Wars. Major themes to be considered include the development of a fiscal-military state; the birth of modern party politics; economic growth and its consequences; the expansion of Britain’s world power and the loss of its North American colonies; the place of religious beliefs and institutions in an increasingly polite and commercial society; the pressures for social and political reforms; and the “Second Hundred Years War” with France.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5865 - Churchill’s Britain



    Britain in the 20th- century, focusing on the country’s decline from world power: Britain’s modern constitution; the onset of trouble before 1914; the experience of two world wars; society and policy between the wars, especially appeasement and its background; postwar developments, including the welfare state, the “special relationship” with the United States, and European integration.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5866 - History and Strategy of the Afghan Wars



    Examines the history of strategic rivalry in Afghanistan and the borderlands of Central, South, and West Asia. Topics include the geopolitical setting and premodern precedents of contemporary policy; Britain’s Afghan Wars and the Great Game of empire in Asia; the interests and influences of Pakistan, Iran, India, and China; the Soviet war of the 1980s and its consequences; and developments since 2001.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5867 - Rise of the British Empire



    Examines sources, strategies, ideologies, and impact of the British Empire in the 19th- century. Evaluation of British imperialism from regional as well as metropolitan perspectives, giving particular emphasis to the imperial roots of globalization; how the use of technology and information interlocked the British Empire as a worldwide network of trade, investment, migration, and military power.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5868 - Fall of the British Empire



    Evaluation of the fate of the British Empire in the 20th- century, focusing on the global impact as well as the process of decolonization. Topics include the question of imperial overstretch; development of the Commonwealth; India’s independence; and Britain’s withdrawal from its smaller dependencies in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East through the return of Hong Kong to China in 1997.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5870 - European Intellectual and Cultural, 18th-20th- Centuries



    Intellectual and cultural trends from the Enlightenment to the beginning of the 20th- century. Themes include economic liberalism, philosophical liberalism, revolution, romanticism, nationalism, philosophy of history, Marxism, Nietzsche, racism, Antisemitism, Social Darwinism, interpretive sociology, and comparative history.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5871 - European Intellectual and Cultural, 20th- Century



    Intellectual and cultural currents in 20th- century Europe. Themes include radicalization of intellectual life, Freud and psychoanalysis, fascism, Nazism, Communism, capitalism, feminism, postwar conservatism, post-modernism, collapse of European communism, and fin-de-siecle liberalism.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 5900 - Special Topics in History



    Specific course content will vary with offering.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 1.0-15.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 1.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,CR,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 6000 - Seminar in United States History



    Topics and research in U.S. history.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated for a maximum of 8.0 hours.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 4.0 seminar

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 6100 - Seminar in Latin American History



    Literature and source materials in Latin American History; readings and reports.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated for a maximum of 8.0 hours.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 4.0 seminar

    Eligible grades: A-F,CR,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 6300 - Seminar in African History



    Research and scholarship in African history.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated for a maximum of 8.0 hours.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 4.0 seminar

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 6400 - Seminar: Southeast Asia



    Research and historiography of Southeast Asian history.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated for a maximum of 8.0 hours.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 4.0 seminar

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 6500 - Seminar in East Asian History



    Study and research in the history of East Asia

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated for a maximum of 8.0 hours.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 4.0 seminar

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 6600 - Seminar in European History



    Research in European history.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated for a maximum of 8.0 hours.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 4.0 seminar

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 6700 - Learning and Teaching World History for Graduate Students



    World History is a comparatively new, or at least newly redefined and newly important, field of teaching, research, and writing in our discipline. Many history graduate students have never studied it, or have been introduced to it only in cursory or piecemeal fashion, yet are increasingly called upon to refer to it, utilize its findings and insights in their own work, and … teach it. One obvious goal is to provide a quick and broad-brushed overview of the basic content of World History. Covers major periods in world history from the beginning to the present, highlighting major global changes and their interconnectness. A second goal is to develop a sensitivity to and critical sense about such fundamental matters as structure, generalization, and perspective in World History. Considerable time is spent discussing these, and emphasizing areas in which comparative study is and is not appropriate. A third goal is to introduce some of the major themes and issues that attract debate among world historians these days, and to appreciate the strengths and weaknesses which they pose. This attention to current historiography, especially in a new field, is critical for showing the differences and similarities between today’s World History and other perspectives on the study of the past. Along the way, we will consider some strategies for coming to terms with the welter of information and opinion in this often unwieldy field, and for approaching it in ways that are useful to learning and understanding what it has to offer to the study of other varieties of history. A final aim is to introduce graduate students to the many challenges and approaches to teaching this subject. The intent is not only to prepare graduate students for teaching their own World History surveys, but to suggest ways in which they can incorporate global perspectives into their own scholarship and into a variety of possible teaching assignments. Students follow common readings and individual readings, and produce weekly papers on these readings, which are discussed intensively in a seminar setting. The final portion is devoted to students producing an original syllabus for an undergraduate course in World History (either Before 1750 or Since 1750), of sufficient quality to be used in the classroom. This intended to better prepare our graduates to enter the real teaching world of today, in which most will be asked at one time another to talk about and teach World History, and in which having taken a course like this can be a critical factor in an academic job interview.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 4.0 seminar

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 6900 - Special Topics in History



    Specific course content will vary with offering.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 1.0-15.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 1.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,CR,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 6901 - Colloquium in United States History



    Literature and source materials in United States history. Readings and reports.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated for a maximum of 20.0 hours.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 seminar

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 6902 - Colloquium in Latin American History



    Literature and source materials in Latin American history. Readings and reports.

    Requisites
    Max repeat hours up to 20
    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated for a maximum of 20.0 hours.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 seminar

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 6903 - Colloquium in European History



    Literature and source materials in European History from ancient times to the present. Readings and writing.

    Requisites
    Max repeat hours up to 20
    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated for a maximum of 20.0 hours.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 seminar

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 6904 - Colloquium in the History of Southeast Asia



    Issues and topics in Southeast Asian history and culture generally, with particular emphasis on selected developments in 19th- and 20th-centuries. Readings and reports.

    Requisites
    Max repeat hours up to 20
    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated for a maximum of 20.0 hours.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 seminar

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 6905 - Colloquium in Middle Eastern History



    Literature and source materials in Middle Eastern History. Readings and reports.

    Requisites
    Max repeat hours up to 20
    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated for a maximum of 20.0 hours.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 seminar

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 6906 - Colloquium in African History



    Literature and source materials of African history. Readings and reports.

    Requisites
    Max repeat hours up to 20
    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated for a maximum of 20.0 hours.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 seminar

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 6907 - Colloquium in East Asian History



    Selected topics in the history of Japan, China or Korea. Readings and reports.

    Requisites
    Max repeat hours up to 20
    Credit Hours: 4.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated for a maximum of 20.0 hours.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 seminar

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 6930 - Directed Study in History



    Intensive individual work either in research or individual systematic reading along lines of student’s special interest and under supervision of staff members.

    Requisites
    Permission required
    Credit Hours: 1.0-6.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated for a maximum of 20.0 hours.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 4.0 independent study

    Eligible grades: A-F,CR,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 6950 - Thesis



    Writing of a Master’s thesis.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 1.0-16.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 4.0 thesis/dissertation

    Eligible grades: A-F,CR,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 8900 - Special Topics in History



    Specific course content will vary with offering.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 1.0-15.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 1.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,CR,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 8930 - Independent Study



    Topic and content arranged between faculty member and student.

    Requisites
    Permission required
    Credit Hours: 1.0-15.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated for a maximum of 20.0 hours.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 1.0 independent study

    Eligible grades: A-F,CR,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HIST 8950 - Dissertation



    Writing of doctoral dissertation.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 1.0-16.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 1.0 thesis/dissertation

    Eligible grades: A-F,CR,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 5120 - Global Health Programming



    Addresses diverse and rapidly changing health problems in underdeveloped and industrialized countries while exploring roles of health professionals. Surveys program interventions and solutions that are available or under development.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 5300 - Health Issues: U.S. Underserved Populations



    In-depth analysis of critical health issues germane to underserved populations in the United States. Emphasis on those groups suffering the most profound consequences of health problems and disease.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 5900 - Special Topics in Health



    Specific course content will vary with offering.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 1.0-15.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 1.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,CR,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6010 - Introduction to the U.S. Health Care Delivery System



    Overview and analysis of the U.S. health services system, including a detailed examination of how the system is organized, internal and external forces on the system, how services are delivered, and the mechanisms by which health care services are financed.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6020 - Information Systems for Health Services



    Overview and analysis of the technology, planning, and leadership issues associated with health care information systems, including the challenges of implementing information systems for health care organizations and delivery systems.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6030 - Leadership of Health Organizations



    Structure, organization, and function of health care delivery organizations and systems with emphasis on leadership concepts and issues such as control, change management, communication, and decision making.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6040 - Research and Quantitative Methods for Health Services



    Research methods and investigation in health and health care systems. Topics and problems focus on the application of quantitative methods by health care leaders in maximizing efficiency and effectiveness.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6060 - Gerontechnology



    An analysis of the health and environmental problems confronting an aging society and ways in which technology can be harnessed to address them. Topics and problems focus on existing technologies and their applicability for use by and for the elderly, and the identification of new technologies to enhance elderly independence both in the community and in healthcare settings.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6070 - Health Promotion and Health Behavior



    Theory and application of health promotion/education planning, implementation, and evaluation by health professions in a variety of settings. Emphasis on research related to determinants of health behavior, plus strategies and techniques used by professionals to foster human health.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6080 - Health Policy



    Impact of health care public policy; including the health administrator’s role in policy analysis, development, interpretation, and implementation.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6100 - Evaluation and Quality Improvement in Health Care



    Evaluation strategies to assess and improve health care efficiency, effectiveness, and quality, including use of quality standards and protocols.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6130 - Aging and Health



    Theories of aging involving changes in structure and performance presented. Emphasis on normal aging changes, positive mental health and aging, health promotion and maintenance of wellness, and community health.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6140 - Public Health Services in Underserved Rural Populations



    Issues related to and types of public health services in rural populations and the implications to people’s health. Discussion focuses on public health services and medical care services, health needs/concerns, and health care service disparities in rural and underserved populations. Other issues include collaboration in public health services, planning public health services, and community-based research in rural populations.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6150 - Maternal and Child Health in Africa



    Examination of the health of mothers, infants, and children and the strategies for improving maternal and child health in the context of African health and sociocultural issues.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6160 - Health Care and People of Africa



    Examination of health care delivery services in the context of African cultures, population-based public health practice and the provision of health practice and the provision of health care facilities for the people of the African regions.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6170 - HIV/AIDS in Africa



    Examination of contemporary pandemic HIV/AIDS and the opportunistic infections as they affect morbidity and mortality rates in Africa and the complex interwoven factors underlining control and prevention, social concerns, and policy implications in African cultures.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6210 - Health Care Finance



    Financial administration concepts and tools (such as financial statement analysis, time value of money, cost analysis and rate-setting, budgeting, portfolio theory, asset pricing models, valuation methods, and cost of capital) essential in sustaining viability of various health care organizations.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6220 - Health Care Reimbursement



    Examination of payment mechanism characteristics and their effects on leadership decisions in various health care delivery organizations and systems.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6240 - Community Health Programs



    Institutional framework and activities of various agencies promoting and maintaining health of people of community, state, and nation.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,CR,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6280 - Health Law



    Interface between the legal system and health care delivery system, considering the roles and rights of key U.S. health care stakeholders, including: patients, administrators, governing boards, state and federal government, third-party payors, and health care providers.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6300 - Epidemiology in Health Administration



    Rational basis for setting priorities and allocating scarce health care resources, including use of methodologically sound health statistics; understanding of natural history, classification, and prevention levels of disease; measurement of morbidity and mortality; causal inference; appropriate sources of health care data; and epidemiological principles.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6350 - Human Resources Leadership in Health Care



    Practical aspects of human resource leadership in various health care settings to optimize the performance of a diverse workforce.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6380 - Strategic Planning and Marketing in Health Care



    Processes involved in health care organization strategic planning and marketing, exploring community and health care needs assessment, strategic marketing design, business scenarios, decision analysis, feasibility studies, implementation strategies, and evaluation methods.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6480 - Ethical Issues in Health Care



    Exploration of dominant ethical theories and applicable principles relevant to current clinical and leadership issues in health care.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6530 - Managed Care



    Overview and analysis of the impact of managed care on care delivery; examination of key issues confronting administrators working for and with managed care organizations.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6600 - Management Applications in Health Care



    Integration of MHA program learning with the problems of the practice environment by focus on a specific health care organizational project.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6710 - Public Health Concepts



    Definitions of public health, organizational structure, history, law, ethics, essential services, global programs, and future public health. Unifying theme is health disparities of population groups.

    Requisites
    MPH Major
    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6720 - Social and Behavioral Sciences in Public Health



    Social and behavioral science concepts, diversity issues, theories of health education and promotion, applications to public health issues, and interventions in reference to communication, collaboration, and strategies.

    Requisites
    MPH Major
    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6730 - Epidemiology in Public Health



    Covers the fundamental epidemiological concepts, methods, and their practical applications. Health/disease status measurements, the principles of causality, and epidemiological study designs will be studied. Evaluation of risk factors and the effectiveness of interventions targeting them will be discussed.

    Requisites
    MPH Major
    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6740 - Biostatistics in Public Health



    Principles of biostatistics in the context of multiple public health applications including basic and advanced statistical techniques for analyzing and investigating public health issues including disparities.

    Requisites
    MPH Major
    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6750 - Health Services Administration in Public Health



    Management and administration concepts as they apply to public health entities or settings/systems that use a public health perspective in service delivery.

    Requisites
    MPH Major
    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6760 - Environmental Health Sciences in Public Health



    Air/water quality, food hygiene, sanitation municipal/infectious/hazardous waste, vector-borne disease, occupational health, legal and risk issues, global issues, and other special topics.

    Requisites
    MPH Major
    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6770 - Grant and Proposal Writing in Public Health



    Methods and techniques for writing and managing grant proposals to support public health programs. Emphasis on development of grant proposals, including narrative, program plan, evaluation design, time line, budget justification, identifying grant sources, managing funded projects, and developing requests for proposals.

    Requisites
    HLTH 6710 and 6720 and 6730 and 6740 and MPH major
    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6780 - Public Health Practice and Issues



    In an organizational setting, the following topics will be explored: health informatics and communication, diversity and cultural proficiency, and public health professional ethics. These topics are emerging public health issues, which will be applied in a practice setting. This is a required course in the Master of Public Health program with two-thirds of the content being presented online and one-third in a practice setting.

    Requisites
    HLTH 6710 and 6720 and 6730 and 6740 and MPH major
    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6790 - Seminar



    Research and investigation in health and health care. Topics and problems suitable for thesis writing, methods of research, writing practice, and critical analysis of outline for research study.

    Requisites
    MPH Major
    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May be repeated for a maximum of 6.0 hours.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 seminar

    Eligible grades: A-F,CR,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6791 - Chronic Disease Epidemiology, Prevention, and Control



    The epidemiology of heart disease, hypertension, stroke, diabetes, cancer, chronic lung diseases, chronic neurologic disorders, and musculoskeletal diseases will be studied. Risk factors, extent, and modern public health approaches to prevention and control of major chronic diseases will be covered. The public health burden of chronic disease will also be discussed.

    Requisites

    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
  
  • HLTH 6795 - Public Health Research and Evaluation



    Public Health Research and Evaluation is a theoretical and applied course on research methods. Students will critically review journal articles, create research questions, conduct comprehensive literature reviews, employ quantitative and qualitative research methods that fall within institutional review board parameters, and develop and execute a data analysis plan. Culmination of coursework will be individual oral presentation and mock journal article.

    Requisites
    HLTH 6730 and 6740 and admission to the MPH Program
    Credit Hours: 3.0
    Repeat/Retake Information: May not be retaken.

    Lecture/Lab Hours: 3.0 lecture

    Eligible grades: A-F,CR,PR,WP,WF,FN,FS,AU,I
 

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