Global Learning Resources
Curriculum Transformation
Crossroads
in the Study of the Americas (CISA), the Five Colleges
Established by the Five Colleges, Inc.,
CISA is a curricular and co-curricular project that crosses disciplinary and national
boundares to examine contemporary issues of culture and citizenship. In this interview,
CISA Director Robbie Schwartzwald describes the process through which the idea for
Crossroads in the Study of the Americas center evolved, as well as the goals and
expectations he and his colleagues have for the center. Members of the Five College
Consortium are Amherst College, Hampshire College, Mount Holyoke College, Smith College,
and the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
Cultural
Encounters, St. Lawrence University's Intercultural and Area Studies Program
St. Lawrence's Cultural Encounters Program is designed both to provide an academic
context for the experiences of studying, working, and living among people from different
cultures, both in off-campus programs during college and after college; and to offer the
option of a challenging, thematically-integrated, alternative method of meeting various
course requirements. Cultural Encounters consists of these general components:
Core courses; Foreign language study; Science and mathematics requirements; at least one
semester on a St. Lawrence international program; a senior seminar. All courses
within the Cultural Encounters Program follow curricular
guidelines defining the three levels of study: Conceiving the World and Cultural
Encounters, in which students gain an understanding of their own and other cultures, and a
Program Seminar, which provides a forum for students to reflect on and integrate their
study abroad experiences with the coursework they have done over the preceding three
years.
Syllabi of Courses in St. Lawrence University's Cultural Encounters Program
- Cultural Encounters Senior Seminar: Comparative
Studies in Racial and Cultural Identities: Taught by Grant Cornwell and Eve
Stoddard, this capstone course draws on students' experiences in off-campus programs,
including a research project that will focus on questions about racial/cultural identities
synthesizing the experiences abroad or in a culturally distinctive U.S. off-campus
program, additional research, and the theoretical readings of the course.
- Creating Colonialism: the Literature of
Exploitation and Cultural Contact: Taught by John Hunter, this course studies
the descriptions of colonized territories written by their colonizers.
- Religious Studies 248N: Fundamentalism as
Cultural Encounter: Taught by T.B. Coburn, this course examines religion and the
concept of "fundamentalism" in comparative cultural and social contexts,
including, but not limited to, modern India, the Islamic world, and North America.
- History 247: The Rise of the New Europe: Taught by Dr. Judith DeGroat, this seminar examines the changing concepts of
"Europe" and "European," the impact of non-European immigrants on the
culture and society of Europe, and the definitions of citizenship and their social impact
in culturally diverse societies.
- Fine Arts/Cultural Encounters 220: The Museum as
Cultural Crossroads: Taught by Dr. Dorothy Limouze, this course , which explores the
museum as a largely western phenomenon and as a lens through which the western world views
other cultures, familiarizes students both with the institution's history and with
contemporary critical appraisals.
- Greek Poetry, Philosophy, and Politics in a
Multicultural Context: Taught by Anne Mamary, this course examines ancient Greek
poetry, philosophy, and politics and how these texts developed in a multicultural
(African, Greek, and Semitic) context in the Mediterranean Basin. The class also considers
19th and 20th century discourses about these works and cultures.
Global
Studies Major, St. Lawrence University
The goal of St. Lawrence
University's Global Studies Major is to teach students to analyze comparatively the impact
of global processes on specific phenomena connected with, across and between geographical
areas. The program integrates student research into a major that is firmly based in
a set of core courses and is custom-designed to suit each student's research interests.
Information about the program is available on SLU's International & Intercultural
Studies web site.
Honors 343: Contemporary Japan, Lynchburg College
This course is designed to provide students with a broad understanding of
the nature of present day Japan. The emphasis is on the cultural, sociological, political,
and economic dimensions of life in Japan. Four primary areas will be covered in the
course: history and geography of the country with emphasis on the roles that these have
played in shaping the current environment; issues linked to living patterns such as career
choices, the role of religion in society, the role of women, and family and group
dynamics; business and economic aspects of Japan, emphasizing the post World War II period
of rapid development and Japan's current and future role in the global economy; and the
nature of the political structure and processes and how these have shaped contemporary
Japan. Throughout each of these sections emphasis will be on how political,
economic, and sociological forces have influenced contemporary Japanese society, and how
these forces are likely to affect the future shape of the nation.
Sex, Health, and AIDS, the University of Arizona
Team taught by Professor Susan Craddock and Dr. Sally Stevens, this course
explores HIV and AIDS from a variety of perspectives, including its biology and pathology,
its impact on communication and sexual practices among college students, the social and
economic causes of HIV/AIDS in the United States and elsewhere in the world, and the
politics of medical research and health care funding. The course attempts to
challenge commonly held perceptions about the origins, causes, and social constructions of
AIDS; to examine the reasons why people might not change behaviors that put them at a
health risk; and to tackle the difficulties of policy formation and community action.
AAC&U offers these resources only as possible models of interest and has not submitted each of them to any substantial peer or quality review. If you have questions about any particular resource, please contact the institution sponsoring it directly.
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