PSU Extended Campus Programs
Welcome
PSU at PCC Cascade - Winter 2010
| Anth. 399 Old World Prehistory (Meet online first week)
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(4 cr) |
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CRN: |
45042 |
Section: |
C2 |
| Instructor: |
Sarah Sterling |
| Day: |
Wednesday |
| Time: |
5:30 - 9:00 p.m. |
| Room: |
Terrell Hall TH 122 |
| Starts: |
Jan. 4 |
| Notes: |
Meet in class: Jan. 13, 27, Feb. 10, 24, March 10.
This course provides an introduction to how archaeological methods and techniques can tell us about both the prehistoric and historic past in the Old World (Europe, Africa and Asia). We begin with the debate surrounding the appearance of Anatomically Modern Humans in Africa and Europe and end with the emergence of complex cultures in the Old World approximately 3000 - 4000 years ago. |
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Course taught partially online |
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| Eng 340 Medieval Lit: Chaucer (Meet in class first week)
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(4 cr) |
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CRN: |
45754 |
Section: |
W41 |
| Instructor: |
Sean Pollack |
| Day: |
Wednesday |
| Time: |
6:00 - 9:30 pm |
| Room: |
Jackson Hall JH 112 |
| Starts: |
Jan. 6 |
| Notes: |
Meet in class: Jan. 6, 20, Feb. 3, 17 and March 3.
Who was Geoffrey Chaucer? The author of Canterbury Tales and Troilus and Criseyde was a fourteenth century poet, courtier, diplomat, and bureaucrat who almost single-handedly brought the Italian Renaissance to England. In this course we will look at Chaucer's texts, life, times, and most importantly, his language. Yes, we will read Chaucer in Middle English, and no previous experience with medieval English literature is presumed or required. If you've always wondered what Chaucer was all about, this is your introduction. If you've read Chaucer before, but want to get deeper into his world of bawdy tales, knights, lovers, scholars, and his transformations of classical myths and Italian humanism, this is what you've been waiting for. |
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Course taught partially online |
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| PS 399 Role of the Vice Presidency (Meet in class first week)
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(4 cr) |
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CRN: |
45041 |
Section: |
C1 |
| Instructor: |
James Hite |
| Day: |
Wednesday |
| Time: |
5:30 - 9:00 p.m. |
| Room: |
Terrell Hall TH 122 |
| Starts: |
Jan. 6 |
| Notes: |
Meet in class: Jan. 6, 20, Feb. 3, 17, March 3.
This course explores the American vice presidency as it has grown from an office of relative obscurity and constitutional insignificance, to arguably one of the most influential political and policy positions in the federal government. |
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Course taught partially online |
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