Liberal Studies - American Civilization and Culture Concentration (Historical Focus)

Parent Program: 
Overview & Highlights: 

The following courses are required for this concentration. The general education courses listed are only those required for this concentration. A total of 57 - 63 units are required for general education (not including the language requirement).

Degree Course Listings: 

General Education Requirements
BIOL 101LPrinciples of Biology4 units
HIST 150American Civilization4 units
LIT 180Introduction to Literature3 units
PE 120Dance Movement1 unit
PHYS 150LPhysical Science4 units
PHYS 150Earth Science3 units
PSY 120Introduction to Psychology3 units
Liberal Studies Required Courses
ART 300Art Fundamentals3 units
DRA 355Creative Drama3 units
HIST 440California History and Politics4 units
ENV 150Introduction to Environmental Studies4 units
LA 380Learning Communities1 unit
LANG 310First and Second Language Acquisition3 units
LANG 340Introduction to Linguistics3 units
LIT 465Literature for Children and Young Adults3 units
MATH 132Arithmetic and Data Analysis3 units
MATH 134Algebraic Thinking and Geometry3 units
MUS 305Music in the Classroom3 units
KIN 460Elementary Physical Education Methods3 units
PSY 350Child Development3 units
SOC 310Cultural Communities of California3 units
 OR 
SOC 410American Ethnicity and Pluralism3 units
American Civilization & Culture Concentration (Historical Focus)        Required Courses
American Civilization: Intellectual History
 Select one of the following: 
HIST 350American Religious History3 units
HIST 430American Wilderness Literature and Philosophy3 units
HIST 435American Intellectual History4 units
LIT 355American Literature: Beginnings to 19th Century3 units
LIT 360American Literature: 20th Century3 units
American Civilization: Social/Political History
 Select one of the following: 
PS 385Urban Society and the Welfare State4 units
PS 430America in a Global Community4 units
American Civilization: Its Changing Character
HIST 425Twentieth Century America4 units

ART 300: Art Fundamentals (3 units)

  • This course is designed to introduce studio art, art history, art criticism and aesthetics to the future elementary school teacher. This class will provide a foundation for life-long learning within the art discipline. Competencies pertaining to art instruction will be developed through various art experiences based upon art education theory and practice.

BIOL 101L: Principles of Biology (4 units)

  • An examination of the cell, inheritance, ecology, human biology, the diversity of life and evolutionary theory. Emphasis is given to understanding central concepts and to the process of science. Attention is also given to the relationships between biology and Christian faith and practice. It provides foundational understandings for general education and liberal studies.

DRA 355: Creative Drama (3 units)

  • This course equips people to lead others in process-oriented creative drama activities, including theater games, group improvisation, storytelling and related performance forms.

ENV 150: Introduction to Environmental Studies (4 units)

  • An interdisciplinary study of the relationships between people and their environment. The use of natural resources, environmental degradation and human population are examined from ecological, social and religious perspectives.

HIST 150: American Civilization (4 units)

  • A study of the development of American culture and society from the colonial period to the present. Major themes and events are examined within the context of America's geography, religious and immigrant heritage and sociopolitical development. (This course meets the U.S. Constitution requirement for teaching credential candidates.)

HIST 350: American Religious History (3 units)

  • A survey of the way the American religious tradition has contributed to the shaping of American political, social and cultural life, and the way the American experience has in turn shaped the religious tradition.

HIST 425: Twentieth Century America (4 units)

  • A study of the emergence, development and nature of American industrial and urban society. Particular attention is given to the political and economic systems, the various social movements that have on occasion challenged them, the creation of a welfare state and the development of an expansionist foreign policy. A counter theme of resistance to the modernizing impulse is explored as well.

HIST 430: American Wilderness Literature and Philosophy (3 units)

  • Exploration of American ideas about wilderness, the natural world and human relationships to them. Includes a four-day field trip to the eastern side of the Sierra Nevada. Readings include Thoreau, Muir, Austin, Abbey, Snyder and Williams.

HIST 435: American Intellectual History (4 units)

  • Surveys the development of American patterns of thought from the Colonial period to the present. Topics include Puritanism, the Enlightenment, democratic social theory, philosophical naturalism, pragmatism and modern science.

HIST 440: California History and Politics (4 units)

  • California is often viewed as the "trendsetter" for the rest of the nation. This course seeks to explain why by acquainting students with the social, cultural, economic and political development of California from early settlement to the present. At the same time, it familiarizes them with the state's current political system and the politics that surround it. (Meets the California history and government requirement for teaching credential candidates.) 

KIN 460: Elementary Physical Education Methods (3 units)

LA 380: Learning Communities (1 unit)

  • A seminar course with two hours per week of field experience that will focus on learning communities of elementary educational systems. The course will involve analysis and evaluation of classroom observations in relation to academic studies of the multiple subject programs.

LANG 310: First and Second Language Acquisition (3 units)

  • An introduction to the ways human beings acquire a first and second language and the conditions that support acquisition.

LANG 340: Introduction to Linguistics (3 units)

  • Language is studied as a system of systems including phonology, syntax, semantics and pragmatics. Students also discuss language universals and current usage standards. 

LIT 180: Introduction to Literature (3 units)

  • A study of outstanding examples of the short story, novel, poetry and drama genres. Designed to introduce the student to the world of literature, to create an appreciation for it and to provide analytical tools for further study.

LIT 355: American Literature: Beginnings to 19th Century (3 units)

  • A study of poetry, fiction and nonfiction during this period of literature, including such authors as Louisa May Alcott, Emily Dickinson, Henry David Thoreau and Walt Whitman. Texts will be studied in relation to their cultural and historical contexts.

LIT 360: American Literature: 20th Century (3 units)

  • Study and analysis of American writers from diverse ethnic, cultural, and racial backgrounds who challenge traditional definitions of American identity. Authors may include Ernest Hemingway, Langston Hughes, Sylvia Plath and Gloria Anzaldua.

LIT 465: Literature for Children and Young Adults (3 units)

  • This course is a survey course in the literature for children from preschool through junior high school. The course is particularly designed to assist teachers and teacher candidates in the selection and use of literature in the classroom.

MATH 132: Arithmetic and Data Analysis (3 units)

  • This course is one of the two courses required for liberal studies majors intending to be elementary school teachers. The purpose of the course is to strengthen the students' conceptual understanding of the mathematics taught in the K-7 settings. Topics will include: numeration systems, a variety of algorithmic structures in arithmetic, simple set theory, probability, descriptive statistics, graphical interpretations of data, construction of appropriate graphical structures.

MATH 134: Algebraic Thinking and Geometry (3 units)

  • This course is one of the two courses required for liberal studies majors intending to be elementary school teachers. The purpose of the course is to strengthen the students' conceptual understanding of mathematics taught in the K-7 settings. Topics will include: the interplay of algebra and arithmetic, generalization of algorithms from arithmetic to algebra, functions and equations, the hierarchical ordering of operations, basic analytic geometry, elementary geometric ideas of area, perimeter, classification and spatial relationships.

MUS 305: Music in the Classroom (3 units)PE 120: Dance Movement (1 unit)

  • Music skills and effective means of teaching them are the subject of this class. A variety of approaches to teaching music, including the Kodaly method, will be explored. Students will learn the basics of reading and performing music. This course fulfills the requirement of the liberal studies major.

PE 120: Dance Movement (1 unit)

PHYS 105L: Physical Science (4 units)

  • An integrative study of the physical sciences, including the history and methods of science, the relationship of scientific truth and biblical truth and the relationship of modern technology to science and its consequences for society.

PHYS 150: Earth Science (3 units)

  • This course presents the concepts of the major geological processes affecting the physical earth and helps students appreciate the earth and understand environmental concerns. Exercises in mineral identification are also included.

PS 385: Urban Society and the Welfare State (4 units)

  • As America has become an increasingly urbanized society, growing numbers of people have become dependent upon governmental assistance to meet certain basic human needs. The result has been the gradual evolution of a welfare state—welcomed by some, resisted by others. This course acquaints students with the nature of current social welfare institutions and activities, provides an understanding of the political milieu that has shaped them over time, develops an awareness of the impact they have had on their recipients and stimulates the beginnings of a value-based personal perspective regarding how an individual should respond to the issues of social justice. 

PS 430: America in a Global Community (4 units)

  • The world is increasingly becoming a global community, and America finds itself faced with the challenges and opportunities of living in such a world. But what does it mean to live in a global community? Does America see itself and behave as a member of a global community? This course will explore answers to these questions by examining the nature of American foreign policy since World War II, analyzing various international issues and problems of contemporary concern and exploring what America's response to them should be. 

PSY 120: Introduction to Psychology (3 units)

  • The objectives of this course are to present the student with an overview of the facts and issues of the discipline, to examine the relationship of psychology to religion and to explore the implications of the subject matter for how we live. Such topics as perception, learning, biofeedback, stress, normality, therapy and community are discussed.

PSY 350: Child Development (3 units)

  • A study of the development of the child from conception to adolescence. Topics of development, such as physical, intellectual, social, emotional and moral are studied.

SOC 310: Cultural Communities of California (3 units)

  • An examination of the folklore and historical background of the major "parallel" cultural (minority) groups in California, including but not limited to Native American, African American, Hispanic, Pacific Islander and other Asian American populations. Though special attention is given to cultural groups students come into contact with, national and global, social and cultural issues are explored to enhance their understanding of the similarities and differences among the diverse groups in society. SOC 482 must be taken simultaneously if this is being used to meet a focus series requirement.

SOC 410: American Ethnicity and Pluralism (3 units)

  • A study of the history of immigration, racism, discrimination and assimilation in American society. The experiences of various ethnic groups in America from the nation's founding to the present are examined and the rise of pluralism as the current model for structuring ethnic diversity in American institutional life is explored. SOC 482 must be taken simultaneously if this course is being used to meet a Focus Series requirement.
 
 
 
 
Tuition & Fees