Senior
Seminar
(3 Semester Hours)
(To be taken after the student has completed 75 semester hours.)
Senior seminars are offered in a number of subjects and disciplines each
semester, each one organized around a particular subject/issue important to
contemporary society. Each seminar is listed by title and instructor in the
schedule of courses each semester. The student must successfully complete a
seminar outside of his or her major. Majors excluded from each seminar are
given in each course description.
The Senior Seminar is designed to be a cross-disciplinary capstone
experience and an integral part of the core curriculum. Students are required
to develop their analytical and critical skills through extensive and
concentrated class discussions and debate in a specialty beyond their
particular discipline. These seminars promote an open approach to the ideas
presented and their role in society, with particular emphasis on their relationships
to other disciplines. An enrollment cap allows this particular approach and
provides an unusual, if not unique, experience for most undergraduate students.
- EIU
4100G, Folklore, Culture, and Society. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4101G, Spaceship Earth: The Present State. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4102G, Technology and Society. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4103G, Physical Activity and Mental Wellness. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4104G, World Film: Language and Culture in Film. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4105G, Controversial Issues in Education. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4106G, War Stories. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4107G, The Idea of a University: Yesterday and
Today. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4108G, The Changing World of Women. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4109G, The Politics of Human Rights. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4110G, Frontiers of Communication. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4111G, Plants and Civilization. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4112G, Women and Technology. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4113G, The European Union. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4115G, Pop Culture Economics. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4118G, Sociobiology: The Biological Origins of Social Practices. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4121G, Leisure Time: The American Perspective. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4123G, Social Movements, Crowds and Violence. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4125G, Cultural Diversity in the United States. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4126G, Body, Health, and Society. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4128G, Politics and Popular Culture. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4129G, Law and Technology. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4131G, Modern Biomedical Science: Promise and Problems. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4142G, Telecommunication Issues in the Third Millennium. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4151G, Nutritional Dilemmas and Decisions. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4155G, The European Witchhunts.
(3-0-3)
- EIU
4157G, Impact of Communication Disorders: Adjusting to Cultural Demands.
(3-0-3)
- EIU
4158G, Freedom of Expression. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4160G, Personal Financial Investments. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4161G, Theatre as a Soapbox. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4162G, Women's Voices: Women in the Theatre. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4165G, Journalistic Media in Society. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4167G, The Meaning of Life. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4168G, The Internet as a Social Phenomenon.
(3-0-3)
- EIU
4169G, Women in Science. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4170G, History on Film. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4171G, Comics, Manga, and Graphic Novels:
History of Graphic Narratives. (3-0-3)
- EIU
4190G, Spaceship Earth: The
Present State, Honors. (4-0-4)
- EIU
4191G, Leisure Time: The American Perspective,
Honors. (4-0-4)
- EIU
4192G, Film and Contemporary Society, Honors. (4-0-4)
- EIU
4193G, The Holocaust, Honors. (4-0-4)
- EIU
4194G, Leadership: Theory & Practice. (4-0-4)
- EIU
4195G, The European Witchhunts, Honors. (4-0-4)
- EIU
4197G, Freedom of Expression: Dissent, Hate and Heresy, Honors. (4-0-4)
- EIU 4198G,
Mischievous Molds, Honors. (4-0-4)
- EIU
4199G, The Politics of Human Rights, Honors. (4-0-4)
- EIU
4290G, Plants and Civilization, Honors. (4-0-4)
- EIU
4291G, Pop Culture Economics, Honors. (4-0-4)
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