Undergraduate Course Catalog 2016-2017
College of Liberal Arts
» http://cola.unh.edu
Dean: Heidi Bostic
Associate Dean: Mary E. Rhiel , Brett M. Gibson
Faculty Fellow: Susan M. Hertz
Introduction
It is the purpose of the College of Liberal Arts, as a center of learning and scholarship, to help students achieve an understanding of the heritage of civilization and to educate them in the tradition of the past and realities of the present so they may recognize and act upon their obligations to the future.
The college seeks to meet the educational needs of each student through the development of interests and skills, which, combined with the individual’s potential, make possible a richer, more useful life.
Combined Programs of Study
In addition to pursuing a single major, students may combine programs of study as follows:
Minors: See University Academic Requirements, Liberal Arts Interdisciplinary Programs, and University Interdisciplinary Minors.
Interdisciplinary majors: See Liberal Arts Interdisciplinary Programs.
Second majors: See University Academic Requirements.
Dual-degree programs: See University Academic Requirements.
Student-designed majors: See Special University Programs.
Other combined programs and interdisciplinary opportunities: See Special University Programs.
Proficiency in a Foreign Language
Please see the explanation of this University requirement under Degree Requirements: Bachelor of Arts.
Within the College of Liberal Arts, only those students majoring in linguistics, psychology, theatre and dance, or women's studies may use American Sign Language (ASL) to fulfill their foreign language proficiency requirement. English teaching majors who plan to pursue deaf studies may petition the English department to use ASL to fulfill their foreign language proficiency requirement.
College of Liberal Arts Center for Study Abroad
The College of Liberal Arts offers a number of managed study abroad programs that are administered by college faculty and the College of Liberal Arts Center for Study Abroad. These programs provide opportunities for liberal arts students as well as students in other colleges to experience and learn about different cultures and, in non-English-speaking countries, to increase proficiency in a foreign language.
Because the college administers these programs, registration, finances, and other logistics are streamlined and simple. Students pay UNH tuition and a single program fee, which covers housing, excursions, and, in some cases, board. Most UNH student fees are waived with the exception of the technology fee, a study abroad administration fee, and an international travel insurance fee. Students are guaranteed a full semester of credits (16) for the semester-long programs, and students are eligible for federal financial aid for the semester-long programs.
Please see the list of eligibility requirements under Study Abroad Programs.
The College of Liberal Arts Center for Study Abroad is located in 116 Murkland Hall. To learn more about any of the following programs, visit the Center or contact Jim Parsons, College of Liberal Arts study abroad coordinator, cola.studyabroad@unh.edu or james.parsons@unh.edu, (603) 862-3962.
Semester Programs
Chengdu, China: Spring semester study of Chinese language and culture at Chengdu University.
Faculty Director: Yige Wang, yige.wang@unh.edu, (603) 862-3565, 104 Huddleston Hall.
London, England: Fall and/or spring courses in British studies, the arts, humanities, social sciences, business, and a wide range of other subjects at Regent’s University, London.
Faculty Director: Douglas Lanier, douglas.lanier@unh.edu, (603) 862-3796, 12A Hamilton Smith Hall.
Dijon, France: Academic year, spring, or summer study of French language and other liberal arts courses (in French) at the Université de Bourgogne, Dijon.
Faculty Director: Claire Malarte-Feldman, claire.malarte-feldman@unh.edu, 210E Murkland Hall.
Legon, Ghana: Spring-term program in a wide range of courses at the University of Ghana, one of West Africa’s most prestigious universities.
Faculty Director: Burt Feintuch, burt.feintuch@unh.edu, (603) 862-4356, 23 Huddleston Hall.
Budapest, Hungary: Fall-term program with justice studies emphasis at Corvinus University.
Faculty Director: Charles Putnam, charles.putnam@unh.edu, (603) 862-7041, 208 Huddleston Hall.
Budapest, Hungary: Spring-term program focusing on the humanities, and modern Hungarian and Central European history and culture at Corvinus University.
Faculty Director: Stephen Trzaskoma, s.trzaskoma@unh.edu, (603) 862-3648, 306 Murkland Hall.
Ascoli Piceno, Italy: Summer, semester, or full-year study in the humanities, social sciences, and Italian language and culture at the UNH-in-Italy campus.
Faculty Director: Amy Boylan, amy.boylan@unh.edu, (603) 862-3551, 317 Murkland Hall.
Granada, Spain: Spring semester Spanish language immersion program with courses focusing on Spanish language and other disciplines at the Centro de Lenguas Modernas of the University of Granada.
Faculty Director: Lina Lee, llee@unh.edu, (603) 862-3123, 210H Murkland Hall.
Summer Programs
Ascoli Piceno, Italy: Various five- to six-week program options focusing on art, music, Italian language, and nutrition.
Faculty Director: Amy Boylan, amy.boylan@unh.edu, (603) 862-3551, 317 Murkland Hall.
Belize: Four-week summer Archaeological Field School in Belize.
Faculty Director: Eleanor Harrison-Buck, belize.fieldschool@unh.edu, (603) 862-4742, 311 Huddleston Hall.
Chengdu, China: Three-week summer program in Chinese language study at both the beginner and advanced levels at Chengdu University.
Faculty Director: Yige Wang, yige.wang@unh.edu, (603) 862-3565, 104 Huddleston Hall.
Costa Rica: Six-week summer program in Spanish language and culture at the Institute of San Joaquín de Flores.
Faculty Director: Lina Lee, llee@unh.edu, (603) 862-3123, 210H Murkland Hall.
Cambridge, England: Six-week summer program offering courses in history, literature, and humanities at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge University.
Faculty Director: Dennis Britton, dennis.britton@unh.edu, (603) 862-1206, 122 Hamilton Smith Hall.
Berlin, Germany: Five-week summer immersion program in German language and culture at the BSI Private Language School in central Berlin.
Faculty Director: Mary Rhiel, mary.rhiel@unh.edu, (603) 862-0063, Murkland Hall.
Russia: Four-week summer program in Russian language, culture, mythology and propaganda in Moscow, St. Petersburg, and on the Trans-Siberian Railway.
Faculty Director: Arna Bronstein, arna.bronstein@unh.edu, (603) 862-3445, 304 Murkland Hall.
January Term and Short-Term Programs
Belize: Three-week January term course in archaeological survey and mapping in Belize.
Faculty Director: Eleanor Harrison-Buck, belize.fieldschool@unh.edu, (603) 862-4742, 311 Huddleston Hall.
London, England: January term course, the London Experience, a ten-day experience of the theatre of London with insights into its politics, society, and culture as reflected in the arts.
Faculty Director: David Kaye, london.experience@unh.edu, (603) 862-0667, M313 Paul Creative Arts Center.
London, England: Three-week January term course on travel writing with two weeks in London.
Faculty Director: Susan Hertz, susan.hertz@unh.edu, 108 Hamilton Smith Hall.
Rome, Italy: January term course on ancient Roman architecture and society at the Intercollegiate Center for Classical Studies in Rome.
Faculty Director: R. Scott Smith, scott.smith@unh.edu, (603) 862-2388, 301 Murkland Hall.
Research Centers and Institutes
Center for New England Culture
cola.unh.edu/center-new-england-culture
A unit of the Center for the Humanities, the Center for New England Culture promotes understanding of the region's diverse culture and rich history, and it fosters an appreciation of the value of regional culture in contemporary American life. The center is directed by David H. Watters, professor of English.
Center for the Humanities
cola.unh.edu/center-humanities
The Center for the Humanities fosters excellence in the humanities, broadly conceived, at the University of New Hampshire. Center resources and programs support faculty research, encourage reflection and inquiry across the University community and beyond, create interdisciplinary initiatives in many forms, and undertake special projects to raise the visibility of the humanities. To accomplish this, the center endeavors to support the highest quality work by UNH humanities faculty, to build productive collaboration among faculty, to create singular projects that advance its goals, and to be a center of innovation, planning, and inspiration for the humanities at the University of New Hampshire. By pursuing its goals, the center supports the University’s research mission in particular, as well as its academic plan.
The center is the sponsor of the Saul O. Sidore Memorial Lectures, the James H. and Claire Short Hayes Chair in the Humanities, and the University of New Hampshire-University of Ghana study-abroad program. The Center for New England Culture is a unit of the humanities center. The Center for the Humanities is directed by Burt Feintuch, professor of folklore and English. Katie Umans is the center's assistant director.
Crimes Against Children Research Center
www.unh.edu/ccrc
The Crimes Against Children Research Center (CCRC) is concerned with all forms of crimes against children and adolescents, from birth through age 17, both within and outside the family, both known and unknown to law enforcement. These include criminal acts as defined by law, such as sexual assault, abduction, theft, robbery, and aggravated assault against children. But it also includes child abuse in all its forms—physical, sexual, emotional—and child neglect, as well as child-to-child violence, such as peer and sibling assaults and bullying. It also includes indirect victimization, where children witness or are affected by the crime victimization of a family member or friend.
The CCRC, created in 1998, grew out of and expands upon the work of the UNH Family Research Laboratory, which has been devoted to the study of family violence and related topics since 1975. Associated with the center is an internationally recognized group of experts who have published numerous books and articles concerning the incidence and impact of violence against children.
CCRC staff has contributed to many pioneering national crime studies, including National Incidence Study of Missing, Abducted, Runaway, and Thrownaway Children; National Family Violence Survey; National Youth Victimization Prevention Survey; National Survey of Sexual Abuse in Day Care; Developmental Victimization Survey; Youth Internet Safety Surveys; and Multisite Evaluation of Children’s Advocacy Centers.
The CCRC is directed by David Finkelhor, who is also the co-director of the Family Research Laboratory and professor of sociology at the University of New Hampshire. Finkelhor has been researching criminal violence against children since 1978 and is the author and editor of 12 books and more than 100 articles on the subject.
Family Research Laboratory
cola.unh.edu/frl
Since 1975, the Family Research Laboratory (FRL) has devoted itself primarily to understanding family violence and the impact of violence in families. As public and professional interest in family violence has grown, so has the need for more reliable knowledge. The FRL seeks to fill that need through comprehensive literature reviews, new theories, and methodologically sound studies. Researchers at the FRL pioneered many of the techniques that have enabled social scientists to estimate directly the scope of family violence. These efforts have brought international recognition to the FRL.
The FRL is unusual among research centers in the field because it addresses all aspects of the family, violence, and abuse. Topics undertaken by the FRL include physical abuse of children, corporal punishment of children, sexual abuse of children, physical abuse of spouses, dating violence, abuse of the elderly, intra-family homicide, rape and marital rape, violence between siblings, peer victimization of children, pornography, and missing and abducted children. This variety of topics is a result of beliefs that have guided FRL research: that various forms of family problems are interrelated, that conflict is as basic to family life as are love and cooperation, and that much of the conflict and violence in the world outside the family can be traced to roots within the family. This holistic view of family violence has contributed both diversity and richness to the FRL’s work.
The FRL’s prominence in the field is in part a result of the large number, variety, and scope of its publications. In a span of 10 years, FRL staff members have published more than 45 books and more than 740 articles on family violence.
The FRL is housed in a suite of offices in the Horton Social Science Center and contains a library of 3,000 books. The FRL is co-directed by David Finkelhor, professor of sociology and director of the Crimes Against Children Research Center, and Murray A. Straus, professor emeritus of sociology.
Justiceworks
cola.unh.edu/justiceworks
Justiceworks is a research and development group in justice studies. Founded in 1999 as a collaborative consortium of academics and professionals, Justiceworks offers an array of balanced, non-partisan services addressing issues in crime, safety, security, and the administration of justice.
Justiceworks is co-directed by John T. Kirkpatrick, vice provost for student life, dean of students, and clinical professor of sociology; and Charles Putnam, clinical professor of justice studies.
Prevention Innovations Research Center
cola.unh.edu/prevention-innovations
Prevention Innovations Research Center: Ending Sexual and Relationship Violence and Stalking is a research center at the University of New Hampshire made up of researchers and practitioners who work collaboratively to develop and evaluate prevention strategies, evidence-based measures to document the problems of sexual and relationship violence and stalking, and comprehensive community tools to effectively address the causes of violence. The Prevention Innovations Research Center aims to assist postsecondary institutions and federal, state, and local researchers and practitioners to develop, evaluate, and implement model policies, procedures, and programs to end sexual and relationship violence and stalking. The center's faculty and staff are nationally and internationally recognized leaders in the prevention field who design and provide cutting-edge contributions to evidence-based practices in prevention and make significant contributions to scholarship, programming, and policy making in the field. Their research and prevention efforts emphasize the importance of using a community bystander focus while examining the continuum of violence.
The Susan Schechter Domestic and Sexual Violence Social Justice Laboratory (Schechter Lab) is an interdisciplinary research laboratory within the Prevention Innovations Research Center. Undergraduate and graduate students associated with the Schechter Lab earn academic credit for their role as research assistants and work with members of Prevention Innovations Research Center on their research, report writing, and publications. The Sharon B. Murphy Scholarship supports undergraduate and graduate student scholarship in the fields of domestic and sexual violence and stalking for work within the Schechter Lab. Also within the Research Center is the Campus Sexual and Relationship Violence Prevention Consortium. This annual membership program provides support, technical assistance, and training for a cohort of institutions of higher education from across the United States, building both capacity and knowledge across the cohort to improve the efforts of their individual campuses in prevention and response of sexual and relationship violence and stalking.
The Prevention Innovations Research Center members are UNH faculty members from diverse disciplines and colleges across the UNH landscape, including the College of Liberal Arts, the College of Health and Human Services, and the Law School, who work with graduate and undergraduate students from across the University’s colleges and law school. Practitioners are from local and state organizations. The goals of the Prevention Innovations Research Center are to 1) generate evidence-based knowledge aimed at preventing sexual abuse, relationship violence, and stalking; 2) promote creative and collaborative partnerships between practitioners and researchers; and 3) transform community norms and climates through the dissemination of commercialized products that result from the center's research.
The Survey Center
cola.unh.edu/survey-center
The UNH Survey Center is a full-scale, non-partisan academic survey research center, committed to providing university researchers, government and business leaders, and private organizations with reliable information about public attitudes concerning important policy matters. It is nationally known for its public opinion and political polling for CNN, Fox News, and WMUR-TV.
The UNH Survey Center has conducted survey research projects at the University of New Hampshire since 1986: state, regional, and national general population surveys based on probability sampling; surveys that target specific populations; surveys that utilize complex stratified sampling techniques; and panel studies. The Survey Center conducts telephone, mail, and web surveys, as well as focus groups and other qualitative research projects.
The UNH Survey Center is located in Huddleston Hall and features a 32-station Computer-Assisted Telephone Interviewing (CATI) system. The Survey Center is directed by Andrew E. Smith, who is also associate professor of practice in political science. Students interested in employment as interviewers can contact Martha Belanger at martha.belanger@unh.edu.
Related Research Center:
Carsey School of Public Policy
carsey.unh.edu
The Carsey School of Public Policy at the University of New Hampshire is a nationally acclaimed resource for research, leadership development, and engaged scholarship relevant to public policy. The school’s activities address the most pressing challenges of the twenty-first century, striving for innovative, responsive, and equitable solutions at all levels of government and in the for-profit and nonprofit sectors. Faculty and students throughout the College of Liberal Arts serve as staff, fellows, researchers, and assistants in the school.
Academic and Cultural Centers and Institutes
Confucius Institute at UNH
cola.unh.edu/confucius
The Confucius Institute at UNH (CI-UNH) is a partnership between the University of New Hampshire and Chengdu University in China that engages the life of the University with the larger community, both locally and globally. The institute offers a full curriculum in Chinese language and culture. It also provides opportunities for cultural learning and exchange for regional schools—primary through post-secondary. At a time when China is the third largest trading partner for New Hampshire, CI-UNH can provide unique opportunities for business and industry in the state. CI-UNH is co-directed by Yige Wang of the UNH Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures; and Jie Du, the director of international cooperation and exchange at Hanban in China.
ESL Institute
cola.unh.edu/esl-institute
The ESL Institute at the University of New Hampshire has been involved in teaching international students English since 1976. The Institute provides high-quality instruction in English as a second language (ESL) and orientation in U.S. culture to international students who are non-native speakers of English. ESL courses are offered at the elementary level, the intermediate level, and the advanced level. Students at these levels receive intensive English instruction for five hours per day, four days per week, in the areas of reading, writing, listening, and speaking, as well as pronunciation and contextualized grammar instruction. For students who have a TOEFL score of 60 or above (Internet-based) or 500 or above (paper-based, administered by the ESL Institute), the ESL Institute provides “bridge” courses where students can simultaneously enroll in one to two UNH academic classes while continuing to study English intensively from four to ten hours per week. At these “bridge” levels, students have the opportunity to “try out” academic courses in a supportive environment. In addition to its focus on ESL instruction for international students, the Institute aspires to serve as a resource for international education to the faculty, staff, and students of UNH. For more information: cola.unh.edu/esl-institute.
Museum of Art
The Museum of Art serves as the New Hampshire Seacoast’s premier public art museum and, for more than 50 years, has remained a vital resource for the visual arts, serving the University, local, and regional communities. Visitors and members gather to enjoy a wide variety of changing exhibitions, as well as annual exhibitions featuring UNH studio faculty and student work. Exhibitions of outdoor sculpture by regional artists are shown regularly in the Mills Courtyard. Accompanying programs include gallery talks, lectures, concerts, family programs, and special events. The museum's summer Art Camp provides K-12 students with quality hands-on visual arts and instruction.
The museum’s diverse permanent collection includes more than 1,800 works of art, from prehistoric to contemporary. The works are exhibited in the galleries and the Collection Study Area on a regular basis and are also used by faculty, students, and scholars for teaching, research, and interdisciplinary study.
Located in the Paul Creative Arts Center, the museum is open to students, faculty, museum members, and the general public free of charge. For more information, call (603) 862-3712 or visit cola.unh.edu/moa.