2009-2010

Email 23 November 2009 from JQ Johnson concerning Examples of Public Access Policies


Charge: The University of Oregon has a longstanding commitment to making its research widely available, both to the scholarly community and to the general public. Technology is now enabling faculty, universities, and disciplines to adopt new ways to provide enhanced visibility and access to research, usually through digital repositories that are freely accessible. The terms "public access" or "open access" are used to describe these methods that help to remove financial and permission barriers to scholarship and readership. The Committee will
  • 1. Investigate policies facilitating such public access at other AAU Universities.
  • 2. Consult widely within the UO community.
  • 3. Take into consideration UO Policy statements, OUS Internal Management Directives, and other relevant documents.
  • 4. Draft a University Policy Statement that, if endorsed by the UO Senate and promulgated by the President, would enable the University to support wider access to UO faculty research and enhance the visibility of UO faculty research.
Chair: Dev Sinha dps@uoregon.edu. Other members Barbara Altmann, Deb Carver (Dean of the Library, ex-officio), Dave Hubin (Liason with the President's office, ex-officio), Peter Gilkey (Senate President, ex-officio)Robert Illig, J. Q. Johnson, Eric Priest, Gordon Sayre, Dev Sinha.

The committee held its first meeting 9 December 2009. An abstract will be available presently. The Committee will meet again in January. Meetings are open to the interested University community.

Documents relating to the Senate Ad Hoc Committee on Scholarly Publishing

  1. A page of links.
  2. Resolution US09/10-3 Establishing the committee.
  3. Formation of the Senate Ad Hoc Committee on Public Access to Scholarly Publishing.
  4. Email 23 November 2009 from JQ Johnson concerning possible policy statements.
  5. Email 9 December 2009 from Dev Sinha concerning the first meeting of the Senate Ad Hoc Committee on Public Access to Scholarly Materials.

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Senate Ad Hoc Committee on Text Books


Senate Ad Hoc Committee on Text Books

The following information is from the minutes of the 8 October 2008 Senate meeting:

Mr. Dev Sinha, mathematics, announced that he has become aware of a number of students complaining about textbook prices. From 1994-2004, the wholesale price of textbooks went up 62% and general books went up 25%. The UO�s OSPIRG student group has been recommending for faculty to use open source and open access textbooks whenever possible. He noted that faculty can modify or add sections of text that become part of the text (Mr. Sinha provided a more detailed explanatory paper handout). With the ever-increasing price of textbooks in mind, Mr. Sinha asked for the creation of an ad hoc sub-committee to consider textbook pricing issues and to provide the senate with some recommendations. Mr. JQ Johnson, library, is willing to be a member of the committee which Mr. Sinha would chair. The intent is to produce a White Paper that makes the issues clear. On a final note, Mr. Sinha opined that faculty produce academic materials, research, and literature, and then have to pay too much to have access to what they have produced. President van Donkelaar indicated that he would move forward to form such a committee. In brief, the committee would produce a White Paper summarizing our understanding of this area for the UO community; identify examples of best practices regarding textbooks, both on our campus and other campuses; consider ways to encourage use of lower-cost textbooks; consider whether it would be worthwhile to devote any university resources to this area; consider the capabilities of the Duck Store to help ease the adoption of lower-cost textbooks; and consider reaching out to other campuses, presumably through their faculty governance structures, in order to coordinate efforts and save costs.


The following information is from the minutes of the 14 January 2009 UO Senate Meeting.

Ad Hoc Open Source Scholarly Communication Committee. Mr. Dev Sinha, mathematics, reported on the work of the committee, saying that as textbooks get more and more expensive the committee is interested in initiating a campus discussion about ways to mitigate the ever-increasing expense of students� textbooks. He said that faculty can be quite creative in addressing the textbook cost issue (for example, �banking� older homework problems for students� use). The committee hopes to engage the faculty in a creative discussion to combat escalating textbook costs. Culminating in the report are six recommendations: (1) be mindful of textbooks costs (encourage use of �open textbooks� available on-line); (2) encourage reuse of textbooks; (3) encourage use of lecture notes and supplemental materials on-line; (4) find better venues for faculty to share teaching materials, in particular, question �banks�; (5) negotiate regularly with publishers; and (6) encourage production of open textbooks. Mr. Sinha encouraged everyone to read the committee�s report and for the time being to think about how to save money for students now, while the committee will continue to develop and expand the ideas generated so far, including perhaps starting a working group to look at creating open source texts. (See http://pages.uoregon.edu/uosenate/dirsen089/TextbookWhitePaper.pdf for the full report.)

Senior Vice Provost Russ Tomlin supported the idea of exploring a means by which the open source textbook idea can get off the ground. He said he would look into starting a small group to create a sustainable business model to provide some incentive and return for faculty to engage in this type of activity. Mr. Gilkey then moved to endorse and accept the report of the committee; the motion passed unanimously.


Membership:
  1. 2008/9: Dev Sinha (Chair), Steven van Enk from Physics, John Russell from the Library, JQ Johnson from the Library, Bruce Lundy from the DuckStore, Paul van Donkelaar (ex-officio) and Brian Beal as undergraduate representation.
  2. 2009/10: TBA

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Senate Budget Committee


Senate Budget Committee


6.4 Senate Budget Committee: The Senate Budget Committee is the University's primary agency for faculty and student participation in fiscal policy.

6.4.1 The Senate Budget Committee is charged to inform itself about issues that affect the financial well-being of the University. It will advise the President and the senate on budgetary policy and long-term financial strategies, and will keep the University Senate informed about financial matters. The committee will develop and maintain a broad overview of the University's budget, paying particular attention to General Funds (i.e., State appropriations and tuition and fees). The Budget Committee may initiate the study of financial issues.

6.4.2 Members of the Senate Budget Committee will be appointed by the Senate President and will serve three-year terms. The Senate Executive Committee will have the right to attend meetings in a non-voting capacity, as will the Faculty Advisory Council. The Provost is a voting member of the committee. Both the President and Provost are invited to attend meetings, and may designate staff members to accompany or represent them. The President and members of the Administration will keep the committee informed of actions by the Governor, the Legislature, the Oregon University System, the Chancellor's Office, and other agencies that affect the availability of resources and place constraints on the expenditure of General Funds.

6.4.3. Two staff members having budgetary responsibilities will be appointed to assist the committee. The committee will choose its own chair from its membership. The committee may meet in executive session when appropriate, and may establish working sub-committees.


The home page of this committee is located at http://pages.uoregon.edu/uosenate/dircom/budgetcom.html. The members for 2009/10 are:
  • Terms End June 2010: John Chalmers, Tim Duy.
  • Terms End June 2011: Peter Keyes, Gordon Sayre
  • Terms End June 2012: Van Kolpin, TBA.
  • Ex-Officio: Vice President Finance. Provost, Senate President.

Web page spun on 30 May 2009 by Peter B Gilkey 202 Deady Hall, Department of Mathematics at the University of Oregon, Eugene OR 97403-1222, U.S.A. Phone 1-541-346-4717 Email:peter.gilkey.cc.67@aya.yale.edu of Deady Spider Enterprises

Senate Executive Committee


Senate Executive Committee


6.1 Senate Executive Committee: The Executive Committee of the University Senate consists of the elected officers of the Senate, and the Secretary. The Executive Committee may appoint additional student and faculty Senators to serve on this committee.

6.1.1 The function of the Executive Committee is to advise the Senate President and facilitate the work of the Senate. It meets at the call of the Senate President.

7.1 Since 1991-92, all non-elected committees established by faculty legislation are appointed by the Committee on Committees, a committee appointed by the University Senate. The Secretary of the Faculty shall coordinate the elections of faculty to elective committees. The secretary shall arrange for the filling of vacancies on elected committees and councils by notifying the next eligible candidate, determined in descending order of the number of votes received in the most recent election for the relevant committee or council. If no eligible candidate is available to fill the vacancy, the Senate Executive Committee, with advice and recommendations from the Committee on Committees, shall appoint an eligible faculty member to fill the vacancy until the next regular election cycle. Filling a vacancy shall not preclude the appointee from standing for election to the same committee or council during the next election cycle if eligible.

9.1.2 The Senate President shall set the agenda for each University Senate meeting. The Order of Business follows the outline listed below, however the placement of motions or resolutions for consideration will be at the discretion of the Senate President. Usually the more important motions or resolutions are placed first on the agenda, and less important or secondary motions or resolutions later. The order of receipt does not dictate the placement of an item on the agenda. The agenda must be circulated to each Senator and other persons involved in an agenda item prior to the scheduled meeting.

9.1.3.7 The Senate President shall meet with the Senate Executive Committee to discuss the agenda of the next scheduled meeting of the Senate. The agenda must include all motions/resolutions that will be on the floor at this meeting of the Senate.


  • The members of the 2009/10 Senate Executive Committee are:
  • Nathan Tublitz, Senate President (Biology)
  • Peter Keyes, Interim Senate Vice President (Architecture)
  • Gwen Steigelman, Senate Secretary (Academic Affairs)
  • Barbara Altmann, FAC Chair (Romance Languages)
  • Jeff Hurwit (AAA-Art History)
  • Peter Walker (Geography)
  • Katy Lenn (OA-Library)
  • Carla McNelly (Classified Staff-Multicultural Academic Success)
  • Emma Kallaway (ASUO President)
  • Zach Stark-Macmillian (ASUO Student Senator)
  • Harinder Kaur Khalsa (CAS-Romance Languages)
  • Paul Simonds (Parliamentarian-Emeritus Anthropology)

Senate Executive Committee Meeting Schedule for 2010:

Wednesday, January 27, 3:00 - 5:00pm, EMU Oak Conference Room

Wednesday, February 24, 3:00 - 5:00pm, EMU Century Room E

Friday, March 12, 3:00 - 5:00pm, Collaboration Conference Room - Knight Library, Room 122

Wednesday, April 28, 3:00 - 5:00pm, EMU Rogue Room

 

last update on 11 February 2010 by ms

Senate Nominating Committee


Senate Nominating Committee


6.3 Senate Nominating Committee: The Senate Nominating Committee is appointed by the President of the Senate. It shall nominate individuals upon request to various standing committees of the Senate, to some standing committees of the Faculty and, under certain circumstances to the Interinstitutional Faculty Senate, ad hoc committees of the Senate, or to other committees at the request of the President of the University or the President of the Senate. This committee also nominates candidates for President and Vice-President of the Senate.

The members of the Senate Nominating Committee are being appointed for 2009/10:

  1. Mary Ann Hyatt mahyatt@uoregon.edu
  2. Anne Laskaya (laskaya at uoregon.edu)
  3. Susan Verscheure (susankv at uoregon.edu)
  4. TBA

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Senate Nominating Committee Report 27 October 2009


Subject: Fwd: Re: Graduate Council Social Science Representation
To: "Peter Gilkey"
From: "Anne Laskaya"
Date: Tue, 27 Oct 2009 20:22:15

Dear Peter,

We looked at Lise Nelson's qualifications and are delighted to report she's willing to serve on the Graduate Council. So this serves as notice of our nomination.

It's fine with me/us if you wish to expedite the nomination as you did at the last meeting. If the senators have questions, we'll be ready to answer, otherwise, perhaps we can just vote on the appointment. The Senate likely needs the time for discussing the more contested or complicated motions and issues before us.

Thanks again, Anne Laskaya


Web page spun on 28 October 2009 by Peter B Gilkey 202 Deady Hall, Department of Mathematics at the University of Oregon, Eugene OR 97403-1222, U.S.A. Phone 1-541-346-4717 Email:peter.gilkey.cc.67@aya.yale.edu of Deady Spider Enterprises

Report of the Nominating Committee to the October 14 2009 UO Senate Meeting


Report of the Nominating Committee to the October 14 2009 UO Senate Meeting


The Senate Nominating Committee Recommends the following appointments for confirmation by the UO Senate
  • Erin Moore (Architecture and Allied Arts) to serve a term on the IFS expiring June 2011
  • Ron Severson (Lundquist College of Business) to fill a vacancy on the IAC - term to expire June 2010
  • James Isenberg (Mathematics) to be a Senate Representative to the IAC - term to expire June 2011
  • Grace Golden (Human Physiology) to be a Senate Representative to the IAC - term to expire June 2010

These nominees were confirmed by the 14 October 2009 meeting of the UO Senate.
Web page spun on 15 October 2009 by Peter B Gilkey 202 Deady Hall, Department of Mathematics at the University of Oregon, Eugene OR 97403-1222, U.S.A. Phone 1-541-346-4717 Email:peter.gilkey.cc.67@aya.yale.edu of Deady Spider Enterprises

Senate Rules Committee


Senate Rules Committee

6.2 Senate Rules Committee: The University Senate Rules Committee shall consist of three persons appointed by the Senate President. The Rules Committee is charged to negotiate with the sponsors of motions/resolutions, in advance of the appropriate Senate meetings, to clarify and/or to propose editorial changes in notices of motions sent to the Committee by the Senate President.

6.2.1 The Rules Committee is not required to report on every proposed motion, but rather acts at the request of the Senate President. The Rules Committee chair shall contact the sponsor(s) of the motion to arrange discussion of possible changes to a motion. The intent of the motion shall not be altered or changed by the Rules Committee. Any conflicts in word usage, meaning, purpose or structure should be remedied prior to the Senate meeting at which the motion will be acted upon formally. The Rules Committee chair shall assure that the maker of the motion has provided a valid Fiscal Impact Statement prior to formal introduction of the motion. (See "Fiscal Impact Statement" in Article V) The Rules Committee chair shall report the Committee's changes in wording or procedure to the sponsor(s), whether or not they are accepted by the sponsor(s). Only the Rules Committee form of the motion shall be introduced for Senate consideration.

The members for 2009/10 are:

  • Chair: Tracy Bars (AAA Dean's Office) (541) 346-2077 tbars@uoregon.edu
  • Ali Emami (Finance) (541) 346-3323 aemami@uoregon.edu
  • Michele Henney (Accounting) (541) 346-3281 mhenney@uoregon.edu
  1. Reports
  2. 6-30-2009

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Formation of the Senate Ad Hoc Committee on Public Access


Subject: Senate Ad Hoc Committee on Public Access
To: baltmann@uoregon.edu, dcarver@uoregon.edu, hubin@uoregon.edu, Peter Gilkey (gilkey@uoregon.edu), rillig@uoregon.edu, jqj@uoregon.edu, priest@uoregon.edu, gsayre@uoregon.edu, dps@uoregon.edu
Cc: dheying@uoregon.edu
From: Peter Gilkey (gilkey@uoregon.edu)
Date: Sun, 22 Nov 2009 16:07:01

Barbara Altmann baltmann@uoregon.edu
Deb Carver (Dean of the Library, ex-officio) dcarver@uoregon.edu
Dave Hubin (Liason with the President's office, ex-officio) hubin@uoregon.edu
Peter Gilkey (chair) gilkey@uoregon.edu
Robert Illig rillig@uoregon.edu
J. Q. Johnson jqj@uoregon.edu
Eric Priest priest@uoregon.edu
Gordon Sayre gsayre@uoregon.edu
Dev Sinha dps@uoregon.edu

Dear Colleagues.

Thank you so much for agreeing to be part of the Senate Ad Hoc Committee on Public Access. The charge to the Committee is given by Senate Resolution US09/10-3 which I copy below. I would like us to get together to meet before the Christmas break and will ask DeAnna Heying ( dheying@uoregon.edu) to get together a doodle poll to see if this is possible! I would like to explore the possibility that we can "piggy back" on the work done at other Universities to construct relatively easily a policy statement on the subject we can bring to the UO Senate for approval to be submitted to UO President Lariviere for promulgation. It may, of course, turn out that is not possible. But it is worth trying the easy approach first!

So please be on the lookout for a doodle poll from DeAnna! All the best.

Peter B Gilkey President 2009/2010 UO Senate


The University of Oregon has a longstanding commitment to making its research widely available, both to the scholarly community and to the general public. Technology is now enabling faculty, universities, and disciplines to adopt new ways to provide enhanced visibility and access to research, usually through digital repositories that are freely accessible. The terms "public access" or "open access" are used to describe these methods that help to remove financial and permission barriers to scholarship and readership. The Committee will

  • 1. Investigate policies facilitating such public access at other AAU Universities.
  • 2. Consult widely within the UO community.
  • 3. Take into consideration UO Policy statements, OUS Internal Management Directives, and other relevant documents.
  • 4. Draft a University Policy Statement that, if endorsed by the UO Senate and promulgated by the President, would enable the University to support wider access to UO faculty research and enhance the visibility of UO faculty research.

    Subject: Senate Ad Hoc Committee on Public Access to UO Scholarly Materials
    TO: UO Senate
    From: Peter Gilkey
    Date: Sun, 22 Nov 2009 16:30:38

    Dear members of the UO Senate.

    Motion US09/10-3 directed me to to create a Senate Ad Hoc Committee on Public Access to UO Scholarly Materials. Pursuant to that motion and in consultation with the Senate Nominating Committee, with the chair of the FAC, with the Provost, and with the Dean of the UO Library, I have appointed the Committee -- further details are available at http:// www.uoregon.edu/~uosenate/dirsen090/SenAdHocPubAc-22Nov09.html I will be getting back to you presently after the committee has met and has decided how best to proceed.

    Respectfully submitted

    Peter B Gilkey President 2009/10 UO Senate


    Web page spun on 22 November 2009 by Peter B Gilkey 202 Deady Hall, Department of Mathematics at the University of Oregon, Eugene OR 97403-1222, U.S.A. Phone 1-541-346-4717 Email:peter.gilkey.cc.67@aya.yale.edu of Deady Spider Enterprises

DENIED PROPOSALS


Posted 19 November 2009 at 09:46. Later revisions will be posted as received.

PRELIMINARY FALL 2009 CURRICULUM REPORT

OVERVIEW

The body of this report consists of two major sections: Course Proposals reviewed Fall 2009 and Other Curricular Matters. Policies and definitions governing group and multicultural general-education requirements are under Other Curricular Matters.

Course proposals approved by both the University of Oregon Committee on Courses (UOCC) and the University Senate are effective Fall term 2010, unless a specific term is requested by an academic department and stated otherwise in this report.

The UOCC will consider new proposals during winter term and will submit a winter quarterly report to the University Senate in March 2010.

Routing of Minor Changes: The UOCC has confirmed that the following minor course changes may be made without review by the full committee: minor edits of course description, pre- or corequisites, grading option, and conditions of repeatability. Changes may be submitted in writing directly to the Office of the Registrar and Design and Editing Services, in care of Mike Jefferis (jefferis@uoregon.edu) and Scott Skelton (sskelton@uoregon.edu). The memorandum should indicate the effective term for the change(s). Note: extensive changes may be referred to the UOCC for review.

Courses Not Taught Report: The UOCC has changed the policy of dropping courses not taught within the past three years from the fall curriculum report to the spring curriculum report. This allows the correct listing of courses in the catalog for the following curricular year. The intention for this change is to allow departments a chance to reply earlier and provide a more thoughtful response while still involved in curricular planning and staffing for the next academic year and can best determine which courses they are able to offer.

Multicultural Courses Policy:As part of general education, offerings of multicultural courses at the 100, 200, and 300 levels need to be available to a wide spectrum of students from all across the university. Departments wishing to offer courses to satisfy the multicultural requirement should make these courses available at the more general 100, 200, or 300 levels whenever possible, rather than at the more specialized 400 level.

Extended Course Descriptions for Group-Satisfying Courses: All proposals for courses that would satisfy a group requirement for general education must include a suitable extended course description, for use with the course, as specified in senate legislation:

ÒFor all group-satisfying courses to be offered during a particular term, faculty members or departments are asked to post electronically, in the Schedule of Classes, course descriptions that are substantially expanded over those provided in the catalog. The posted course information should be understandable to someone unfamiliar with the field and should emphasize the questions or issues that reveal, by their breadth and significance, why the course has earned group-satisfying status.Ó (US03/04-8, May 12, 2004)


LOOKING AHEAD

Academic Year 2009–2010

December 2, 2009:       University Senate considers Fall 2009 preliminary report of the University of Oregon Committee on Courses.

December 16, 2009:     Curricular proposals for consideration in the winter 2009 round must be submitted to the provostÕs office.

March 10, 2010:          University Senate considers Winter 2010 preliminary report of the University of Oregon Committee on Courses.

March 17, 2010:          Curricular proposals for consideration in the Spring 2010 round must be submitted to the provostÕs office.

May 12, 2010:             University Senate considers Spring 2010 preliminary report of the University of Oregon Committee on Courses.

Members, University of Oregon Committee on Courses

Voting:       Paul Engelking, Chair                        Ex officio:        Sue Eveland

                  Jack Boss                                                               John Crosiar

                  Paul Peppis                                                             Marian Friestad

                  Frances White                                                          Scott Skelton

                  Shlomo Libeskind                                                    Andrew Wahlstrom

                  Jens Noeckel (absent for fall round)

Student:      Alex McCafferty                                Staff:               Tami Oar

                  Elizabeth Aldrich                                                     Mike Jefferis


Motion

The University of Oregon Committee on Courses moves that the following course proposals and other curricular matters be approved.

Unless indicated otherwise, courses may be taken either pass/no pass or for letter grades. ÒP/N onlyÓ or Ògraded onlyÓ indicates that all students must take the course as specified in the bold print. Separate grading options for majors are bracketed in this report and appear in UO class schedule notes; they are not printed in the UO Catalog. R after course credits means that the course number may be repeated for credit. ÒSequenceÓ after the description means the courses must be taken in numerical order.

College of Arts and Sciences

BIOLOGY

NEW COURSES

BI 485/585 Techniques in Computational Neuroscience (4) Introduction to numerical techniques for modeling the nervous system from single neurons to neutral networks. Prereq: BI 360 or BI 461, and Math 241-242 or higher

(Course previously taught as 410/510 in fall 2008)

BI 490/590 Theoretical Ecology (4) Provides a novel and fun way of learning how to use simple mathematical methods to understand complex ecological systems. Prereq: BI 212-214; or BI 251-253

EAST ASIAN LANGUAGES & LITERATURE

(UOCC Administrative Action)

EALL 510 Experimental Course: [Topic] (1-5R) Effective winter 2010

ECONOMICS

NEW COURSES

(Course previously taught as 410/510 in winter 2010)

EC 422/522 Economic Forecasting (4) Basic techniques of economic forecasting that are typically used in a business environment Prereq: EC 420 Coreq: EC 421

ENGLISH

EXISTING COURSE CHANGES

(UOCC Administrative Action)

ENG 360: African American Writers

(UOCC Administrative Action)

ENG 361: Native American Writers

(UOCC Administrative Action)

ENG 362: Asian American Writers

(UOCC Administrative Action)

ENG 363: Chicano/Latino Writers

(UOCC Administrative Action)

ENG 222: Introduction to the English Major

ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES PROGRAM

NEW COURSES

(Course previously taught as ENVS 399 in (winter 2009)

ENVS 335 Allocating Scarce Environmental Resources (4) [Graded only for majors] Considerations for the design of environmental and natural resources policies and regulations: balancing societyÕs preferences and the costs of environmental protection and resource conservation Prereq: MATH 105 or higher.

Requesting that this course satisfy Social Science group requirement.

GEOGRAPHY

(UOCC Administrative Action)

GEOG 204: Geography of Russia & Neighbors

GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES

(UOCC Administrative Action)

GEOL 399: Special Studies [Topic] (1-5R)

HISTORY

(UOCC Administrative Action)

Existing Course Change

HIST 409 Supervised Tutoring (1-2R)

HIST 409 Supervised Tutoring (1-4R) Effective Fall 2009

LINGUISTICS

(UOCC Administrative Action)

AEIS 610 Experimental Course: [Topic] (1-5R) Effective fall 2009

POLITICAL SCIENCE

(UOCC Administrative Action)

PS 470 Constitutional Law

(Drop the prerequisite PS 275)

NEW COURSE

PS 378 Games in Politics (4) Politics can be viewed as strategic interactions among politicians, voters, countries, etc. Course focuses on how to model these interactions, using tools of ÒGame TheoryÓ.

PSYCHOLOGY

EXISTING COURSE CHANGES

PSY 302 Statistical Methods in Psychology (4) Prereq: MATH 111, PSY 201, 202, WR 121, 122.

(changed pre-requisite)

PSY 302 Statistical Methods in Psychology (4) Prereq: MATH 111 or MATH 243, WR 121.  Sophomore standing required. Effective winter 2010.

PSY 303 Research Methods in Psychology (4) Prereq: PSY 302, WR 121, 122.

(changed pre-requisite)

PSY 303 Research Methods in Psychology (4) Prereq: PSY 201 or PSY 202, PSY 302, WR 122 or 123.  Effective winter 2010. 

PSY 412 through 480 Prereq: WR 121 and 122 or 123; PSY 303.

(changed pre-requisite)

PSY 412 through 480Prereq: PSY 201, PSY 202, PSY 302; WR 122 or 123.  Effective winter 2010. 

ROMANCE LANGUAGES

REINSTATED COURSE

ITAL 461/561: Vico and Settecento (4) Prereq: 317, 318, and 319

EXISTING COURSE CHANGE

FR 399: Special Studies (1-5R)

SOCIOLOGY

EXISTING COURSE CHANGES

SOC 425/525 Issues in Family Sociology (4)

(Changed Course Title, Repeatability)

SOC 425/525 Issues in Sociology of Family: [Topic]

Repeatable

Repeatable 2 times.

Repeatable for a maximum of 12 credits.

Repeatable under the following conditions: when topic changes

PROFESSIONAL SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES

School of Architecture and Allied Arts

ART

EXISTING COURSE CHANGES

ART 115 Basic Design: Fundamentals (4) Intermedia laboratory for fundamentals of communication design.

Development of visual vocabularies.

(Changed Course Description, Course Title, Grading Options)

ART 115 Surface, Space, and Time (4) Graded only.

Introduces interdisciplinary media processes, critical theory, formal communication design, color theory, skills in objective evaluation and critique, and how materials, processes and context establish meaning.

ART 116 Basic Design: 3D (4) Visual communication and critique. Development of visual vocabularies through investigation of space and structure.

(Changed Course Description, Course Title)

ART 116 CORE Interdisciplinary Laboratory (4)

Rigorous studio projects in the Core STUDIO sequence stressing interdisciplinary media transitions and the inter-relatedness of conceptual and formal concerns.

Pre/corequisite(s): ART 115

ART 233 Drawing (4R)

(Changed Course Description, Course Title) Beginning course in observation, selection, and recording of significant elements in various drawing media.

ART 233 Drawing I (4R)

An introduction to basic drawing concepts and practices. 

NEW COURSES

ARTD 256 Introduction to Production (4) Graded only. Traditional camera, sound, and lighting techniques in production are taught, nonlinear editing is introduced, and key theoretical, historical and aesthetic approaches to video art are surveyed.

ARTF 268 Introduction to Fibers: Structures (4) Students develop skills and cultivate conceptual concerns pertaining to structural textile construction. Introduces historical and contemporary work through slides and lectures. Prereq: ART 115, 116, 233

ARTF 269 Introduction to Fibers: Surfaces (4) Students develop skills and cultivate conceptual concerns pertaining to embellished or manipulated surfaces of textile forms. Introduces historical and contemporary work through slides and lectures. Prereq: ART 115, 116, 233

ARTF 368 Textile Printing (4R) Introduction to screen-printing process for fabric and alternative substrates. Textile history, the relevance of printing, and related ideas of decoration, repetition, and appropriation are explored. Prereq: ARTF 253, 268, or 269 Rmastery of subject

ARTF 369 Woven Structures (4R) Introduction to floor loom hand weaving. Traditional and experimental use of materials, techniques, and structures are used to understand weaving as a cross-disciplinary practice. Prereq: ARTF 253, 268, or 269 R mastery of subject

(Course previously taught as 410 in winter 2009)           

ARTP 481 Adv Painting Practice (4R). This course allows the student to pursue individual creative practice and to form the critical intelligence necessary to develop as an artist. Sequence: ARTP 281, 381, 390 Prereq: 2 terms ARTP 390 R mastery of subject

LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE

NEW COURSES

(Course previously taught as LA 4/508 in spring 2008)

LA 446/546 Landscape Urbanism (4) Landscape theory and practice as the foundation of urban design, synthesizing architecture, infrastructure, microclimate and ecology across multiple scales and time frames

(Course previously taught as 610 in fall 2007)

LA 617 Introduction to Landscape Architecture Theory (4) P/NP only. Survey and critique of the theoretical frameworks, prevalent ways of knowing, ways of expanding understanding, and argument in landscape architecture

PLANNING, PUBLIC POLICY AND MANAGEMENT

OLD COURSES DROPPED

PPPM 683 Professional Practice in Nonprofit Organizations (1)

Topic area covered in other nonprofit courses. Substituting the philanthropy seminar for this required course.

NEW COURSES

PPPM 623 Professional Development in Public Administration (1) P/NP. The goal of this class is to catalyze students to articulate preliminary career goals and begin mapping out the necessary steps to accomplish their goals.

ARCHITECTURE AND ALLIED ARTS

OLD COURSE DROPPED

(UOCC Administrative Action)

AAA 409 Supervised Tutoring (1-12R)

NEW COURSES

(UOCC Administrative Action)

AAA 404 Internship [Topic] (1-12R)

(UOCC Administrative Action)

AAA 409 Practicum [Topic] (1-5R)

(UOCC Administrative Action)

AAA 604 Internship [Topic} (1-12R)

(UOCC Administrative Action)

AAA 609 Practicum [Topic] (1-12R)

(Course previously taught as 410/510 in fall 2008)

ARCH 438/538 Housing Prototypes (3) An examination of modern housing prototypes (1920s-present) with an emphasis on understanding the many and varied factors involved in the production of quality housing. Junior standing required. Open to all majors.  

PRODUCT DESIGN

(UOCC Administrative Action)

PD 198 Workshop: [Topic] (1-12R)

(UOCC Administrative Action)

PD 199 Special Studies: [Topic] (1-5R)

(UOCC Administrative Action)

PD 399 Special Studies [Topic] (1-5R)

Charles H. Lundquist College of Business

FINANCE

(UOCC Administrative Action)

FIN 609-Practicum [Topic]: (1-9R)

MANAGEMENT

(UOCC Administrative Action)

MGMT 609 Practicum [Topic] (1-16R) Pass/No Pass

(change grading option)

MGMT 609 Practicum [Topic] (1-16R) Optional Grading

SPORTS BUSINESS

EXISTING COURSE CHANGE

(UOCC Administrative Action)

SBUS 609 Practicum: [Topic] (1-4R)

(variable credit change)

SBUS 609 Practicum: [Topic] (1-9R)

College of Education

COUNSELING PSYCHOLOGY AND HUMAN SERVICES

EXISTING COURSE CHANGES

FHS 491 Jr. Professional Practices & Issues I (3) 

(Changed Grading Options)

UO grading option: Graded Only

Majors grading option: Graded Only

FHS 492 Jr Professional Practices & Issues II (3) 

(Changed Grading Options)

UO grading option: Graded Only

Majors grading option: Graded Only

FHS 493 Jr Professional Practices & Issues III (3) 

(Changed Grading Options)

UO grading option: Graded Only

Majors grading option: Graded Only

SPECIAL EDUCATION AND CLINICAL SCIENCES

EXISTING COURSE CHANGES

SPED 488/588 Professional Practices (3)

(Changed Course Title)

SPED 488/588 Professional Practices: [Topic]

COMMUNICATION DISORDERS & SCIENCES

EXISTING COURSE CHANGE

CDS 609 Practicum Speech-Language-Hearing

(Change from optional grading to pass/no pass only)

Law

UOCC REINSTATED COURSES

Law 670 Public Land Law [Topic] (1-3R) Effective fall semester 2009

Law 658 Local Government Law Effective fall semester 2009

Physical Education and Recreation

EXISTING COURSE CHANGE

PEL 409 Practicum: [Topic] (1-3R)

(Change credits)

PEL 409 Practicum: [Topic] (1-4R)

Effective summer 2009

Journalism and Communication

EXISTING COURSE CHANGE

(change prerequisite)
J 464/564 Newspaper Design (4) Prereq: J 361

J 464/564 Newspaper Design (4) Prereq: J 202, J 203, J 204 or J 205, J 206, J 207. Effective winter 2010

OTHER CURRICULAR MATTERS

COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES

State BoardÕs approved the Bachelors of Arts in Cinema Studies on September 17, 2009.Effective date of Winter 2010. (State Board has delegated of final approval of the new program to its Academic Strategies Committee).

COLLEGE OF EDUCATION

In 1993, the M.ED and D.Ed degrees in Communication Disorders and Sciences were listed as inactivated in the UO catalog, and were no longer offered by the department.  The seven-year sunset period has expired and no students are enrolled in either of those degree programs.  Communication Disorders and Sciences offer the M.A., M.S., and Ph.D. only.

COLLEGE OF JOURNALISM AND COMMUNICATION

Effective fall term 2009 these majors will be dropped: JEM Journalism: Electronic Media (J&C) B.A., B.S., JMAG Journalism: Magazine (J&C) B.A., B.S., and JNE Journalism: News-Editorial (J&C) B.A., B.S..

MULTICULTURAL REQUIREMENTS

Students who participate in University of Oregon sponsored study abroad programs can fulfill one Category C International Cultures-satisfying course through this participation in order to meet Multicultural Requirements.


The UO Foreign Study Programs Committee in collaboration with Study Abroad staff will identify which UO-sponsored programs will meet the International Culturesrequirement, based on the following criteria:

  • Students must be enrolled full-time and maintain satisfactory academic progress throughout their academic programs abroad.
  • Approved study abroad programs must be a minimum of five weeks in length. If the program is between five and nine weeks in duration, it must have substantial cultural immersion, and meet at least two of the following three criteria:
    1. Include a home stay or immersion living experience
    2. Offer a language-intensive and/or culturally-immersive curriculum
    3. Provide an internship, service learning, or integrated work or volunteer program
  • Programs of ten weeks or longer will automatically satisfy the International Cultures requirement
  • A student who participates in a program that does not fit any of the criteria above has the option to petition the Academic Requirements Committee under their usual guidelines.

DENIED PROPOSALS

PENDING PROPOSALS

SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE AND ALLIED ARTS

(Moved to the Winter term, request for new syllabus)

ARTF 456/556 Advanced Fibers (3-5R) 

(Changed Course Description, Course Title)

ARTF 456/556 Adv Fibers: Craft & Textile Construction

(Moved to the Winter term request for additional information)

ART 333 Drawing II (4) Building on previous drawing skills, course emphasizes synthesis of ideas and approaches, complex subjects, investigation and expression. Sequence: ART 233 Prereq: ART 233

Course emphasizes development of individual studio practice through an exploration of contemporary issues in textile-based processes and an expansion of the rhetoric of craft.

Course will be taught Once or more per academic year

Pre/corequisite(s): ARTF 368; and 267 or 369

(Moved to Winter term, request for revised syllabus)

(Course previously taught as 510 in 2006WI)

LA 619 Contemporary Landscape Architecture Theory (3) Critical survey of important landscape design ideas and examples from the last thirty years by examination of articles, texts, dialogues, sites, built works and personalities Prereq: ArH 578 Offered alternate years.

HONORS COLLEGE

(Moved to Winter term, waiting for revised syllabus).

HC 377 Thesis Orientation (1) Sophomore/junior year preparation for thesis project. Prereq: HC 223 or HC 233

WITHDRAWN PROPOSALS

SUBMITTING COURSE PROPOSALS

The Committee on Courses offers the following reminders:

  • Proposals to the Committee on Courses must be submitted on electronic forms, available on the CAS website, http://uocurriculum.uoregon.edu/. Arrangements for access may be made by contacting the appropriate college curriculum coordinator for each individual professional school or college. Proposals submitted on old forms will be returned, without review, to academic departments, schools, or colleges. Proposals must be submitted to the Committee on Courses prior to the beginning of the term in which they are to be considered. Proposals received after the beginning of the term will be deferred to the following term. All departments should consult their college curriculum coordinator for deadline dates or go to http://uocurriculum.uoregon.edu/ and click the ÒImportant DatesÓ link.
  • The following minor course changes may be made without review by the full committee: minor edits of course description, pre- or co-requisites, grading option, and conditions of repeatability. Changes may be submitted in writing directly to the Office of the Registrar and to Design and Editing Services, in care of Mike Jefferis (jefferis@uoregon.edu) and Scott Skelton (sskelton@pages.uoregon.edu), respectively. The memorandum should indicate the effective term for the change(s). Note: extensive changes may be referred to the UOCC for review.
  • If there is any question that a proposed new or changed course might duplicate coverage in an existing course from another department or school, the proposing department must gain written confirmation that the other department has been consulted and does not object to the new or changed course.
  • Proposals for new courses must be accompanied by full syllabi.
  • For 4XX/5XX level courses, both proposal forms and syllabi must state explicitly the substantive and measurable differences in type and amount of work for the two levels.
  • The minimal requirements for general-education status of a course are regarded as necessary, but not always sufficient, for inclusion of a course as part of a comprehensive general-education program at the university.

Group satisfying courses are intended to provide students with a cohesive general-education program. Proposals for group-satisfying status of a course should explain how the course enhances general-education at the university, explicitly stating how the course would complement other group-satisfying courses, and which other courses would be especially suitable for students to take in accompaniment. Approved March 10, 2004.

According to University Senate legislation, courses submitted for group-satisfying status must be submitted to the Intercollege General-Education Review Committee.

Proposals for undergraduate group-satisfying and multicultural courses must include written justification, regardless of whether they are new or existing courses.

  • The minimal requirements for multicultural status of a course are regarded as sufficient for inclusion of a course as part of the multicultural course requirements.

Any course that might appear to satisfy the university multicultural requirements, either by title, description, or content, is carefully examined to see if it should be listed as a multicultural course. If a course might appear on its face eligible for multicultural status, the committee needs clear explanation of why the course does—or does not—satisfy multicultural course guidelines. Arbitrary exclusion of courses from the list of multicultural satisfying courses can engender student confusion or cynicism. Approved on March 10, 2004.

  • The UO Committee on Courses has established the policy that the phrase Òor instructorÕs consentÓ will not be stated along with any other course prerequisites. The prerequisites of any course may be overridden by instructorÕs consent, and need not be stated explicitly for individual courses. Academic departments are able to override any prerequisite requirements in Banner should a student qualify to enroll.

ÒInstructorÕs consentÓ is reserved for use alone as a sole prerequisite to allow departments to monitor suitability of enrollment in courses for individual students, preventing enrollment without prior approval. Academic departments should be aware they must code the courses correctly and assume enrollment management responsibilities, preauthorizing each student individually, with this option. Approved March 10, 2004.


CONTENTS OF COURSE SYLLABUS

As the primary, commonly available summary of a course, the syllabus serves several purposes. It outlines the course, it denotes what students may expect from the course, and it locates the course in the curriculum. The syllabus is the best, most concise description of a course by its teacher available to both prospective students and colleagues. The Committee on Courses uses syllabuses in its review of courses. To maximize the usefulness of a syllabus to students and faculty, it should contain the following contents:

1. Course Number

2. Title

3. Credits

4. Term, place, time, instructor

(For a new course proposal, indicate when it is likely to be offered, and how frequently)

(For a new course proposal, indicate who is likely to teach the course)

5. Position in the curriculum

¥ Satisfies group requirement? Explain why

¥ Satisfies multicultural requirement? Explain why

¥ Satisfies other general-education requirement?

¥ Satisfies other major or program requirement?

¥ Preparatory for other courses?

¥ List prerequisites or other suggested preparation

6. Format (lecture, discussion, and laboratory)

7. Outline of subject and topics explored

8. Course materials (texts, books, readings)

9. Instructor expectations of students

¥ Be explicit (by pages assigned, lengths of assignments)

¥ Level of student engagement expected (see suggested Student Engagement Inventory on following page)

¥ Readings

¥ Problems

¥ Attendance

¥ Project

¥ Writing

¥ Laboratory

¥ Field work

¥ Work with electronic media, network, online

¥ Performance

¥ Presentation

¥ Exams

¥ Differential expected for graduate work for joint 4xx/5xx-level courses

10. Assessment

¥ Methods (testing, homework)

¥ Times or frequency

¥ Grading policy

¥ Incomplete policy

[See Faculty Handbook for other recommendations regarding university policies.]


STUDENT ENGAGEMENT INVENTORY

To aid in assigning student credit hours uniformly to courses in the curriculum, the committee inventories the amount of student engagement in a course. The committee has found the following tool to be useful. Departments preparing course proposals are invited to use this form when deciding how many SCH units to request for a proposed course. Departments are encouraged to report to the committee how this tool may be improved for their use.

Please identify the number of hours a typical or average student would expect to spend in each of the following activities. The general guideline is that each undergraduate credit should reflect thirty hours of student engagement. Therefore, a 3-credit course would engage students for ninety hours total among the activities listed below, whereas a 4-credit course would list 120 hours of activities in which students are engaged over the course of the term. (Graduate students are expected to perform work of higher quality and quantity, typically with an additional 20–25 percent effort expected.)

Educational activity

Hours student engaged

Explanatory comments (if any):

Course attendance

 

 

Assigned readings

 

 

Project

 

 

Writing assignments

 

 

Lab or workshop

 

 

Field work, experience

 

 

Online interaction

 

 

Performances, creative activities

 

 

Total hours:

 

 

Definition of terms:

Course attendance

Actual time student spends in class with instructor or GTF

Assigned readings

Estimated time it takes for a student with average reading ability to read all assigned readings

Writing assignments

Estimated time it takes for a student with average writing ability to produce a final, acceptable written product as required by the assignment

Project

Estimated time a student would be expected to spend creating or contributing to a project that meets course requirements (includes individual and group projects)

Lab or workshop

Actual time scheduled for any lab or workshop activities that are required but are scheduled outside of class hours

Field work, experience

Actual or estimated time a student would spend or be expected to spend engaged in required field work or other field-based activities

Online activities

Actual or estimated time a student would spend or be expected to spend engaged in online activities directly related to the course, separate from online research required for projects or writing assignments

Performance, creative activities

Actual or estimated time a student would spend or be expected to spend outside of class hours engaged in preparing for required performance or creative activity


UNDERGRADUATE GENERAL-EDUCATION REQUIREMENTS

GROUP-REQUIREMENT POLICIES

The following criteria were proposed by the Undergraduate Council and the College of Arts and Sciences Curriculum Committee. The University Senate approved them in May 2001 by Motion US0001-3 Replacement Motion governing the approval of courses meeting general-education requirements and the distribution of courses student must complete within each group.

1. Group satisfying courses in Arts and Letters, Social Science, and Science must meet the following general criteria:

1.1. Group satisfying courses in arts and letters must create meaningful opportunities for students to engage actively in the modes of inquiry that define a discipline. Proposed courses must be broad in scope and demonstrably liberal in nature (that is, courses that promote open inquiry from a variety of perspectives). Though some courses may focus on specialized subjects or approaches, there must be a substantial course content locating that subject in the broader context of the major issues of the discipline. Qualifying courses will not focus on teaching basic skills but will require the application or engagement of those skills through analysis and interpretation.

1.2. Group satisfying courses in the social sciences must be liberal in nature rather than being professionally oriented or limited to the performance of professional skills. They must cover a representative cross-section of key issues, perspectives, and modes of analysis employed by scholars working on the subject matter addressed by the course. The subject matter of the course will be relatively broad, e.g. involving more than one issue, place, or time. Courses with an emphasis on methods and skills will satisfy the requirement only if there is also a substantial and coherent theoretical component.

1.3. Group satisfying courses in the sciences should introduce students to the foundations of one or more scientific disciplines, or should provide an introduction to fundamental methods (such as mathematics) that are widely used in scientific disciplines. Courses should introduce students to the process of scientific reasoning.

2. Specific Criteria:

2.1. Group satisfying courses must be numbered at the 100, 200, and 300 levels.

2.2. Lower division courses must be offered annually, and upper division courses at least every other year.

2.3. Approved courses must be at least 4 credits each.

2.4. Upper division group satisfying courses must provide depth and rigor beyond that of typical lower-division general-education courses. Departments must justify, in terms of content, workload, and method of instruction, the assignment of a course to the upper level.

2.5. Courses that are offered for majors only are excluded from group status, but courses that are designed for both majors and other students may qualify.

2.6. Although laboratory courses are not automatically excluded from group status in the sciences, to acquire this status, the courses must not focus primarily on techniques or data collection.

3. Procedures governing the approval of all courses designed to meet General-education requirements.:

3.1. Before submission to the Senate, such courses proposed by departments must be reviewed at several levels:

3.1.1. By the curricular committees of the various colleges and schools

3.1.2. By an inter-college committee including the members of the CAS Curricular Committee and two representatives appointed by the deans of the others schools and colleges. This second committee is also charged to review such courses as do not meet the standards set in paragraph (2.) and to negotiate a solution with the sponsoring department.

3.1.3. By the University Committee on Courses.

3.2. The inter college committee is authorized to establish procedures governing the review process.

4. Completion of group requirements (student progress):

4.1. Within the full set of courses that fulfills all of the requirements, students may not count

4.1.1. more than one course that has the subject code of the major, or

4.1.2. more than three courses that have the same subject code.

4.2. Within the smaller set of courses that fulfills the requirements of each group, students must complete at least two courses that have the same subject code.


SUSTAINABLE COURSE DESCRIPTIONS

The 2000–2001 academic years was the first year that the Committee on Courses systematically deleted from the university catalog courses that have not been taught for three years or more.

In several cases, departments had not offered a specialized course under a course number and title specified in the catalog. Yet similar courses had been taught regularly in the department in various formats, under experimental numbers (410, 510, 610), or under the general designations for special topics seminars, workshops, or practicums (the 406/407/408/409, 506/507/508/509, 606/607/608/609 series). With time, departments had discovered that a course description in the catalog was too specialized to apply to any of their courses as actually being taught.

Unfortunately, removal of an overly specialized course, although untaught, still might have consequences for departments. Often that course had been the sole representative in the catalog of subjects that are taught by a department and are part of the regular curriculum. Dropping that course could make it appear that a department offered no courses in that courseÕs subject area.

The committee has noted another, companion problem. Over the years, the committee has observed that new courses tailored to the particular research interests and instructional style of an individual faculty member are likely to fall into disuse within a few years as the personÕs teaching assignments and interests change, or if the instructor becomes unavailable for teaching that particular course.

The Committee on Courses recommends that departments and programs develop more sustainable course descriptions. A sustainable course description would identify a subject area and general approach, but would not be so restrictive as to exclude different perspectives or specializations also representative of that subject area.

The committee also recommends that departments and programs be selective when proposing permanent course status for specialized courses that can only be taught by one particular instructor.

For example, a department with several experts qualified to teach ceramics, but having only one instructor who specializes in Ming porcelain per se, might currently have a specialized course titled Ming Dynasty Porcelains in the catalog. A more sustainable course title could be Chinese Porcelains or even Porcelains, depending upon the range of expertise available to teach the course. Another approach would use the topics course Ceramics, possibly repeatable as the exact subject material—and transcript title—changes.

Departments following these recommendations could then represent the full range of their curricular offerings and could maintain a sustainable list of courses in the catalog.

MULTICULTURAL-CATEGORY DEFINITIONS

Category A: American Cultures. The goal is to focus on race and ethnicity in the United States by considering racial and ethnic groups from historical and comparative perspectives. Five racial or ethnic groups are identified: African American, Chicano or Latino, Native American, Asian American, European American. Approved courses deal with at least two of these groups in a comparative manner. They do not necessarily deal specifically with discrimination or prejudice, although many do.

Category B: Identity, Pluralism, and Tolerance. The goal is to gain scholarly insight into the construction of collective identities, the emergence of representative voices from varying social and cultural standpoints, and the effects of prejudice, intolerance, and discrimination. The identities at issue may include ethnicities as in the American Cultures category, as well as classes, genders, religions, sexual orientations, or other groups whose experiences contribute to cultural pluralism. This category includes courses that analyze the general principles underlying tolerance, or the lack of it.

Category C: International Cultures. The goal is to study world cultures in critical perspective. Approved courses either treat an international culture in view of the issues raised in Categories A and B (namely, race and ethnicity, pluralism and monoculturalism, prejudice and tolerance) or explicitly describe and analyze a worldview (i.e., a system of knowledge, feeling, and belief) that is substantially different from those prevalent in the twentieth-century United States.

CRITERIA FOR ADDING AN ÒHÓ SUFFIX TO A COURSE NUMBER

The Committee on Courses has discussed the criteria for adding an ÒHÓ suffix to a course number and recommends the following:

The ÒHÓ suffix is intended to advise students that a course provides honors content of significant difficulty and requires honors effort from students. The Committee on Courses will be looking for evidence of the following in determining whether a course should hold an ÒHÓ suffix designation:

1.   Students enrolling should have a cumulative GPA of at least 3.30 in their major.

  1. The content of the class, and the level of analysis, should be significantly deeper than for nonhonors classes.
  1. Class size should be small enough to promote intensive student participation.
  1. The faculty member(s) teaching the course should be available for close advising outside of class.

SUGGESTIONS FOR REVISING DEFINITIONS OF

UNDERGRADUATE MAJORS, MINORS, CERTIFICATES

MAJOR

Definition

Courses in designated primary subject areas or disciplines in which a student commits to gaining in-depth knowledge, skills, competence, and attitudes through a coherent pattern of courses. A footnote accompanies the major definition: Divisional major programs emphasize a general and integrated approach to learning, with the studentÕs major program broadly inclusive of work in several of the discipline or subject areas within the specific division within which the studentÕs degree program lies (i.e., humanities, social science, science). For instance, a divisional major program in the social sciences would call for the student to include within his or her major work from several of the disciplines or subject areas in the social sciences (such as sociology, political science, or economics). Because of the breadth of disciplines or subjects included in the major, the student has less opportunity to delve in depth into a single subject area such as sociology, political science, or economics, than they would be able to do were they in a Òdepartmental majorÓ program in a single one of these disciplines or subject areas.

Minimal Requirements

36 credits, of which a minimum of 24 must be upper division. Departments should consider setting minimum residency requirements.

MINOR

Definition

Courses in a designated secondary subject area or discipline distinct from and usually outside the studentÕs degree major in which knowledge is gained in a coherent pattern of courses.

Minimal Requirements

24 credits, of which a minimum of 12 must be upper division. Should be within a discipline that already has a preexisting major or is sponsored by a department.


CERTIFICATE

Definition

An approved academic award given in conjunction with the satisfactory completion of a program of instruction requiring one year or more, but less than four years, of full-time equivalent, postsecondary-level work. The conditions and conferral of the award are governed by the faculty and ratified by the governing board of the institution granting the certificate.

Minimal Requirements

36 credits—24 upper division with 12 minimum at 400 level. The sponsoring department must provide guidance—a template or check list and the name of an adviser, with notice that the student must consult an adviser to apply for the certificate at least two terms prior to graduation.

 


Web page spun on 19 November 2009 by Peter B Gilkey 202 Deady Hall, Department of Mathematics at the University of Oregon, Eugene OR 97403-1222, U.S.A. Phone 1-541-346-4717 Email:peter.gilkey.cc.67@aya.yale.edu of Deady Spider Enterprises
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