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Social Determinants of Health

Serving as the “anchor” of the public health major, this course examines, in-depth, how some of the critical social determinants of health, such as race, gender, poverty, and geography impact health outcomes. HIST/AFS 294: Medicine and Empire. Can also be taken as a Global and Cross-cultural elective for the PH major/minor.
 
Semester
Spring 2025
Public Health
PH 310

Algonquin-Adirondacks Connections

Imagine an international zone so fluid that natural species migrate more easily than humans.  It  exists and sits about 50 miles from our campus.  The Frontenac Arch-Thousand Islands terrestrial passage along the St. Lawrence River is where small and large animals, reptiles, and fish annually migrate.

Semester
Spring 2024
FYP-FYS
FRPG 2213

Restorative Circles & K-12 Education

Why are K-12 schools moving to restorative practices rather than traditional forms of school discipline? What does it look? What do students, teachers and administrators think of it? What is needed to make it work? And finally, is it effective? Let's take a look at restorative circles and find out how several schools in the North Country are implementing them to address issues from belonging to acceptance to addressing the devastating harm of racial incidents.

Semester
Spring 2024
FYP-FYS
FRPG 2224

Latin American Politics

This course introduces students to the politics of Latin America. Tracing the roots of current political conflict to the colonial era, the primary focus of the course is on underdevelopment and political change in Latin America today. The course examines the roles of key political actors, including the military, indigenous peoples and the church. It explores patterns of development, introducing theories that seek to explain persistent poverty and inequality as well as the periodic swings between authoritarianism and democracy in the region.
Semester
Spring 2024
Government
GOVT 228 / CLAS 228

Practical Elements of Time Travel

“We study history so that we can know the past, engage the present, and impact the future.” Fall semester 2023 opened with racist graffiti sprayed on the sidewalk outside of Whitman Hall. Rumor has it that white faculty still say the “n-word” in their classes. Being a person of color (POC) at a predominantly white institution (PWI) is challenging. It also represents a challenge for actively anti-racist people, regardless of their ethnicity.

Semester
Spring 2024
FYP-FYS
FRPG 2217

Queer Feelings

Appropriate for FY students- Is it high time we lean into our unpleasant feelings: exhaustion, loneliness, shame, melancholy, anxiety? Can interrogating our feelings help us better know, even see through, the world as it exists? How do we navigate society, relationships, our own selves with and against feelings? In turn, how might understanding ourselves as entities of feeling first and foremost - as the locus of desires, energies, and reactions - free us from traditional categories of identity and being?

Semester
Spring 2024
English
ENG 3080 / GNDR 3026

Holy Horrors

Religion and the Religious in Horror Films. Horror films deal with transcendence. They invariably are about worlds, beings, and paranormal experiences that go beyond what we know, what is "natural," and what is "real" in this beautiful but also terrifying world where we live. Horror films, through text, sounds, music, and pictures offer an "as if reality," something we can enjoy and ponder without necessarily believing in it as an absolutely true, real, and authoritative.

Semester
Fall 2024
Religious Studies
REL 3045

Introduction to Theatre

This course is designed to aid the student in an investigation into the various aspects of theatrical
performance and process. This course will explore the five main aspects of the theatrical event: director,
actor, playwright, designers (costume, scenic, lighting) and audience. Throughout the course students
will discover the relationship between text/literature and the artistic nature of theatre to make and
enhance meaning.
Semester
Spring 2025
Performance and Communication Arts
PCA 125

Buddhist Religious Traditions

This course offers an introduction of Buddhism from its genesis in India to Buddhism important role as a global religion today. Topics include the basic teachings and practices of early Buddhism in India in the sixth to fifth centuries BCE, the development of sophisticated philosophical teachings, meditational techniques and religious practices, lay and monastic life that arise with the historical spread of Buddhism into Sri Lanka, Southeast Asia, Tibet, China, Japan and, more recently, the West. Offered every other year.  Also offered in Asian Studies.
Semester
Fall 2024
Religious Studies
REL 222