Elective Courses (3)
Complete three electives, one of which must have a CE (Community Engagement) designation.
- At least two (2) electives must be at the 300-level or above;
- At least one (1) elective must be applied, meaning the course is not only about advocacy and social justice but also involves the practice of advocacy (i.e., one or more initiatives that push beyond individual c9onsiousness-raising and contribute to the transformation of social systems).
Note: Students are encouraged to consider fulfilling electives through CE field studies as well as approved study abroad programs (semester-long, summer, and field study.)
Possible electives include (applied electives are noted with an *):
ANT 200 Cultural Anthropology
ANT 251 Native American Cultures
ANT 321 Public Archaeology
ANT 350 Anthropology and the Family
ASJ Topics (195, 295, 295)
CMC 270 Media, Gender and Sexualities
CMC 310 Media, Peace, and Justice *(applied elective)
CMC 320 Political Economy of Body and Food
CMC 325 Incarceration and Inequality *(applied elective)
CMC 330 Native American Media and Cultural Studies
CMC 335 Critical Disability Studies
COM 240 Intercultural Communication
COM 340 Health Policy and Advocacy Communication
ECO 307 International Economics
ECO 371 International Economic History
ENV 330 Women and the Environment
ENV 340 Environmental Justice
HIS 329 Aspects of War
PHI 312 Feminist Theory
PHI 315 Gender, Rights, and Relativism
POL 252 American Civil Rights Law and Policy
POL 302 The Politics of Global Poverty
POL 330 Peace and Conflict Studies
POL 332 International Human Rights *(applied elective)
POL 363 American Social Policy
PPE 119 Contemporary Issues in Public Policy and Economics
PSY 332 IS: Psychology of Social Behavior
PSY 407 Organizational Development (typically only offered in Holt)
SI 310 Nonprofit Leadership and Innovation
SOC 330 Social Movements
SOC 331 The Civil Rights Movement and Black Freedom Struggle in the United States
SWAG 205 Introduction to Sexuality, Women’s, and Gender studies
SWAG 350 Feminist Methodology
THE 244 Theatre and Disability