[History_students] Scheduling information for 2004-2005 school year
Judy Ossello
jossello at depaul.edu
Thu Jul 29 12:03:46 CDT 2004
Scheduling information for 2004-2005 school year
The following information is designed to help students plan their
2004-2005 schedules. It includes information on classes that students
frequently ask about. Be sure to consult with your academic advisor
before enrolling for classes.
HST 199 and HST 397:
HST 199, Historical Concepts and Methods (the prerequisite for all
300-level history classes) will be offered 8 times during the 2004-2005
school year. HST 397, Coordinating Seminar (to be taken during the
student=s senior year) will be offered 3 times.
In Autumn Quarter, HST 199 will be offered three times: MWF 12:00-1:00
(Prof. Goffman), MWF 1:10-2:10 (Prof. Schultz), and T 5:45-9:00 (Prof.
Tikoff). It will be offered twice in Winter Quarter: TTh 3:10-4:40
(Prof. Sylvester) and W 5:45-9:00 (Prof. Storey). There will be three
more sections in Spring Quarter: MWF 10:00-11:50 (Prof. Krokar) and MWF
12:00-1:00 and 1:10-2:10 (both sections, Prof. Doody).
HST 397 will be offered once each quarter: in Autumn Quarter T Th
1:30-3:00 (Prof. Sylvester); in Winter Quarter MWF 10:50-11:50 (Prof.
Eslinger); and in Spring Quarter Th 5:45-9:00 (Prof. Mockaitis).
Evening classes:
HST 199 will be offered in the evening both Autumn Quarter (Tuesday,
Prof. Tikoff) and Winter Quarter (Wednesday, Prof. Storey). HST 397
will be offered in Spring Quarter (Thursday, Professor Mockaitis).
Classes at the 200-level in the categories of Europe, U.S., Latin
America, and intercontinental/comparative will be offered in the evening
each quarter during the 2004-2005 school year. Classes at the
200-level in the categories Asia and Africa will not be offered as
frequently. HST 287 East Asian Civilizations since 1600 will be
offered in Autumn Quarter (Thursday, Prof. Arenson); HST 229 Africa 1900
to Present will be offered in Spring Quarter (Thursday, Prof Otunnu).
300-level classes will be offered in the evening each quarter: two in
Autumn Quarter (both U.S.), one in Winter (U.S.), and 5 in Spring (1
Latin America, 1 Africa, 1 Europe, 1 U.S. and HST 397).
Please note that all evening history classes are offered 5:45-9:00. Be
sure to check whether the course you want is offered at Lincoln Park or
the Loop.
Pre-law classes:
All of the history classes required for the pre-law concentration will
be offered during the 2004-2005 school year. There are multiple
sections of HST 220 World History III offered each quarter. HST 292
England to 1688 will be offered twice, once each in Winter and Spring
Quarters (TTh 3:10-4:40, Prof. Mockaitis, LPC, both quarters). In
Autumn Quarter HST 365 US. Constitutional History to 1865 (Prof. Croak)
will be offered on Wednesday evening in the Loop. In Winter Quarter HST
388 The Court and the Bill of Rights (Prof. Croak) will be offered on
Tuesday evening in the Loop, and HST 395 Nuremburg to Iraq: Sources and
Evidence (Prof. Williams) will be offered MWF 1:10-2:10 at Lincoln Park.
In Spring Quarter HST 386 US. Constitutional History since 1865 (Prof.
Williams) will be offered on Wednesday evening in the Loop.
Please note that the Philosophy Department has reorganized its major,
dropping some classes that Pre-law history majors took and renumbering
others. As of summer 2004, it looks as if the only philosophy course
offered during the 2004-2005 school year that pre-law history majors
should take will be PHL 282 Symbolic Logic I, offered in Winter
Quarter.
New or infrequent classes to look out for:
In Autumn Quarter, Prof. Boeck will offer HST 320 on Frontiers and
Boundaries in World History, Prof. Krokar will offer HST 363 Modern
Balkans, Prof. Mora-Torres will offer HST 367 Comparative Latin American
Borderlands, and Prof. Lindsey will offer HST 394 African-American Urban
History.
In Winter Quarter, in conjunction with Catholic Studies= AJerusalem
Quarter,@ the department will offer a number of courses at both the 200-
and 300-level, including Prof. Scott=s HST 323 Cultures of Early
Christianity and Prof. Schultz=s HST 365 Crusades. Look out, as well,
for HST 269 Introduction to Public History (Prof. Eslinger), HST 278
History of American Religion (Prof. Atkinson), HST 279 Westward
Expansion in the U.S. (Prof Rzeczkowski), HST 331 The Nation and
Nationalism in Europe (Prof. Krokar), and HST 370 American Colonial
History (Prof. Burton).
In Spring Quarter look for HST 272 Fascism and Counter-Revolution
(Profs. Sippel and Erlebacher), HST 278 History of American Religion
(Prof. Atkinson), HST 321 Topics in African History (Prof. Garfield),
HST 322 Topics in Asian History (Prof. Hirano), and HST 371 The American
Revolution (Prof. Eslinger).
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