Timeroom: January 2025

Displaying 11 - 20 of 83 Results for: Campus = Durham

CMN 455 (01) - Introduction to Media Studies

Introduction to Media Studies

Online Course Delivery Method: Online Asynchronous
Credits: 4.0
Term: January 2025 - January Term - online (12/27/2024 - 01/18/2025)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   30  
CRN: 30123
Nature, development, and the effects of mass media. Overview of mass communication history and theory.
Equivalent(s): CMN 455H
Attributes: Social Science (Discovery)
Instructors: Michael Soha
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
12/27/2024 1/18/2025 Hours Arranged ONLINE
Additional Course Details: 

CMN 456 (01) - Propaganda and Persuasion

Propaganda and Persuasion

Online Course Delivery Method: Online Asynchronous
Credits: 4.0
Term: January 2025 - January Term - online (12/27/2024 - 01/18/2025)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   30  
CRN: 30080
Introduction to theories of propaganda and persuasion. Examination of symbolic strategies designed to secure or resist social and institutional change. Attention given to case studies of social, political, economic, and religious reformation. Special consideration of the ethical ramifications of such efforts.
Equivalent(s): CMN 456H
Attributes: Humanities(Disc)
Instructors: Robert Jackson
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
12/27/2024 1/18/2025 Hours Arranged ONLINE
Additional Course Details: 

Durham   Health & Human Services :: Communication Sci&Disorders

COMM 804 (01) - Counseling Clients and Families with Communication Disorders

Counseling w/ Comm Disorders

Credits: 2.0
Term: January 2025 - January Term - on campus (01/02/2025 - 01/18/2025)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   40  
CRN: 30012
This course focuses on counseling in the area of communication sciences and disorders. Specifically, the course will examine the application of therapeutic principles in clinical settings with people who have speech, language, and hearing communication difficulties. More specifically, this course is intended to provide the student with a broad overview of contemporary counseling approaches and issues that apply to specific clients and their family members. The course involves formal lectures and group discussion.
Section Comments: This class will meet on January 13, 15, and 17.
Equivalent(s): COMM 915
Instructors: Joan Glutting
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
1/13/2025 1/13/2025 M 9:10am - 4:00pm PETT 114
1/17/2025 1/17/2025 F 9:10am - 4:00pm PETT 114
1/15/2025 1/15/2025 W 9:10am - 4:00pm PETT 114
Durham   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 504 (01) - Resume Writing

Resume Writing

Online Course Delivery Method: Online Asynchronous
Credits: 2.0
Term: January 2025 - January Term - online (12/27/2024 - 01/18/2025)
Grade Mode: Credit/Fail Grading
Class Size:   30  
CRN: 30046
Write your resume now! Readings from recruiters, scholars, and managers reveal what employers want in resumes and cover letters, and what they don't want. Topics include: understanding ATS (applicant tracking systems); analyzing purpose and audience; learning cutting-edge designs; writing detailed and efficient content; tailoring your resume to the job advertisement; writing persuasive cover letters; and formatting and editing tips. Students will identify two job advertisements and write a resume and letter for each.
Instructors: Christine O'Keefe
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
12/27/2024 1/18/2025 Hours Arranged ONLINE
Additional Course Details: 

 

J-Term 2025 Course Details:

  • Learn cutting-edge designs
  • Write detailed and efficient content
  • Tailor your resume to the job advertisement
  • Craft persuasive cover letters
  • Format & Edit your resume to get the job! 
Durham   Liberal Arts :: English

ENGL 520 (01) - Dystopian and Post-Apocalyptic Fiction

Dystopian Lit

Online Course Delivery Method: Online Asynchronous
Credits: 4.0
Term: January 2025 - January Term - online (12/27/2024 - 01/18/2025)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   30  
CRN: 30047
What?s behind the explosion of the dystopian and post-apocalyptic subgenres in the past decade? How do these seer-like representations of the future revisit older narrative traditions? We will discover why these prophetic forms--straddling the realms of science, politics, literature, and psychology--are at the forefront of the popular imagination. Assignments include blog posts, an op-ed, an imitative style exercise, and participation in online group chats from which you have a wide selection of times.
Attributes: Humanities(Disc)
Instructors: Stephanie Harzewski
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
12/27/2024 1/18/2025 Hours Arranged ONLINE
Additional Course Details: 

J-Term 2025 Course Details:

This course examines the sociological reasons behind the explosion of the dystopian (sometimes called “dyslit”) and post-apocalyptic subgenres in the past decade, manifested in the bestselling trilogies The Hunger Games and Divergent, prize-winning fiction such as Cormac McCarthy’s futuristic wasteland The Road, and the recent release of the film adaptation of The Giver, Lois Lowry’s young adult classic. However, these seer-like representations are not the product of the late twentieth century and contemporary period, but have a much longer lineage; for instance, E.M. Forster’s short story “The Machine Stops,” though published in 1909, uncannily predicted the iPod, Skype, instant messaging, and the Internet. In this spirit, we will identify narrative traditions this body of writing revisits to impart, ironically, a clairvoyant vision for our world’s future. Assignments include regular blog posts, longer writing assignments whose options include a close-reading essay, an op-ed, an imitative style exercise, plus three online group discussion chats from which you have a wide selection of dates/times. In short, we will discover how these prophetic forms, straddling the realms of science, politics, literature, and psychology, document, “what is past, is passing, and to come,” to borrow from William Butler Yeats’s “Sailing to Byzantium,” and assess their position at the forefront of the popular imagination. 

This course may be counted towards Women's & Gender Studies major or minor requirements. 

This course satisfies the following requirement areas for English Department majors:

  • ENGLISH: Genres or Theory
  • ENGLISH TEACHING: One ENGL Dept course in Writing, Linguistics, Critical Theory, Film or Literature
  • ENGLISH LITERATURE: Post-1800 Literature; Genre; or 500-Level Introductory Course
  • ENGLISH/JOURNALISM: Post-1800 Literature
  • ENGLISH TBD: Post-1800 Literature
  • ENGLISH/LAW 3+3: 500-Level Introductory Course
Durham   Engineering&Physical Sciences :: Earth Sciences

ESCI 405 (01) - Global Environmental Change

Global Environmental Change

Online Course Delivery Method: Online Asynchronous
Credits: 4.0
Term: January 2025 - January Term - online (12/27/2024 - 01/18/2025)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   18  
CRN: 30063
Special Fees: $20.00
Human activity rivals nature as an agent of change in the global environment. Explores evidence of environmental degradation in Earth's crust, hydrosphere, and atmosphere; considers prospects for future sustainable human health, diversity, and economic development. Problem solving through critical analysis of environmental variables.
Attributes: Physical Science(Discovery)
Instructors: John Slater
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
12/27/2024 1/18/2025 Hours Arranged ONLINE
Durham   Engineering&Physical Sciences :: Earth Sciences

ESCI 868 (01) - Applied Physical Oceanography for Hydrographic Surveyors

Oceanography for Hydrography

Credits: 2.0
Term: January 2025 - January Term - on campus (01/02/2025 - 01/18/2025)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   12  
CRN: 30030
This course provides a context-specific examination of physical oceanographic phenomena that impact the quality of hydrographic surveys. This includes a review of global scale ocean circulation followed by a particular focus on processes controlling the variability of coastal and continental shelf oceanography. The instruments used, and the available ocean climatological databases are emphasized. The course is designed to meet the oceanography requirement for the Category A FIG/IHO/ICA Standards of Competence for Hydrographic Surveyors.
Instructor Approval Required. Contact Instructor for permission then register through Webcat.
Instructors: John Hughes Clarke
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
1/2/2025 1/18/2025 MTRF 9:10am - 10:00am CHASE 142
1/2/2025 1/18/2025 MTRF 11:10am - 12:00pm CHASE 142
1/2/2025 1/18/2025 MTRF 1:10pm - 2:00pm CHASE 142
1/2/2025 1/18/2025 MTRF 3:10pm - 4:00pm CHASE 142
1/2/2025 1/18/2025 W 9:10am - 12:00pm CHASE 142
1/2/2025 1/18/2025 W 1:10pm - 4:00pm CHASE 142
Durham   Liberal Arts :: Geography

GEOG 574 (01) - Global Landscapes and Environmental Processes

Global Landscapes and Environ

Online Course Delivery Method: Online Asynchronous
Credits: 4.0
Term: January 2025 - January Term - online (12/27/2024 - 01/18/2025)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   35  
CRN: 30037
A survey of earth's major landforms and the geographic factors that influence their development, distribution, and morphology. Topics include mountain building, river systems, desert migration and expansion, glacial and periglacial environments, and shoreline evolution. Discusses interactions with human activities and climate change. Emphasizes how these processes interact to form surface features that are unique to their geographic environment.
Attributes: Physical Science(Discovery)
Instructors: Solomon Maingi
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
12/27/2024 1/18/2025 Hours Arranged ONLINE
Durham   Graduate School :: Graduate School

GRAD 900 (01) - Master's Continuing Research

Master's Continuing Research

Credits: 0.0
Term: January 2025 - Full Term (12/27/2024 - 01/18/2025)
Grade Mode: Not graded
Class Size:   30  
CRN: 30107
Master's Continuing Research (GRAD 900) is for Master's students who are in residence and need to be full time but have already completed all course requirements, have previously registered for the maximum number of thesis or project credits. As this grants full-time status, students are also responsible for the full time mandatory fees. Effective Fall 2020, GRAD 900 may be taken only once. However, students who need to repeat this registration may do so with permission. Not Graded.
Instructor Approval Required. Contact Instructor for permission then register through Webcat.
Instructors: STAFF
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
12/27/2024 1/18/2025 Hours Arranged TBA
Durham   Graduate School :: Graduate School

GRAD 970 (01) - Special Topics in College Teaching

SpcTop/Teach&LrnMultiMedia

Online Course Delivery Method: Online Asynchronous
Credits: 2.0
Term: January 2025 - January Term - online (12/27/2024 - 01/18/2025)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   20  
CRN: 30065
Formal courses in college teaching: A) field studies; B) disciplinary studies, C-Z other.
Repeat Rule: May be repeated for a maximum of 10 credits.
Instructors: Catherine Overson
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
12/27/2024 1/18/2025 Hours Arranged ONLINE