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Consciousness Studies [clear]
Title | Offering | Standing | Credits | Credits | When | F | W | S | Su | Description | Preparatory | Faculty | Days | Multiple Standings | Start Quarters | Open Quarters |
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Michael Paros
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Program | FR–SRFreshmen–Senior | 16 | 16 | Day | W 16Winter | Why do humans keep pets and at the same time raise animals for food? What are the psychological and moral complexities that characterize our relationships with animals? What is the impact of human-animal interactions on the health and well-being of people and animals? How do we assess the relative welfare of animals under a variety of circumstances? This program is an interdisciplinary study of human (anthro) and animal (zoo) interaction. This topic of inquiry will be used to study general biology, evolutionary biology, zoology, anthropology, and philosophy. Through field trips, guest speakers, reading, writing, and discussion, students will become familiar with the multiple and often paradoxical ways we relate to companion animals, animals for sport, zoo animals, wildlife, research animals, and food animals. We will use our collective experiences, along with science-based and value-based approaches, to critically examine the ever-changing role of animals in society.We will begin the quarter by focusing on the process of animal domestication in different cultures from an evolutionary and historical perspective. Through the formal study of animal ethics, students will also become familiar with different philosophical positions on the use of animals. Physiology and neuroscience will be used to investigate the physical and mental lives of animals, while simultaneously exploring domestic animal behavior. Students will explore the biological basis and psychological aspects of the human-animal bond. They will then study the science of animal welfare and complete a final project in which they will apply their scientific and ethical knowledge to a controversial and contemporary animal welfare question. Students will finish the quarter with a multiple-day trip to University of British Columbia, where they will visit with faculty and students doing active research in animal welfare science.Students will be expected to read primary literature in such diverse fields as animal science, ethology, neurobiology, sociobiology, anthropology, and philosophy. Student success in this program will depend on commitment to in-depth understanding of complex topics and an ability to combine empirical knowledge and philosophical reflection. | Michael Paros | Freshmen FR Sophomore SO Junior JR Senior SR | Winter | Winter | |||||
Mukti Khanna
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Program | FR–SRFreshmen–Senior | 8 | 08 | Day | Su 16 Session I Summer | This class will focus on both theory and practice in the field of psychology related to counseling for individuals, groups and communities. Students will develop paraprofessional counseling skills based on peer counseling, energy psychology, person- centered expressive arts therapy and intermodal expressive arts therapies.Mindfulness and somatic practices, including qigong and jin shin jyutsu, will be explored in terms of developing presence as a counselor, therapeutic skills, emotional regulation and understanding health from a mind -body perspective in counseling situations.Students will study personality theory to understand the theoretical orientations that support counseling practice from psychodynamic, humanistic and East-West paradigms in psychology.Modes of instructions will include seminars, case studies, counseling labs, workshops, assessments and theoretical projects. | Mukti Khanna | Tue Wed Thu Fri | Freshmen FR Sophomore SO Junior JR Senior SR | Summer | Summer | ||||
Mukti Khanna
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Program | JR–SRJunior–Senior | 16 | 16 | Day and Weekend | W 16Winter | This upper-division program will focus on both theory and practice in the field of psychology related to counseling for individuals, groups, and communities. The program will also focus on applications of social justice multicultural counseling work in the mental health field through theoretical readings and case studies.Students will study personality theory to understand the theoretical orientations that support counseling practice from psychodynamic, behavioral, humanistic, and transpersonal paradigms in psychology. Students will develop paraprofessional counseling skills based on peer counseling, energy psychology, and expressive arts therapy models of practice. Mindfulness and somatic practices will be explored in terms of developing presence as a counselor, therapeutic skills, and understanding interpersonal dynamics in counseling situations.Modes of instructions will include seminars, counseling labs, workshops, assessments, and theoretical projects. | Mukti Khanna | Junior JR Senior SR | Winter | Winter | |||||
Terry Setter, Cynthia Kennedy and Bill Arney
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Program | FR–SRFreshmen–Senior | 16 | 16 | Day | F 15 Fall | "The art of living" is an ancient concept, one that has always suggested that by being educated correctly one could come to live consciously and conscientiously, attentively, and with a sense of purpose. “Correct” education required both education of the mind and education of the body. One cultivated the mind through philosophical discussion with elders and masters who also prescribed appropriate practices for the body. This program will begin by contrasting “the art of living” and its characteristic effort to refine life by cutting away the unnecessary in favor of the Good, with modern life that constantly seeks to expand one's choices, options, and alternatives, all of which tend to distract our attention from our “true” purpose. Among other practices, we will study walking, reading, and writing: walking as political (e.g., protest marches), aesthetic (the "dandy"), and ascetic (pilgrimage) activity; reading not as information acquisition or entertainment but, as many religions do, as a practice of discernment of wisdom; writing not to express oneself or to find one's voice, but as a dedicated effort to find words to help one appreciate and understand embodied experience. We will explore questions about values in life as well as the writings of authors such as C.G. Jung, Ivan Illich, and Joanna Macy.We will explore ways people have used resources and practices, personal to global, to craft richer, more meaningful lives. We will have weekly workshops in movement and somatic practices as well as an overnight retreat to build program cohesion and explore new skills. During the term, students will work collaboratively to create responses to our program materials. They will also conduct independent research on a topic of their choosing, related to the program content; this project will account for up to half of the awarded credit. | Terry Setter Cynthia Kennedy Bill Arney | Freshmen FR Sophomore SO Junior JR Senior SR | Fall | Fall | |||||
Marja Eloheimo
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Program | FR–SRFreshmen–Senior | 12 | 12 | Weekend | F 15 Fall | W 16Winter | S 16Spring | Working as a project team, this program has a mission. Students will continue to tend and refine habitat and theme areas in the Longhouse Ethnobotanical Garden, including the Sister Garden (patterned after a medicinal garden we created on the Skokomish Indian Reservation) as well as create valuable educational resources that contribute to the Evergreen community, local K-12 schools, local First Nations, and a growing global collective of ethnobotanical gardens that promote environmental and cultural diversity and sustainability. Our work will also contribute to the new Indigenous Arts Campus. During , we will become acquainted with the garden and its plants, habitats, history, and existing educational materials. We will begin to engage in seasonal garden care and development, learning concepts and skills related to botany, ecology, Indigenous studies, and sustainable medicine. We will also establish goals related to further developing educational materials and activities, including a Web presence. Students will have the opportunity to select and begin specific independent and group projects that include learning knowledge and skills pertinent to their completion. During , we will focus on the garden's "story" through continued project work at a more independent level. Students will work intensively on skill development, research, and project planning and implementation. We will also be active during the winter transplant season and will prepare procurement and planting plans for the spring season. During , we will add plants to and care for the garden, wrapping up all of the work we have begun. We will establish opportunities to share the garden and our newly created educational materials, effectively enabling the garden to "branch out." This program requires commitment to a meaningful real-world project and strongly encourages yearlong participation. It also cultivates community within the program by nurturing each member's contributions and growth, and acknowledges the broader contexts of sustainability and global transformation. | Marja Eloheimo | Sat Sun | Freshmen FR Sophomore SO Junior JR Senior SR | Fall | Fall Winter Spring | ||
Hirsh Diamant and Tomoko Hirai Ulmer
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Program | FR–SRFreshmen–Senior | 8 | 08 | Weekend | S 16Spring | This program will introduce the history, culture and philosophy of China and Japan. We will use the theme of Silk Roads in our examination of China as the heart of Asian civilization and Japan as a constant presence at the eastern end of the routes. We will examine Asian philosophies including Daoism, Confucianism, Buddhism and Shintoism. We will learn the ideographic languages and their embedded worldview and sensitivities as expressed in poetry and literature; and we will envision contemporary and future Silk Roads with new trends, aspirations, and beliefs. Our inquiry into Chinese and Japanese history will focus on periods in which foreign influences were most influential, for example the time when Buddhism, along with tea, traveled on Silk Roads. Another transformation occurred in the 20 century, with devastating conflicts of WWII. Most of today’s complex political issues between China and Japan stem from this war. For centuries China has played, and is continuing to play, a central role in Asia. Japan embraced Chinese culture while modifying it to fit Japan’s political and cultural climate and needs. Japanese language, architecture, literature and art are steeped in Chinese influences. Japan is also a repository of both tangible and intangible Chinese culture that has disappeared from China itself. Treasures from the Silk Road and Tang Dynasty dance and music from the 8 century still survive in Japan. Such heritage has, in turn, helped produce a present day cultural renaissance in China. Much scholarship about China has been continually flourishing in Japan and the contemporary pan-Asian culture is developing beyond national borders. Program activities will include field trips to the Chinese and Japanese gardens in Portland, Oregon; calligraphy demonstrations and workshops; and learning about Chinese tea culture and Japanese tea ceremony. | Hirsh Diamant Tomoko Hirai Ulmer | Sat | Freshmen FR Sophomore SO Junior JR Senior SR | Spring | Spring | ||||
Ab Van Etten
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Program | FR–SRFreshmen–Senior | 8 | 08 | Evening | S 16Spring | Ab Van Etten | Mon Wed | Freshmen FR Sophomore SO Junior JR Senior SR | Spring | Spring | |||||
Jamyang Tsultrim
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Program | FR–SRFreshmen–Senior | 8 | 08 | Evening and Weekend | Su 16 Session I Summer | Can consciousness be studied through trained subjective experience? In the recent decade, methodologies utilizing have evolved as a crucial tool in investigating the nature of consciousness. Exploring and comprehending the nature and function of human consciousness can help us to discover our innate potential at the deepest levels of advanced consciousness. Students in this program will integrate the findings of Western science with Eastern (Buddhist) philosophies of mind, and will engage in contemplative techniques such as systematic training in universal ethics, refined attention, mindfulness, analytical skills, and direct experience. Main areas of inquiry include the nature of mind and its functions, store-house consciousness, grosser and subtler mind, conceptual thought and non-conceptual awareness, attention, emotions and perceptions. | Jamyang Tsultrim | Mon Wed Sat | Freshmen FR Sophomore SO Junior JR Senior SR | Summer | Summer | ||||
Michelle Aguilar-Wells
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Program | FR ONLYFreshmen Only | 16 | 16 | Day | W 16Winter | This introductory program uses film that revolves around complex issues found in society and that may offer different perspectives on human and societal behavior. Students will view and analyze a minimum of 15 popular and documentary films. The class will be divided into four topical areas: race relations, corporate influence and impacts, LGBTQ community issues, gender study, and student selected topics. Examples of films that may be included are: Crash, Milk, American History X, Wall Street, Grand Torino, Blackfish, Traffic, Missrepresentation, and How to Survive a Plague. Several foundational books will be studied in support of the topics. Students will review critiques of the films, participate in seminars, use organizing techniques to identify concepts, and review competing and historical perspectives. In addition, students will begin to understand the roots of social/activist movements. Students will produce reflections, comparative analyses, and a substantial (topic of choice) research paper, deep reflective questions for the films, and research work associated with each film category. Students will learn to apply critical modes of questioning to issues in their own communities. They will understand the meaning of social consciousness and the value of significant dialogue. Students should be prepared to enter into difficult discussions with civility and respect. Students are expected to critically examine their own beliefs in light of differing perspectives. Students can expect to earn credit in political science, critical thought, social consciousness, media studies, or social justice. : students in this program be prepared to view films that offer controversial, uncomfortable, emotional or trigger subject matter, and may be rated R. | Michelle Aguilar-Wells | Freshmen FR | Winter | Winter | |||||
Jamyang Tsultrim
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Course | FR–SRFreshmen–Senior | 4 | 04 | Weekend | W 16Winter | Are destructive emotions innately embedded in human nature? Can they be eradicated? A growing body of Western research has examined these and other questions through the perspectives of Eastern psychology and philosophy which view destructive emotions, perceptions, and behaviors as the primary source of human suffering. To alleviate this suffering, Eastern psychology has developed a rich and varied methodology for recognizing, reducing, transforming, and preventing these destructive forms of mind and emotion. After examining the nature and function of the afflictive mind/emotions, students will choose one emotion to study in-depth and develop effective East/West interventions to transform this emotion/state of mind. | Jamyang Tsultrim | Sat | Freshmen FR Sophomore SO Junior JR Senior SR | Winter | Winter | ||||
Jamyang Tsultrim
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Course | FR–SRFreshmen–Senior | 4 | 04 | Weekend | F 15 Fall | In what ways do our positive emotions/perceptions enhance our ability to see reality? Are there effective methods for training the mind to cultivate positive thought/emotions? Students will analyze the nature of constructive emotion/thoughts, their influence on our mental stability and brain physiology, and methodologies for influencing and improving mental development and function. Students will explore the correlation between mental training of the mind and physiological changes in the brain. We will also examine the nature of the genuine happiness from Eastern and Western psychological models of mind/emotion as well as from a traditional epistemological model of cognition based on Indo-Tibetan studies. | Jamyang Tsultrim | Freshmen FR Sophomore SO Junior JR Senior SR | Fall | Fall | |||||
Heather Heying, David Phillips and Bret Weinstein
Signature Required:
Fall
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Program | SO–SRSophomore–Senior | 16 | 16 | Day | F 15 Fall | W 16Winter | S 16Spring | Why are there so many species on the planet? Why are there more species nearer the equator than at the poles? This program seeks robust, meaningful explanations for these complex phenomena. In parallel, it approaches human cultural variation in a biotic context, addressing the questions: Where have humans traditionally fit in relation to biological nature, and how has our unparalleled within-species diversity been shaped by nonhuman forces? This program will introduce students to a unique and broadly applicable set of analytical tools, and apply them across a range of settings and scales that would be impossible in a traditional academic context.We will study patterns across space and time, revealing the selective forces that shaped the distribution, form, behavior, and interaction of organisms from all extant branches of the tree of life. From mycorrhizal fungi that live in the roots of trees to bats collecting fruit high in the moonlit canopy, organisms are best understood embedded in the context of the forces that gave rise to them.Though all sciences share a method of inquiry, the theoretical toolkit necessary to understand complex biological systems is different from the more familiar tools of the fundamental sciences, such as chemistry and physics. When an insect extracts nutrients from a leaf by detoxifying compounds built to deter herbivory, both the insect, and the plant whose leaf is consumed, have invested resources in an objective, and their gains and losses can be evaluated in terms similar to those in economics and engineering. We will apply concepts such as sunk costs, zero-sum game, and adaptive landscapes across systems and taxa.We will compare Pacific Northwest rainforest to the Ecuadorian Amazon, witnessing ecology’s most extreme, ubiquitous, and mysterious species-diversity pattern: the latitudinal diversity gradient. We will compare the Amazon at Earth’s most species-rich location—Yasuní—with equatorial montane, cloud forest, and altiplano habitats, revealing dramatic predictable reductions in species diversity that occur at a given latitude, with increases in elevation. And we will compare the high-diversity Amazonian habitat in the humid lowland east to the comparatively low-diversity habitats of the arid Andean rainshadow to the west.In tandem with our study of habitats, we will seek to understand indigenous cultures that have historically inhabited these biomes. We will consider the impact of glaciation and the role it played in initiating the diaspora of New World populations which diversified across the entirety of the Americas before Europeans arrived in the 15th century. Where there is archaeological evidence, we will interpret it in the context of the precolonial world.In fall, we will focus on logical tools, concepts, and language needed to understand evolutionary patterns. We will investigate levels of selection, and grapple with the relationship between genes, cultural memes, and epigenetic markers. We will take several field trips within Washington to experience relevant phenomena (e.g., Hoh rainforest, indigenous fishing on the Klickitat River, the channeled scablands). In winter and spring, we will travel to Ecuador, visit several sites, and spend extended field time investigating patterns across a tropical landscape of unparalleled diversity. | Heather Heying David Phillips Bret Weinstein | Mon Wed Thu | Sophomore SO Junior JR Senior SR | Fall | Fall | ||
Andrew Brabban and Heesoon Jun
Signature Required:
Winter
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Program | SO–SRSophomore–Senior | 16 | 16 | Day | F 15 Fall | W 16Winter | Human life begins as a combination of the parental genetic material in a single fertilized egg and, through development, it becomes an intricate and reactive organism composed of ten trillion differentiated cells. The nervous system alone contains hundreds of billions of cells, forming trillions of electrical connections and serving as the foundation for an immensely complex consciousness capable of thousands of thoughts and feelings per day. In this two-quarter-long interdisciplinary program, we will examine health and human development from evolutionary, developmental, physiological, integrative (allopathic and complementary), and psychological perspectives.Within the psychological component of our program, students will explore the diagnosis and treatment of mental disorders and essentials of healthy development from a holistic perspective. This will include understanding the interaction between nervous systems and environment and examining Diagnostic Statistical Manual Mental Disorders (DSM) from developmental, sociopolitical, and cultural aspects. We shall also focus on the biochemical, psychosocial, and spiritual aspects of specific conditions (e.g., trauma, the repeated experience of not being good enough, the profound psychological effects resulting from betrayal, etc.) on the development of psyche and its impact on healthy/unhealthy development. The importance of mindfulness for staying healthy will be emphasized and students are encouraged to practice mindfulness daily. Attention will also be paid to the psychopharmacology of legal and illegal drugs. In addition, we will explore multicultural perspectives of health and human development. No one model will prevail over another, but rather an integration of ideas, concepts, and thoughts will be presented. Within the biological component, we will approach the human body from an evolutionary and structural/functional perspective. Starting at a molecular level (genetics, cell structure, biochemistry, and gene regulation) and building through cell processes to organ systems, we will examine the human body as an integrated system that reacts to physiological and environmental factors (diet, stress, disease, and pharmacology).The program activities will provide students an opportunity to work collaboratively. Students will develop critical thinking, quantitative reasoning and writing skills and will learn that human health and development are complex, fluid, and dynamic through workshops, lectures, seminars, guest presentations, laboratory work, and group and individual projects. This is a full-time program and students will be expected to work efficiently for a total of 40 hours each week. | Andrew Brabban Heesoon Jun | Mon Mon Wed Thu Thu | Sophomore SO Junior JR Senior SR | Fall | Fall Winter | |||
Janys Murphy and Lynarra Featherly
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Program | FR–SRFreshmen–Senior | 16 | 16 | Day | F 15 Fall | In this all-level interdisciplinary program in human development and experimental creative writing, we will study the bio- and psychosocial development of the self and explore to what degree our self-conception is structured by internal and external voices. We will employ several modes of theoretical, critical, and creative inquiry and expression, listening for and possibly re-arranging the chorus of voices that constitute the self.How does the “voice” of psychology inform our conception of who we are? How do our relationships with others inform and expand our observational selves? We will consider concepts from attachment theory, interpersonal neuropsychology, infant mental health, as well as humanistic, existential, and feminist theory using a wide range of approaches, from neuroscience to psychoanalytic thought and developmental perspectives. Our readings will include work from Erikson, Siegel, Ainsworth, Bowlby, Adler, Rogers, Horney, Freud, Jung, and Frankl.In our writing and literary work, we will ask how do our own “voices” conceive of who we are? How might we disrupt conventional conceptions of the self? In an attempt to hear ourselves and others speak differently, our (un)creative writing will take up experimental writing procedures, e.g., using source texts as material to manipulate, transform and otherwise “translate” using combinatorial play, re-structuring or de-structuring. Our literary and poetic interlocutors will likely include Kristeva, Barthes, Lacan, Žižek, Charles Bernstein, Lyn Hejinian, M. NourbeSe Philip, Maggie Nelson, Claudia Rankine, and Julie Carr.Throughout the program, we will closely read texts from psychology, literary and critical theory, and experimental and conceptual works of poetry. We will engage these works in seminars, small groups, lectures, and reading sessions. All students will develop qualitative research skills, participate in mindfulness practices, and in writing, performance, and movement workshops. Students will write both academic essays and creative work. In the fall, students will explore the chronology of human development from birth to late childhood. Using the universal language of the child, movement and play, we will work through the transitions of each stage, approaching these through both psychology and literary theory. At the end of fall quarter, students will select a subset of writing produced over the quarter to bring together, rework, and self-publish in individual “chapbooks.” | Janys Murphy Lynarra Featherly | Freshmen FR Sophomore SO Junior JR Senior SR | Fall | Fall | |||||
Jamie Colley
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Course | FR–SRFreshmen–Senior | 4 | 04 | Evening and Weekend | F 15 Fall | Odissi, one of the major classical dances of India, combines both complex rhythmic patterns and expressive mime. This class will be devoted to the principles of Odissi dance, the synthesis of foot, wrist, hand and face movements in a lyrical flow to express the philosophy of yoga based dance. Throughout the quarter, we will study the music, religion, and history of Indian dance and culture. | Jamie Colley | Tue Thu Sat | Freshmen FR Sophomore SO Junior JR Senior SR | Fall | Fall | ||||
Jamie Colley
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Course | FR–SRFreshmen–Senior | 4 | 04 | Evening and Weekend | S 16Spring | Odissi, one of the major classical dances of India, combines both complex rhythmic patterns and expressive mime. This class will be devoted to the principles of Odissi dance, the synthesis of foot, wrist, hand and face movements in a lyrical flow to express the philosophy of yoga based dance. Throughout the quarter, we will study the music, religion, and history of Indian dance and culture. | Jamie Colley | Tue Thu Sat | Freshmen FR Sophomore SO Junior JR Senior SR | Spring | Spring | ||||
Mukti Khanna
Signature Required:
Fall
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Program | SO–SRSophomore–Senior | 16 | 16 | Day | F 15 Fall | This program will explore psychological dimensions of community systems through experiential and somatic dialogue practices, theoretical readings and expressive arts explorations. Students will gain skills in communication practices, group facilitation and applied mindfulness that can be integrated in both community internships, counseling and social health care. The program will participate in the interdisciplinary Anthropocene Consortium to provide breadth to our inquiry of psychology and community at this time in human history ( ). Half of the work in the program will be designed by students. Student work may involve community-based internships or student-originated projects in psychology, health, cultural studies and education. Questions to be explored include: The program is connected to Evergreen’s Center for Community-based Learning and Action (CCBLA) which supports learning about, engaging with, and contributing to community life in the region. As such, this program benefits from the rich resource library, staff, internship support and workshops offered through the Center. The CCBLA is available to help students locate potential internship sites during the summer and fall. Please contact them: . | Mukti Khanna | Sophomore SO Junior JR Senior SR | Fall | Fall | |||||
Mukti Khanna and Terry Setter
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Program | JR–SRJunior–Senior | 16 | 16 | Day | S 16Spring | The arts allow us to access deep components of ourselves that are not easily available through other means. They also allow us to gain new perspectives on our culture and the world around us. Perhaps this is at the heart of why people are so passionate about art.In this team-taught, full-time program, students will study developmental psychology and psychological underpinnings of artistic expression and will design arts activities for presentation within the class and for use as social health care projects beyond the campus. Students will integrate their knowledge of these areas to create inter-modal art-centered activities designed to reduce stress and increase resilience and social skills for diverse communities and age groups, including international refugee populations. The student-designed, art-centered activities might take many forms, such as online instructions, a video piece, a tabletop game or interactive theatre workshops. We will make use of cognitive and experiential approaches to learning in order to introduce students to skills and concepts needed to increase their understanding of cognitive, emotional, mental, and physical contexts of developmental psychology. The program will integrate theories with practice to explore diverse resources from personal to global in scale as well as guide students toward creating multi-modal arts-based modules that can become part of an international curriculum on social health care to build resilience and promote creativity for people of diverse ages and to reduce conflict in displaced communities. Students will also develop knowledge and presentation skills by conducting research into a topic of their choosing, related to their arts-presentation project, and presenting it in an appropriate format at the end of the term. | Mukti Khanna Terry Setter | Tue Wed Thu | Junior JR Senior SR | Spring | Spring | ||||
Bob Haft and Donald Middendorf
Signature Required:
Winter
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Program | SO–SRSophomore–Senior | 16 | 16 | Day | F 15 Fall | W 16Winter | From the Old Testament to Sigmund Freud, from August Kekulé’s vision of the ouroboros to Salvador Dali’s melting clocks, dreams have been an integral part of both an individual’s well-being and the creative spirit. Dreams have manifested themselves as clues to personal problems, solutions to stubborn intellectual conundrums, and even as works of art. What role do they play in our own inner and outer lives?This two-quarter, interdisciplinary program will provide an opportunity for students who are interested in doing intensive work in the areas of dreams and photography to cultivate awareness of the interplay of inner and outer experience through challenging readings, creative work, and self-reflection. We will examine our beliefs about the nature of reality as manifest in the expressive arts and physical reality from a variety of disciplinary viewpoints including photography, psychology, literature, and biology.During fall quarter, we will study the basics of black-and-white photography as a means of learning how to see and appreciate the world around us. We’ll also learn how we (and others throughout history) have used dreams to “see” our inner world. We’ll use Greek literature to examine the emotional and behavioral interactions that we call “love” and try to understand the concept of “light” from both a physical and philosophical perspective. During winter quarter, we’ll continue and deepen our study and use of photography and dreams and include a study of relevant topics in biology such as neuroplasticity, epigenetics, and the physiology of the eye. We’ll also examine alternative areas of research such as lucid dreaming and paranormal phenomena, as well as the approach of the Surrealists to examining the nature of reality through art and dreams. Students will have the opportunity to give a presentation to their peers using the skills learned during the two quarters.This is an experiential and rigorous full-time program in which students will be expected to participate in all program activities and document 48 hours of program-related work per week. | Bob Haft Donald Middendorf | Sophomore SO Junior JR Senior SR | Fall | Fall Winter | ||||
Gilda Sheppard and Carl Waluconis
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Program | FR–SRFreshmen–Senior | 8, 16 | 08 16 | Day and Evening | Su 16 Summer | This program will explore the role that movement, visual art, theater, music, and media can play in problem solving and in the resolution of internalized fear, conflicts, or blocks. Through a variety of hands-on activities, field trips, readings, films/video, and guest speakers, students will discover sources of imagery, sound, and movement as tools to awaken their creative problem solving from two perspectives—as creator and viewer. Students interested in human services, social sciences, media, humanities and education will find this course engaging. This course does not require any prerequisite art classes or training. Students may attend either day or evening sessions; first, second or full sessions for 8 or 16 credits accordingly. | Gilda Sheppard Carl Waluconis | Mon Tue Wed Thu | Freshmen FR Sophomore SO Junior JR Senior SR | Summer | Summer | ||||
Gilda Sheppard and Carl Waluconis
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Program | FR–SRFreshmen–Senior | 8, 16 | 08 16 | Day and Evening | Su 16 Summer | This program will explore the role that movement, visual art, theater, music, and media can play in problem solving and in the resolution of internalized fear, conflicts, or blocks. Through a variety of hands-on activities, field trips, readings, films/video, and guest speakers, students will discover sources of imagery, sound, and movement as tools to awaken their creative problem solving from two perspectives—as creator and viewer. Students interested in human services, social sciences, media, humanities and education will find this course engaging. This course does not require any prerequisite art classes or training. Students may attend either day or evening sessions; first, second or full sessions for 8 or 16 credits accordingly. | Gilda Sheppard Carl Waluconis | Mon Tue Wed Thu | Freshmen FR Sophomore SO Junior JR Senior SR | Summer | Summer | ||||
Bret Weinstein
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Research | SO–SRSophomore–Senior | V | V | Day | F 15 Fall | W 16Winter | S 16Spring | Research opportunities allow students to work on specific projects associated with faculty members’ expertise. Students typically begin by working in an apprenticeship model with faculty and gradually take on more independent projects within the context of the specific research program as they gain experience. Students can develop vital skills in research design, data acquisition and interpretation, modeling and theoretical analysis, written and oral communication, collaboration and critical thinking. These are valuable skills for students pursuing a graduate degree or entering the job market. (evolutionary biology) works on a wide range of topics, from evolutionary ecology, to adaptive dynamics. Students have the opportunity to focus on the interaction between selection on genes and culture, especially in humans. This type of inquiry often involves questions of consciousness, and the interface between creatures and novel environments. | Bret Weinstein | Sophomore SO Junior JR Senior SR | Fall | Fall Winter Spring | |||
Bill Arney and David Phillips
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Program | FR–SRFreshmen–Senior | 16 | 16 | Day | W 16Winter | S 16Spring | , “The Way,” is a collection of traditional pilgrimage routes that end in Santiago de Compostela, Spain. A monk said, “The only thing all pilgrims have in common is an interior necessity— ” As we study paths to Santiago, you will learn not just the . It may teach you why you had to go, about yourself, or how you want to live. This walk is a “focal activity” that makes demands and requires discipline, helps you sense relationships even when walking alone, reassures you about unknown capabilities, and, as one writer put it, gives you a “glimpse of life-giving possibilities.” In winter, we will study, first, the political history and the art of walking, especially the connection between walking and writing. Then we will take up the historical, religious, political, and cultural background of the and its place in contemporary Spain. Pilgrims’ accounts provide many takes on why people go to Santiago, what is required—physically, mentally, and financially—for walking routes that vary from 100 kilometers to more than 1,600 kilometers, what “pilgrimage” might mean in our time, and the kinds of meanings people make of their experiences after they return. Readings will range from the mystical realm to first aid for blisters, from spirit care to foot care, and everything in between. This portion of the program will involve significant lecture time, guest presentations, seminars and writing. And we will—all together, in small groups, and alone—take some walks. A substantial independent study project will give each student a personal entrée and continuing connection to “The Way.” Projects will be designed to continue during the students’ walks in the spring. Conversational Spanish, integrated within the program, will further students' preparations. In spring, everyone will be prepared to get to his or her starting point during the first week and begin his or her Way. Students will continue their independent studies and will provide volunteer service at two pilgrims’ shelters or other service organizations along the way. Most of week seven or eight will be spent together in Santiago, reflecting thoughtfully, carefully, playfully and, most important, together on our walks. Then we will probably walk the , the old pagan route toward the setting sun, the (the "Coast of Death") and “the end of the world.” Some may decide that it is important to follow the route from north to Muxía and back to Santiago. For a comprehensive program description and supplementary material on the , visit If you are a student with a disability and would like to request accommodations, please contact the faculty or the office of Access Services (Library Bldg. Rm. 2153, PH: 360.867.6348; TTY 360.867.6834) prior to the start of the program. | Bill Arney David Phillips | Freshmen FR Sophomore SO Junior JR Senior SR | Winter | Winter |