Archived Evening and Weekend Catalogs

Current Offerings

Evening and Weekend Studies


Advanced Management Topics: A Few Good Managers Wanted

8 credits
Faculty: John Filmer, ext. 6159, email: John Filmer
TuW, 6-10p
Prerequisites: Faculty signature, previous management study, junior standing or above.
Enrollment: 30
CRN: 10191
This is a part-time option of the full-time program of the same title. Refer to the online 2003-2004 Academic Catalog for additional information on the full-time program. This yearlong part-time option is designed for students who have previously studied management and wish to engage in advanced work in management related topics. The program will feature a comprehensive analysis of the economic, cultural, political, technological and legal environments in which entrepreneurial organizations (for-profits and non-profits) compete. It will showcase economic and community development and include team building, small business development/startup and growth, organizational communication, ethics, global issues management and strategic and scenario planning. A major focus will be the consideration of current events in management strategy. Seminars will emphasize the development of critical reading and reasoning skills and the formulation and effective articulation of definitive, tightly reasoned positions on key management issues. Program activities will include lectures, workshops, case studies, field trips and group and individual research projects.
Students interested in the 12- or 16-credit option of the full-time program (which involves some class time during the day) should consult with the program faculty. For preliminary management study, please see Introductory Management Topics: A Few Good Managers Wanted.

Credit may be awarded in management strategy, communications, community and economic development, and planning.

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The Age of Irony: 20th-Century America

8 credits
Faculty: Sarah Ryan, ext. 6720, email: Sarah Ryan, and Susan Preciso, ext. 6011, email: Susan Preciso
MW, 6-9:30 and two Saturdays, 10a-4p, Oct 11 and Nov 1
Enrollment: 50
CRN: 10181
This yearlong program will be organized thematically, examining turning points in American life and thought, especially the development of our sense of irony, reflected in politics and culture. Each quarter will have a distinct focus, but will have clear interdisciplinary connections. Fall quarter's work will focus on wars and their consequences-intended and unintended-concentrating on World Wars I and II and the Vietnam War. During winter quarter, we will concentrate on movements for social change, beginning with the Progressive era and continuing through the Civil Rights, Women's and Anti-War movements. During spring quarter's study of culture and creativity, we will see how these turning points were and are reflected in our cultural lives. We will examine literature, film, music and the arts. This is an all-level program, ideal for returning and transfer students. It is a broad liberal arts program designed for students who want to improve their historical knowledge and (multi)cultural literacy. We will also work closely with Caryn Cline to integrate film study into our work each quarter.

Credit may include 20th-century American history, labor history, 20th-century American literature, research skills and academic writing. Our work over three quarters will meet some endorsement prerequisites for the Master in Teaching Program in U.S. history, political science and American literature.

For more information, please see http://academic.evergreen.edu/curricular/ageofirony/

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Art, Creativity and the Sacred

8 credits
Faculty: Ann Storey, ext. 5008
MW, 6-9:30p
Special Expenses: $25 for art supplies and museum admission
Enrollment: 25
CRN: 10163
This program will examine the art and spirituality of two exceptional periods of western culture. During fall quarter we will focus our attention on the Medieval era, while winter quarter will be devoted to the Renaissance. Central questions will include: Why are these periods still so compelling? What were the relationships between the art and spirituality? What parts of these traditions continue to inspire us?

The idea that both mystic and artist were ‘seers’ –-seeing beyond the physical into the transcendent and metaphysical-- impelled them into visionary realms. We will learn about the mysticism of Hildegard of Bingen, Meister Eckhart, and other charismatic figures during fall quarter, as we see their visions expressed in superb mosaics, illuminated manuscripts, stained glass, sculpture and architecture. We will also explore the architecture, music and poetry of Islamic Spain. During winter quarter we will study the ‘devotio moderno’ of the Low Countries and see how this was expressed in the exquisite oil paintings of Flanders. We will include an exploration of the lives and work of creative Renaissance women.

Sacred music of each era will be explored and a field trip each quarter to a museum and concert will be an important part of our activities. Students will have an opportunity for either creating art or completing a research paper for their final project. If the student chooses to do an art project, it could include studying and producing work in a media appropriate to the era, for example, illuminated manuscripts or mosaics.

Credit will be awarded in art history and studio arts.

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Arts, Environment and the Child

8 credits
Faculty: Nancy Parkes, ext. 6737, email: Nancy A. Parkes, and Hirsh Diamant, ext. 6736,email: Hirsh Diamant
M, 6-9p, and Sa, Oct 4, 18, Nov 1, 15, Dec 6, 9a-5p
Enrollment: 50
CRN: 10153
Children begin life with a deep and joyous connection to the arts and to the natural world. Later in life, this natural ability to dance, paint and make things, along with a living connection to ecology, is muted or lost. How? What can be done to restore these essential connections for children and adults? Students will become acquainted with the study of child development, public education methods, alternative education and practical applications of integrating both arts and environmental studies within academic curriculum. Through experiences in visual and performing arts, as well as experiential work with children, students will gain an understanding of the importance of both arts and connection to nature in the development of the child. We will also study how more integrated curriculum may lead children to develop richer adult lives.

Credit may be awarded in child development, expressive arts and environmental education.

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Community Practice and Digital Social Change

8 or 12 credits
Faculty: Doug Schuler, ext. 6704, email: Doug Schuler and Helena Meyer-Knapp, ext. 6549, email: Helena Meyer-Knapp
All students will meet W, Oct 1, 22, Nov 12, Dec 10, 6-10;l Sa, Oct 11, 25, Nov 8, 22, Dec 6, 9a-4p; Sun, Oct 26 and Nov 9, 9a-4p. In addition, students registered for 12 credits will meet W, Oct 8, 15, 29, Nov 5, 19, Dec 3, 6-10p
Special Expenses: $25 for conference registration and video tape
Enrollment: 50
CRN: 10159 (8 credits); 10185 (12 credits)
This yearlong program will consider how technology is used in activist communities, commuities of interest and communities of place. In general we will be exploring relationships between communities in and outside our region. The basic themes for the program are design and development of community tools, pattern languages, participatory design, community informatics, social networks and globalism. Over the course of the academic year we will be working in partnership with various communities.
We will be constraining the guidelines in this program in many ways. The first is that the faculty will be selecting the project areas in advance. Also, students will be working with public domain software (such as PHP, Apache, HTML, Linux and MySQL) and/or video and other digital media. There will be assigned readings, writings, and discussions related to the use of computers in society. We will be attending a national conference in Seattle one weekend in fall. Part of the focus will be developing computer support for the Center for Community Partnerships. There will be a 12-credit option.

Credit will be awarded in social science, technology studies, participatory social action and technology development (e.g. computer science). There will also be an opportunity to earn an additional four credits in pattern language and software development using PHP, MySQL and other public domain technologies to help support community and civic projects. Students can earn an additional four credits developing a short special project using digital video, digital audio or both.

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Computing Across Academic Disciplines

8 credits
Faculty: Barry Tolnas, ext. 6588, email: Barry Tolnas
TTh, 6-10p
Enrollment: 25
CRN: 10647
This is an introductory computer science program that approaches computer science and programming as a tool for solving problems in a wide range of disciplines from the sciences and engineering to the arts and humanities. Each week students will write computer programs based on examples in class which demonstrate how computers can be used to visualize and process information, and experiment with ideas by trying them out in computer simulations.

Credit will be awarded in computer science.

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Doing Science

8 credits
Faculty: Kevin Hogan, ext. 5078, email: Kevin Hogan, and Allen Olson, ext. 5485, email: Allen Olson
Sa, 9a-5p
Enrollment: 50
CRN: 10188
What is science? Is it an esoteric practice that's out of the reach of ordinary mortals, or can anyone do it? We'll discuss the scientific approach as one way of knowing the world. What is "hypothesis testing"? What is the role of statistics? Does science delivery absolute certainty? We will develop skills in observation, sampling methods and data analysis. Reading topics will include some history and philosophy of science.

Credit may be awarded in the history and philosophy of science, research methods, statistics and computing, and the discipline of each student's project focus.

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Finding Your Voice: Advocacy and Change

8 or 12 credits
Faculty: Marla Elliott, ext. 6096, email: Marla Elliott, and Char Simons, ext. 6710, email: Char Simons
W, 6-9:30p, and Sa, Oct. 11, 25, Nov 1, 22, and Dec. 6, 9a-5p
Special Expenses: $10 for performance admission
Enrollment: 35
CRN: 10124 (8 credits); 10125 (12 credits)
Your voice-in your body and on paper-is a manifestation of your truest self. People who can articulately and passionately voice their deepest concerns nurture the whole community. As Arlo Guthrie said, "If you want to end wars 'n stuff, you gotta sing loud."

This skill-based program will help students develop both oral and written eloquence and integrate them with each other. Students will also improve research skills and apply them to furthering a social/political cause. Specifically, each student will explore a particular issue about which she or he feels passionately through advocacy writing, speeches, songs and chants.

Activities will include workshops on singing, songwriting, chanting, speech writing and delivery, research, quantitative reasoning, advocacy writing and editing. Readings will include Freeing the Natural Voice; A Question of Values; Community and the Politics of Place; and others. A 12-credit option will be available for students who want to do community service. This will entail working with a community group for 10 hours a week on an issue related to work the student is doing for the eight-credit part of the program, and an oral or written synthesis of the work at the end of the quarter.

Credit will be awarded in speech, voice and expository writing.

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Gifts of the First People: Plants as Medicine and Food

8 credits
Faculty: Marja Eloheimo, ext. 6448, email: Marja Eloheimo,
W, 6-9:30 and Sa, Oct 4, 18, Nov 1, 15, Dec 6, 9a-5p
Prerequisite: Junior standing or above and faculty signature. Letter of interest outlining relevant background and current reasons for interest in the program. Students should have substantial background in one or more of the following disciplines: Native American studies, botany/plant ecology, botanical medicine, ecological restoration, horticulture, GIS, film/photography, Web design or business development.
Special Expenses: $25 activity fee
Enrollment: 25
CRN: 10128
cHabasHcH3d ti cH3la'ub3sh or "Gifts of the First People" is the new name that Skokomish Traditional Leader, subiyay - Bruce Miller, has chosen for a Tribal-Academic cooperative project that has been underway on the Skokomish Indian Reservation for several years. subiyay tells us that, according to Twana belief, the trees and plants were the first created people. Their gift to those who were created later was food, medicine and materials for survival. This program will embrace the medicinal plant studies included in the sayuyay Plant Project as well as other aspects of the project, including habitat demonstration gardens and edible plant cultivation and harvest. This year, the project will focus on developing a cross-cultural botanical medicine and edible plant study integrating Western and Indigenous traditions. We will experience, refine and formalize curriculum in botanical medicine, botany and ecology, horticulture, harvest and plant product manufacture, business and marketing, educational resource development, Native American studies, environmental anthropology and community service. Expect the unexpected as we join together to collaborate in a real world project and learn from, about, and with the plant people and each other.

Credit may be awarded in botanical medicine, environmental horticulture, and Native American studies among others.

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Government and the Economy

(at Grays Harbor College)

8 or 12 credits
Faculty: Howard Schwartz, ext. 6588, email: Howard Schwartz, and Tomas Mosquera, ext. 6588
Sa, 9a-4p, at Grays Harbor College in Aberdeen; first class meets on the Olympia campus
Prerequisite: Junior standing or above
Enrollment: 35
CRN: 10169 (8 credits); CRN: 10170 (12 credits)
The type of economy we have and the way it performs is the result of centuries of governmental policy making. This program examines the basics of the U.S. market economy and the governmental framework within which it works. We will study the constitutional and political framework within which policy decisions are made and look specifically at the tools governments at all levels use to steer economic decision making. In the process, we will ask some fundamental questions about democracy, equity and governmental effectiveness and will introduce some fundamental macroeconomic concepts to understand how economic factors respond to government policies. Finally, we will attempt to place the U.S. economic system in a comparative perspective to see why the United States differs from market economies in Europe and elsewhere on many essential points.

Credit will be awarded in politics, public administration and economics

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Introductory Management Topics: A Few Good Managers Wanted

8 or 12 credits
Faculty: Theresa Aragon, ext. 6840, email: Theresa Aragon, and Neil Delisanti, ext. 5486, email: Neil Delisanti
Intensive weekends, Oct 4, 18-19, Nov 1-2, 15-16 and Dec 6- 7, 9a-4p
Prerequisites: Faculty signature, junior standing or above, Internet access and one year's work experience.
Enrollment: 35
CRN: 10192 (8 credits); 10193 (12 credits)
This yearlong program will assess management and leadership in the context of contemporary technological advances and globalization. We will examine organizations as interdependent within their economic, political and social environment. Organizational development and management strategies will be analyzed in terms of current and future utility. Traditional elements of management programs such as decision-making, strategic planning, organizational behavior and conflict management will be incorporated throughout the program. Application of theory and enhancement of critical thinking and research skills will occur through developing solutions to problems and case study analysis. Assignments will place a heavy emphasis on developing analytical, verbal, written and electronic communication skills through dialogue, critical essays and case study analysis and presentation. Fall quarter emphasis will be on managerial self-assessment and skill development. Students interested in the 12-credit option should consult with the program faculty. For advanced management study, please see Advanced Management Topics: A Few Good Managers Wanted.

Credit will be earned in leadership and managerial skills development.

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Sport and Society: Separating Hype from Reality

8 or 12 credits
Faculty: Marcella Benson-Quaziena, ext. 6593, email: Marcella Benson-Quaziena, and Joli Sandoz, ext.6850, email: Joli Sandoz
Sa, Oct 4, 9a-5p, and three intensive weekends, Oct 25-26, Nov 8-9, Dec 6-7, 9a-5p
Special Expenses: Attendance at two sports events of student's choice
Enrollment: 50
CRN: 10111 (8 credits); 10646 (12 credits)
Sport can serve as a rich resource for the study of U.S. life, in all of its diversity and drama. Questions we will examine include: What do we mean by sport, and what is its role in higher education? How do sport participation and non-participation affect us? How does competitive athletics shape ideas about gender, work, achievement, aggression, violence, class inequality, race and ethnicity, individualism and collaboration, and fun? We'll rely on approaches and ideas from social psychology and critical sociology to guide our work.

Three credits each will be awarded in sociology and social psychology, and two credits in social research.

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Understanding Your Food: Chemistry and Biology of Nutrients

8 credits
Faculty: Peter Pessiki, ext. 6892, email: Peter Pessiki, and Cindy Beck, ext. 5942, email: Cindy Beck
MW, 6-10p, and Sa, Oct 4, 25, Nov 15, 9a-5p
Special Expenses: $20 lab fee
Enrollment: 48
CRN: 10154
From the world of molecules and cells to the domain of food science, nutrition can be understood from many perspectives. This two-quarter introductory science program will develop skills needed to understand the chemical composition and nutritional values of food. Fall quarter will focus on molecules and chemical bonding, utilizing a mix of general and organic chemistry. Paralleling this, physiology and nutrition will allow students to appreciate the minute detail of nutrients on a cellular level.

Credit will be awarded in chemistry, biology and nutrition.

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Last Updated: August 25, 2017


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Olympia, Washington 98505

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