Archived Evening and Weekend Catalogs

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Evening and Weekend Studies


Applied Computer Programming I

8 credits
Faculty: Barry Tolnas, 867-5531, email: Barry Tolnas
TTh, 6-9:30p
Prerequisite: High school algebra and some trigonometry
Enrollment: 25
CRN: 10231
Although computers are still a very new technology, they have already become an indispensable part of a broad range of human endeavors. Applied Computing introduces computer science by studying its application to disciplines ranging from the arts and sciences to business and the World Wide Web. Students will learn the fundamentals of programming by working to understand and modify short computer programs from a number of disciplines. Credit will be awarded in computer science, data structures and algorithms and applied programming. Upper division credit may be available.

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Art, Words and Women: Masquerade and Metaphor

8 credits
Faculty: Ann Storey, 867-5008, and Joli Sandoz, 867-6850, email: Joli Sandoz
W, 6-9:30p, and Sa, 9a-1p
Prerequisite: Sophomore standing or above
Special Expenses: $15 for museum admission and art supplies
Enrollment: 50
CRN: 10143
Using the primary metaphor of the "masquerade," this program will take an in-depth, interdisciplinary and multicultural approach to the study of 20th-century women's art and writing. Masquerade is an exciting and appropriate theme because-since society constructs gender, in part through femininity-masquerade is an inescapable part of female lives. What are the ways that women express, defy, transform or challenge this masquerade through their art and writing? How does women's resistance help us transform ourselves? Moving from idea to creative response, we will learn how to make masks to use in our performance art pieces. We will also apply our study of metaphor and of feminist theory to such stereotypical themes as mother goddess and witch, to gage their empowering or crippling effects, and to objectifications of women in contemporary art, films and advertising. Our overall goal will be to make useful knowledge from personal experience, emotion, and theoretical/ conceptual material.
Credit will be awarded in feminist art history and feminist literary studies.

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Arts and the Child

8 credits
Faculty: Hirsh Diamant, 867-6736, email: Hirsh Diamant
W, 5:30-9p, and every other Sat, Oct 9, 23, Nov 6, 20 Dec 4, 9a-5p
Special Expenses: Approx $15 for art supplies
Enrollment: 25
CRN: 10138
All children begin their lives singing and dancing, painting and making things. Later in life, this natural ability becomes suppressed and often lost. This class will nourish the inner child of the students and reach out to children in the community. Through experiences in visual and performing arts, students will understand the importance of the arts in the development of a child. The fall quarter will be devoted to the pre-school child with a special focus on puppetry and storytelling.
Two credits each will be awarded in child development and education, expressive arts, puppetry and storytelling, and community service.

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The Authentic Self

8 credits
Faculty: Marcella Benson-Quaziena, 867-6593, email: Marcella Benson-Quaziena, and Marla Elliott, 867-6096, email: Marla Elliott
Sa, Oct 2, 9a-5p, and SaSu, Oct 16, 17, Nov 6, 7, Dec 4, 5, 9a-5p
Prerequisites: Junior standing or above and access to the Internet and a word processing program
Enrollment: 50
CRN: 10184
You are the most powerful and versatile tool you have. How can you use your presence as an instrument of change? How do you know who you are and what you evoke/provoke in others? How do you move in the world with awareness of your authentic self? The ability to communicate and influence is crucial to our effectiveness as we move through many systems. This two-quarter program is designed for students who want to develop skills of self-knowledge and "use of self" as an instrument of social change.
We will use acting to assist us to observe carefully the nature of human feeling and interaction, and to use our observations to create insight in our audiences and ourselves; singing to make art out of breathing, to literally tune ourselves to the subtlest vibrations our bodies are capable of; songwriting to imagine words, rhythm, and melody together and to put forth our imaginations into public space; and human development theory to give us a frame for understanding self in context.
Credit will be awarded in arts and culture and psychology.

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Business in a Global Context

8 credits
Faculty: Theresa Aragon, 867-6840, email: Theresa Aragon
W, Sept 29, 6-10p, and SaSu, Oct 16,17, Nov 6, 7, Dec 11, 12, 9a-5p
Prerequisites: Junior standing or above, Internet access and competence, and at least one year of work experience or college-level management courses
Enrollment: 25
CRN: 10164
The world as we know it has changed immeasurably during the past ten years. Our horizon has been expanded through the World Wide Web and quantum advances in communication and computer technology. We are now members of a global society and as such have an intellectual responsibility to attempt an understanding of globalization. Globalization has created both opportunities and challenges for international business and will serve as the organizing framework for our study of business in an international context. We will inform our understanding through the perspective of politics, economics, social science, culture and history. Learning in this class will be interdependent and dynamic. It will require everyone's best effort and full commitment.
Credit will be awarded in international business and government.

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Community Information Systems

8 or 12 credits
Faculty: Doug Schuler, 867-6704, email: Doug Schuler, and Allen Olson, 867-5485, email: Allen Olson
W, 6-9:30p, and Sa, Oct 9, 16, 30, Nov 13, Dec 4, 9a-4:30p
Special Expenses: Conference fee
Enrollment: 40
CRN: 10168 (8 cr.); 10169 (12 cr.)
This yearlong program will develop Web-based software for communities across the U.S. and the globe. Program themes will include participatory design, community informatics, social networks, localism and globalism. Although a range of projects will be available, all projects will utilize the same software (including Linux, Apache, PHP and MySQL). For more information, please see http://grace.evergreen.edu/cis/
Credit may be awarded in software design and development, project management, PHP programming, database design, community informatics or other social sciences, educational technology and other areas depending on the focus of the project and the role of the student.

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In Search of Sustainability

8 credits
Faculty: Nancy Parkes, 867-6737, email: Nancy Parkes and Marja Eloheimo, 867-6448, email: Marja Eloheimo
W, 6-9:30p, and five Saturdays, Oct 2, 16, 30, Nov 13, Dec 4, 9a-5p
Prerequisite: Sophomore standing or above
Enrollment: 50
CRN: 10232
Is it possible to have a sustainable economy, sustainable healthcare and ecological sustainability? To what extent can we, in the United States, sustain ourselves and our diverse communities with our own hands, minds, hearts and land? What knowledge, skills, practices, and wisdom are needed? Throughout the year, we will examine these issues on our campus, in our personal lives and communities, in collaboration with local Tribal members, and on a more global scale. Our work will include both research and a hands-on approach. From herbalism and gardening as paths of empowerment and heart, to energy and water usage as paths of knowledge and accountability, we will explore sustainability in action. These will include a sustainability plan for the college, the Gifts of the First People Plant Project gardens on the Skokomish Indian Reservation, and other projects proposed by students in the areas of land use, transportation, building use, greenhouse gas emissions, and energy use. We will also build quantitative "indicators" that offer decision-makers information about the effects our usage has on the environment. Finally, we will become familiar with the political framework and institutions-governmental, cultural and corporate alike-that influence and define development on both local and global scales. Students will finish the program with important skills and deeper understandings that they can apply to formulating solutions in other organizations as well as living out commitments on the personal and community level. For further information, e-mail either faculty.
Credit may be awarded in environmental studies, botanical studies (including botanical medicine), natural resources policy, sustainability studies and cultural studies.

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Justice at Work: Civil Rights, Labor Law and the Workplace

8 credits
Faculty: Sarah Ryan, 867-6720, email: Sarah Ryan, and Arleen Sandifer, 867-5470, email: Arleen Sandifer
Sa, 9a-5p
Special Expenses: $20 for conference registrations
Enrollment: 50
CRN: 10140
No discussion about justice in the American workplace can ignore two sets of laws: labor law as set forth in the National Labor Relations Act and civil rights/anti-discrimination law as written in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. These laws define workers' rights, but they also reflect the shape of power in society, and they can determine labor and management strategies. Their texts were written by lawmakers, but in another sense, they were written in the streets and workplaces during turbulent times. Class and racial biases exist in, and are reproduced by, the laws and their practices. How is their history important? What social movements and conditions brought the National Labor Relations Act and the Civil Rights Act into being? How did the struggles at their roots shape the laws' forms? How do they affect the workplace today? Are they effective, and for whom?
This two-quarter program will look at civil rights and labor legislation through the lenses of history and sociology, from perspectives in legal studies and labor studies. We will examine some of the controversies surrounding these laws today-around issues like union organizing, affirmative action and employment discrimination. Students will become acquainted with the critiques developed by scholars in critical race theory and critical legal studies, which help us think about power in the larger society and alternative possibilities for justice.
Be prepared for fun, active problem-solving and lots of hard work. Students will learn to do basic legal and historical research, to research and interpret historical events and the law together, and to understand larger social issues and future implications of cases and legislation. Students will get a sense of the real work of attorneys and courts, but also the real work of activists and union stewards. Students should be prepared with some basic background in 20th-century American history and should have the patience and persistence to read detailed history, statutes and legal cases. The class will be particularly useful for those interested in careers in law, labor organizing, history, social justice, public administration and management.
Credit will be awarded in American history, including labor and African American history, and legal studies.

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Politics and the Media

8 credits
Faculty: Howard Schwartz, 867-6723, email: Howard Schwartz, and Char Simons, 867-6710, email: Char Simons
W, 6-9:30p, and Sa, Oct 2, 16, 30, Nov 13, Dec 4, 9a-5p
Prerequisites: Some college-level work in politics, history, sociology or comparable study
Enrollment: 50
CRN: 10144
Fall quarter will focus on national elections and the media. We will develop an understanding of the media as a political actor by considering the following topics: the history of U.S. media, understanding how news is created and disseminated, critically analyzing news coverage of various kinds of media (print, broadcast, Internet) and understanding the strengths and weaknesses of various types of media. We will study several theories of how public opinion is formed, how they influence politics and policy makers, and how political actors strive to mold public opinion. Students can also expect to improve their understanding of basic quantitative measures, such as polling frequently used by the media, and their proficiency in academic writing.
Credit will be awarded in political science, media theory, public policy and expository writing.

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Quantitative Methods for Effective Management

8 credits
Faculty: Neil Delisanti, 867-5486, email: Neil Delisanti
Sa, Oct 2, 9a-4:30p, and SaSu, Oct 23, 24, 30, 31, Nov 20, 21, Dec 4, 5, 9a-4:30p
Prerequisites: Junior standing or above, access to Internet and Excel software. Students should have college-level management, business or accounting and/or some management or supervisory experience
Enrollment: 25
CRN: 10159
Managers of any organization are constantly required to make decisions in pursuit of the organization's goals. To arrive at the best decisions, effective managers need a wide variety of information that reflects all aspects of an organization. This course is designed to familiarize students with the utilization of quantitative information for the management of organizations. Students will study the fundamental concepts and principles of quantitative analysis, financial accounting, managerial accounting and organizational finance. Subjects covered will include budgeting, organizational analysis and evaluation, cost accounting, time value of money, cost-benefit analysis and cash flow management. Students will also become familiar with the Excel spreadsheet and learn how to design and implement analytical and decision-making models. The emphasis throughout the class will be on the utilization of quantitative data and the understanding of quantitative analysis procedures and processes for the implementation of management decisions in an organization.
Four credits each will be awarded in managerial accounting and financial analysis.

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Sex, Gender and Evolution

8 credits
Faculty: Kevin Hogan, 867-5078, email: Kevin Hogan, and Lori Blewett, 867-6590, email: Lori Blewett
Sa, 9a-5p
Enrollment: 50
CRN: 10173
This two-quarter program will examine sex and gender from several perspectives, including biology, evolution, sociology, and anthropology. In the first quarter we will focus on prevailing theories of evolution and gender. What is sex for? In sexual species only half of the individuals produce offspring, so they should be at a competitive disadvantage relative to asexual species. Yet sex is virtually ubiquitous in biology-what is its evolutionary function? Human societies have developed many ways to mark and accentuate sexual differences. How and why have social constructions of gender varied over time and across cultures? What role has scientific discourse played in the development of gender roles and attitudes? In the second quarter we will focus on contemporary controversies around sexual orientation, sex roles, biology and gender identity.
Credit will be awarded in evolutionary biology and gender studies.

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Work and the Human Condition

8 credits
Faculty: Susan Preciso, 867-6011, email: Susan Preciso, and Stephen Beck, 867-5488, email: Stephen Beck
MW, 6-9:30p and one Saturday per quarter
Enrollment: 50
CRN: 10160
In this year long program, we will examine the nature and place of work in human life and culture. Studying literature, philosophy and history, we will develop an understanding of work that goes well beyond the concept of work as a way to pay the bills. We will consider important questions: Why is work important in a complete human life? What roles can it play both for an individual and for the whole social system? What ways of working should a person strive to practice? Who does what work? Our primary lens will be Western; however, we will make some important connections and comparisons to other traditions as well.
During Fall Quarter, we'll study ideas about the place of work in the human condition, beginning with some ancient foundational texts and continuing to the 18th century. Our reading fall quarter will include passages from the Bible, the Koran, Aristotle, Plato, the Stoics, and Aquinas. We'll read The Odyssey, The Pilgrims' Progress and other selected texts.
Winter Quarter's work will move to a study of ideas about work and working as they evolved during the Industrial Revolution and continue to the present. We'll study Marx and Adam Smith, Walden, Ruskin, Elizabeth Gaskell's North and South, Tess of the D'Urbervilles, and Hannah Arendt's The Human Condition.
During Spring Quarter, students will read contemporary ideas about the values and challenges of work and working. They will also learn from people about the work they do, interviewing and taking oral histories and documenting work and working through photography. Martin Kane, the official college photographer, will be teaching in the program during the spring.
Credits will be awarded in literature, history, and philosophy.

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New Tools for Community Transformation (at Grays Harbor College)

8 or 12 credits
Faculty: Joe Tougas, 867-5052, email: Joe Tougas, and Arlen Speights, 867-5076, email: Arlen Speights
Sa, 9a-4p, at Grays Harbor College in Aberdeen; first class meets at Olympia campus
Prerequisite: Junior standing or above
Enrollment: 35
CRN: 10175 (8 cr); 10176 (12 cr)
What does it take for communities to flourish in the face of economic, social and environmental challenges? Can the technological changes that often drive these challenges also provide tools for overcoming them? How can communities tap the power of computers and the Internet while staying true to their core values and traditions and dealing responsibly with the risks of changing times? In this two-quarter program, we will explore theoretical answers to these questions while providing hands-on experience with applying digital technology to testing those answers in our own communities.
Fall quarter will focus on identifying and clarifying core values within communities and community-based organizations. Students will learn to identify value conflicts, communicate effectively about them, and build consensus and collaboration in pluralistic social networks. We will explore ways the Internet is being used by other communities to share resources and ideas which nurture and strengthen local core values and visions-and we will learn how to do it ourselves.
Students registered for 12 credits will do additional community research and learn some specialized web design skills in support of the application project.
Credit will be awarded in social and political philosophy, community development, web site development and design, mathematics and risk management.

 

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Last Updated: August 25, 2017


The Evergreen State College

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Olympia, Washington 98505

(360) 867-6000