Summer Classes 2007

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Natural and Cultural Resource Management
Nature v. Nurture
The Novel as Social Document

Natural and Cultural Resource Management

Linda Moon Stumpff, 867-6845
June 19, 8:30a-5p; June 23/24 & July 14/15, 8:30a-5p; June 30 (field trip) 7:30a-5p
Signature of instructor for undergraduates

For Credit
4 graduate or 8 undergraduate credits first session
Required Fees: $60 for field trips
CRN: 40116 (UG), 40117 (GR)
Fees do not include tuition

The course surveys the political, legal and social context of natural and cultural resource policies and programs with an emphasis on their impacts on indigenous nations. Students will become familiar with the processes and administrative requirements for implementing federal and state laws in various actions and planning processes including global contexts. The relationship between administration and science in organizations will be explored as well as the intricate relationships between indigenous science and formal scientific approaches that come about in implementing this suite of laws and policies.

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Nature v. Nurture

Jane Wood, (360) 239-2281
August 3, 6-9p; August 4-5, 9a-5p

For Credit
2 credits second session
Special Expenses: $10 for guest speakers, hand-outs and field trips
CRN: 40118
Fees do not include tuition

Non-Credit | Extended Education
Fee: $145
Additional Expenses: $10 for guest speakers, hand-outs and field trips
Course Number: E4037

What causes delinquent and criminal behavior among children and adults? Throughout history, numerous theories have emerged that range from body type to the most minute biological aberration. This intensive weekend course is an introduction to criminology that allows students to examine classical and positivist schools of thought; psychological explanations and sociological theories; and biological and biosocial concepts. Students can expect to understand crime phenomena and typologies, social structure and interaction theories of crime causation; and integrated approaches that combine victimization, criminality and justice. Students will participate in seminar and debate extensively.

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The Novel as Social Document

Dave Hitchens, 867-6598
TuWThF, 1-5p

For Credit
8 credits either session or 16 credits full session
Fees do not include tuition

Novelists, and artists, are often ahead of scholars and historians in identifying and detailing problems and issues. Freud famously said artists were twenty-five years ahead of everyone. In U.S. History, there are abundant examples of novelists confronting human, social, emotional, and economic problems far in advance of politicians and philosophers. This program will study such novels to see how they foreshadowed or illuminated later events—with Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe and The Jungle by Upton Sinclair as shining examples. We will study such novels and place them in historical and cultural context, looking at their impact and consequences. Students may register for first, second, or both sessions and expect credit in Literature and U.S. Social and Intellectual History.

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Last Updated: August 25, 2017


The Evergreen State College

2700 Evergreen Parkway NW

Olympia, Washington 98505

(360) 867-6000