200
This digital literacy course introduces students to the fundamentals of computer programming through rudimentary instruction in a computer language such as Python. By the end of the course, students should be able to demonstrate a basic understanding of and competency in computer programming.
Credit Hours: 1
This online course will introduce students to resources that will help them determine their career goals, identify strategies for developing and articulating Spartan Ready(R) Competencies, and develop a professional portfolio. It is recommended that the course be completed during their second year at The University of Tampa but must be completed before enrolling in their Spartan Studies Culminating Experience Course(s).
Spartan Studies:
Core Requirement
Credit Hours: 0
This course is designed for students interested in obtaining peer leadership roles and is open to any student with an interest in leadership. Over the course of the semester, Spartan Ready® components will be infused with peer leadership. Students will also learn how to build their professional brand as leaders on campus. This course fulfills an elective credit toward the leadership minor. This course is graded Satisfactory/ Unsatisfactory (S/U.)
Credit Hours: 0-2
No matter where or when, humans share a common impulse for self-expression through visual imagery despite vast differences among their creative choices. This course explores the significances of visual art for humanity as well as how its study can foster deep cross-cultural connections and individual self-discovery. We investigate the interpretive frames and types of evidence used to “answer” big questions, using objects such as paintings, sculptures, and architectural monuments as primary evidence, in combination with other sources (such as scholarly readings and historical texts) as inductive analysis tools and as modes for exploring art history as a humanistic discipline.
Spartan Studies:
Core Humanities
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or concurrent with
AWR 201.
Global Media Cultures explores how people living in Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin America, and beyond produce and consume media in both immediate (local) and distributed (global) contexts. Drawing from a global range of written texts that reckon with the political, economic, and technological constraints and affordance of media, communication, and culture around the world, students will watch complimentary popular forms of entertainment in order to understand how these artifacts process and document the human experience. Engaging with and writing about these materials, the class will radiate outward, from media-specific to nationally-specific considerations and beyond to transnational media convergence.
Spartan Studies:
Core Humanities
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or concurrent with
AWR 201.
This Course will give students an opportunity to learn more about issues both locally, nationally, and internationally that impact our lives. Potential issues that will be explored include (but are not limited to) systemic racism in the criminal justice system, police use of force, mass incarceration, human trafficking, mental health and the criminal justice system, wrongful conviction, gun control and gun violence, hate crimes, and environmental criminology
Spartan Studies:
Core Social Science
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or concurrent with
AWR 201
An examination of non-Western dance forms, including classical, ceremonial and folk/traditional, in their historical and cultural contexts. This course is enhanced by observing video and live performances.
Spartan Studies:
Core Humanities
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or concurrent with
AWR 201
This course looks at the lens and screen arts (photography, film, video, animation, and new media). Students will learn how these creative image practices build real and imagined communities transnationally by exploring creative, lens-based image practices from around the world. Addressing images through photographic genres and modes such as portraiture, landscape, documentary, and more, the course will take a comparative approach that allows us to look at a range of cultures outside the US. Within this comparative framework, certain units may focus on one specific region of the world and its diasporic communities.
Spartan Studies:
Core Humanities
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or concurrent with
AWR 201
This course examines the history of selected cities in relation to transnational, intercontinental, and global connections. Students examine evidence revealing how patterns of social relationships, norms, institutions, and civil society and civic engagement in these cities have shaped locally, how they have changed over time, and how they have been connected to global patterns such as trade, empire, migration, and the exchange of ideas and practices such as race, class, gender, and technology.
Spartan Studies:
Core Social Sciences
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or concurrent with
AWR 201.
This course examines the history of wars and revolutions in modern times, including political, cultural, economic, and social clashes and upheavals. Investigating the interconnections between local events and global transformations, students examine evidence revealing how wars and revolutions have shaped, and been shaped by social relationships, norms, and institutions, including civil society and civic engagement. The course explores how wars and revolutions have changed over time, and how they have been connected to global patterns such as trade, empire, migration, and the exchange of ideas and practices such as race, class, gender, and technology.
Spartan Studies:
Core Social Sciences
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or concurrent with
AWR 201.
This course delves into creating stories for social impact with a focus on a social problem that needs urgent attention. Students will learn the principles of solutions journalism, how to identify compelling narratives that showcase solutions to the specific social challenge and how to craft stories that highlight both the challenges and solutions. They will also engage in critical discussions about the ethics and responsibilities of solutions-oriented storytelling in the context of the crisis.
Spartan Studies:
Core Humanities
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or concurrent with
AWR 201
This course examines the ways that practitioners and patients from around the world narrativize medical conditions, health treatments, and the body. Our emphasis on medicine and the body not as static and known entities but as things that require “understanding,” in the senses that they both necessitate interpretation and should be approached compassionately. Our texts will include everything from medical memoirs, to ethnographies, to fiction. We will consider such questions as: How do public and personal interpretations of health impact wellbeing? How do understandings of health differ globally? And, how are health practices nationalized, gendered, and racialized?
Spartan Studies:
Core Humanities
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or concurrent with
AWR 201.
This course will introduce students to narratives of immigrants to major cities as the foundation of our investigation into how ever-shifting local urban cultures inform and are informed by inter- and intra-continental networks of people, businesses, organizations, and political bodies. Through writing about migrant literature, films, plays, music, and/or other cultural artifacts, students will trace how “local” experiences from around the world influence the ever-shifting cultural milieux of the contemporary “global” city. Students will closely read and watch stories of immigrants to a city chosen for the focus of the class using critical texts drawn from several humanities disciplines such as history, literary studies, cultural studies, philosophy, and film studies to gain an understanding of what makes a “global” city.
Spartan Studies:
Core Humanities
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or concurrent with
AWR 201
This course practices humanistic ways of thinking in a global context through adaptation. The course will study how and why human cultures continually return to the same stories. Beginning with close reading of significant texts or authors, the course will explore how those texts have been adapted, translated, and reimagined by and for new cultures. Texts will be drawn from a range of genre and media and several humanistic disciplines. The course culminates in a multimodal adaptation project.
Spartan Studies:
Core Humanities
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or Concurrent with
AWR 201
This course explores how ecological crisis shapes cultural expression and the extent to which the arts can intervene in environmental issues. Given the Global nature of catastrophic climate change, what meaningful ways of thinking, making and acting are available to us on an individual and local level? How do the humanities offer tools for such action in this time? To answer these and other pressing questions, we will analyze artistic works (which may include literature, visual art, performance or film) from set of cultures within and outside of the United States. We will then put these works into conversation with a variety theoretical texts in the humanities. Students should expect a strong focus on reading and writing.
Spartan Studies:
Core Humanities
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or Concurrent with
AWR 201
This course explores the history, implications, and controversies surrounding banned, challenged, and censored books both locally, in the United States, and globally, throughout the world. It provides students with a unique opportunity to engage with literature that has challenged societal norms and to evaluate why. Together, we will discuss the cultural and political contexts that sparked the controversies surrounding these texts. Students who complete this course will have a deeper understanding of the impact of censorship on literature and society and the importance of defending the right to read and express ideas freely.
Spartan Studies:
Core Humanities
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or Concurrent with
AWR 201
In this humanities course, students will study the role music plays in shaping and responding to social movements on a local, national, and global scale, considering what the function, potential, and limits of musical protests were in transforming civic life over the course of the twentieth century.
Spartan Studies:
Core Humanities
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or concurrent with
AWR 201.
This course introduces students to moral thinking and to local and global ethical controversies across the world, predominantly outside of the United States. Students will learn the basics of critical thinking and moral reasoning in a cross-cultural context, and use African, Anglo-European, Chinese, Indigenous, and Islamic moral frameworks to critically and respectfully examine global and local moral debates.
Spartan Studies:
Core Humanities
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or concurrent with
AWR 201.
We will explore questions about metaphysics, epistemology, and value/ethics by engaging with philosophical texts and ideas from parts of the world outside the United States. We will examine a foundational text from ancient Greek, Hellenistic, and/or Roman philosophy (e.g., Plato, Aristotle, the ancient Stoics) and one from early modern philosophy by a French or German philosopher (i.e., Descartes or Kant). We will have additional readings and activities that support, challenge, or complement the foundational philosophical texts from geographically distant parts of the ancient and early modern world by bringing them into conversation with our own lives in our local communities.
Spartan Studies:
Core Humanities
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or concurrent with
AWR 201.
This course explores three traditions of philosophy, religion, and contemplative mind-body practice from parts of the world outside the United States: Indian Vedic philosophy, Chinese Daoism, and Zen Buddhism. Students will explore connections between these global traditions and their own actions as individuals within specific local communities, critically examine philosophical/religious texts, learn through writing while cultivating knowledge and skills distinctive of the humanities and the discipline of philosophy, experience contemplative practices (i.e., hatha yoga, qigong, and/or meditation) outside of the class, and engage in respectful discussion in which they compare/contrast and critically assess these global traditions and their associated contemplative practices.
Spartan Studies:
Core Humanities
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or concurrent with
AWR 201.
This course introduces analytic and continental approaches to study of aesthetics through philosophical explorations of Hip Hop. Students will analyze scholarly themes, perspectives, and critiques, centered on questions of the social, political, and philosophical import of a variety of forms of local and global hip hop aesthetical productions and topics including sexism, homophobia, class, and race. Students will also critically engage others in a group project, while developing their own theoretical attitudes towards critical questions of epistemology, classical aesthetics, post-modernity, and existentialist thought through analyses of traditional and contemporary thinkers, artists, texts, and media.
Spartan Studies:
Core Humanities
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or Concurrent with
AWR 201
This course examines selected topics in politics and society. Topics may include, but are not limited to, the intersection of politics and globalization, ideologies, pop culture, gender, race, law, justice, and sustainability.
Spartan Studies:
Core Social Sciences
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or concurrent with
AWR 201.
Is memory like a camera? Can happiness be learned? Students will examine how psychologists use the scientific method to study a range of everyday human experiences. The course is structured around Dinner Table Conversations that reflect psychology’s broad scope, including human development, biopsychology, cognition, social behavior, and psychological health and distress. Writing is a substantial part of the course, and students will address issues in civic engagement in both writing and other activities.
Spartan Studies:
Core Social Sciences
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or concurrent with
AWR 201.
This course explores sociological insights, using the Tampa Bay area as a living laboratory. Students apply classic and contemporary theory and use empirical research methods to generate space- and place-based sociological insights.
Spartan Studies:
Core Social Sciences
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or concurrent with
AWR 201
This course examines the relationship between contemporary society, the natural environment, and sustainability. It will explore the cultural, institutional, organizational, and interpersonal domains of environmental problems and sustainable solutions with an emphasis on social relations. Topics will include topics such as global climate change, species loss, sea-level rise, food insecurity, and environmental justice. This course will also examine the everyday lived experience of sustainability and environmental issues.
Spartan Studies:
Core Social Sciences
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or concurrent with
AWR 201
A growing number of people in the US and around the world are rejecting traditional religions. Some are turning to New Age religions or Wicca. Others have created organizations like The Satanic Temple to challenge traditional religions. Many others are now nonreligious. This course examines why traditional religion is declining and explores what comes next, connecting secularization in Tampa, with that in the US, and declining religion internationally.
Spartan Studies:
Core Social Sciences
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or concurrent with
AWR 201.
The aim of this social science course is to provide an overview of major concepts and research areas related to the negative communication behaviors often experienced in the context of personal relationships. The course will cover relevant dark side communication topics such as secret keeping, jealousy, infidelity, bullying, relational intrusion (snooping), stalking, aggression, conflict, and hurtful communication at the local and larger societal contexts.
Spartan Studies:
Core Social Sciences
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or concurrent with
AWR 201.
The term "discovery" is a misnomer when discussing the European invasion and colonization of the Americas during the 15th and 16th centuries. Who discovered whom in 1492 and what were the world-changing consequences brought about by this Encounter? How was our local community as well as the greater global community transformed through the phenomenon known as the Columbian Exchange? These questions and many others will be studied through the primary texts and artifacts of that era, in an attempt to understand the Spanish and Indigenous mindset on the eve of the Encounter, when a New World was born.
Spartan Studies:
Core Humanities
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or Concurrent with
AWR 201