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First Year Seminars

Entering DePauw students normally take four academically rigorous courses each semester. In one course, the First-Year Seminar, discussion in a small group, exploration of ideas, careful reading of texts, and critical thinking are especially emphasized.

First-Year Seminars count as a full academic credit. The seminar is one of 31 course credits every student earns toward graduation. Seminars are small (12-15 students) and provide an opportunity for class discussion, participation and interaction with the professor and other students. For most seminars, the instructor also serves as the students' academic advisor. A student mentor is assigned to each seminar group. The group will take part in orientation activities together and will meet outside of class to participate in programs and discussions about college life and campus issues.

Take some time to read through the descriptions of seminars. We hope that you will use your imagination in making your seminar choices. Our seminars are designed to open new areas of interest and to allow you to think in new ways. We hope you will include in your list of choices seminars that sound intriguing to you, no matter what subject you intend to major in and no matter what career you have in mind.

On your course request form, you will rank 10 seminars which are of interest to you. While we cannot guarantee that you will get your top choice, we will try to enroll you in a seminar that will interest you.

The seminars below have been proposed for Fall 2008. Click on the title for a description of the seminar.

Seminar Title
The Great War
Ancient Journeys
Ancient War Memorials
Arab Women Writers and Filmmakers
Art and Ethics
Banned Books: What They Don’t Want You to Read
Chinese Culture and Film
Christian, Jewish and Muslim Spain 711-1609
Culture, Social Structure, and HIV/AIDS in the U.S.
Declarations of Independence
Dialogues with Utopia
Economics and Social Issues: Women in the Third World
Energy Options for the 21st Century
Environment, Labor, and Terror in the Global Economy
Exercise in Extreme Environments
Film, Communication, and Culture: The Case of James Bond
Holocaust and History
Imagination, Activism, and the Art of the Theatre
Intelligence, Mind, and Computers
Mathematical Explorations
Modern Environmental Problems
Modern Japan in Asia and the World
Philosophical Problems
Poetry of Song
Prisons and Race in America
Religions of Asia
Representing Race: Race and Identity in Literature and Film
Romance of the Three Kingdoms
Sex and Politics in an Age of Conflict
Technology and the Internet
The Examined Life
The Lady with the Book: Renaissance Women Writers
The Magic Circle: An Introduction to Ludology
The Quantum Universe
The School as Artistic Community
The Science of Design: From Wooden Spoons to Web Sites
Twentieth-Century Germany Through Film
Understanding the Middle East
Where There's a Will There's a Play; Shakespeare in Performance
Writing Creative Nonfiction: A Sense of Place
Wrong! Science You Know That Just Isn't So