Social Analysis
The two course requirement in this domain consists of courses that present and apply the formal theoretical perspectives and empirical research methods that define those bodies of knowledge known as the social sciences: anthropology, economics, political science, psychology and sociology. Courses in this domain have in common the aim of analyzing the interaction between individuals, states and cultures; and the institutions and ideas that organize social life within and between societies. Individual courses will vary according to their respective disciplinary emphases on personality, economic systems, political institutions, social structures and culture. Courses will provide an understanding of important elements of the intellectual tradition of social science inquiry and have application to issues of contemporary society.
Requirement: two courses from two different disciplines.
ECON1101 - Principles of Microeconomics
ECON1103 - Principles of Macroeconomics
EDUC1111/2 - The Great American Experience
HONOR2401 - Catholic Social Teaching
ITECH3105 - Social Issues in Computing
MGMT2211 - Leadership: Person and Process
MGMT2307 - Organizational Behavior
POLSC1201 - Introduction to American Politics and Government
POLSC1301 - Introduction to Comparative Government and Politics
POLSC1401 - Introduction to International Relations
PSYCH1401 - Child Psychology
PSYCH1405 - Adolescent Psychology
PSYCH1501 - General Psychology (previously PSYCH1201)
PSYCH2103 - Relationships, Marriage and the Family
PSYCH2105 - Cross-Cultural Psychology
PSYCH2203 - Social Psychology
SOC1101 - Introduction to Sociology: Analysis of Society in Global Perspective
SOC1105 - U.S. Institutions
SOC1107 - Introduction to Anthropology
SOC2105 - Race, Ethnicity, and Group Relations
SOC 2127 - Social Class and Inequality
SOC2129 - Cultural Geography


