University Honors Program Amelia Zurcher, PhD
向日葵视频
Sensenbrenner Hall 002
P.O. Box 1881
1103 W. Wisconsin Ave.
Milwaukee, WI 53233
(414) 288-7516
Director
Honors Director's Open Hours
Thursdays 3:30-5pm
Fridays 12:15-1:15pm
(414) 288-3475
Lindsay Daigle, PhD
Assistant Director
Karalee Surface, PhD
Advisor
414-288-5510
Core Courses Spring 2021
Courses Required for Core Honors Freshman:
CORE 1929H Core Honors Methods of Inquiry
A 1.5 credit course taken in both fall and spring of the first year for a total of 3 credit hours. Sections that meet at the same time are paired, and students in each pair will be taught by both instructors. Satisfies MCC Foundations in Methods of Inquiry requirement.
CORE 1929H 901 W 1-2:15pm
Jenn Finn, History & Paul McInerny, Management
The Olympics & Society: This discussion-based Methods of Inquiry course combines approaches from both History and Business to investigate the Olympics as a microcosm of society. Students will examine 鈥淥lympism:鈥 the philosophy and reasons for the games and how they are reflections of society. They will also research and discuss the historical development and philosophical foundations of the Olympics, through such topics as patriotism, politics, cheating, and inclusion.
*Sections 901 and 902 meet at the same time, same day, same topic; enroll in either section.*
CORE 1929H 902 W 1-2:15pm
Jenn Finn, History & Paul McInerny, Management
The Olympics & Society: This discussion-based Methods of Inquiry course combines approaches from both History and Business to investigate the Olympics as a microcosm of society. Students will examine 鈥淥lympism:鈥 the philosophy and reasons for the games and how they are reflections of society. They will also research and discuss the historical development and philosophical foundations of the Olympics, through such topics as patriotism, politics, cheating, and inclusion.
*Sections 901 and 902 meet at the same time, same day, same topic; enroll in either section.*
CORE 1929H 903 M 3:30-4:45pm
Amelia Zurcher, UHP and English & Lani Stockwell, Occupational Therapy
What I Am To Myself: I care not so much what I am to others as what I am to myself. I will be rich by myself, and not by borrowing. -Michel de Montaigne
Taught by one occupational therapy and one humanities faculty, this discussion-based MoI course helps students to look through the lenses of doing as art and art as doing to build their relationship with their own selves and their place in the world.
*Sections 903 and 904 meet at the same time, same day, same topic; enroll in either section.*
CORE 1929H 904 M 3:30-4:45pm
Amelia Zurcher, UHP and English & Lani Stockwell, Occupational Therapy
What I Am To Myself: I care not so much what I am to others as what I am to myself. I will be rich by myself, and not by borrowing. -Michel de Montaigne
Taught by one occupational therapy and one humanities faculty, this discussion-based MoI course helps students to look through the lenses of doing as art and art as doing to build their relationship with their own selves and their place in the world.
*Sections 903 and 904 meet at the same time, same day, same topic; enroll in either section.*
CORE 1929H 905 T 11-12:15pm
Melissa Shew, Philosophy & Ann Millard, Occupational Therapy
What I Am To Myself: I care not so much what I am to others as what I am to myself. I will be rich by myself, and not by borrowing. -Michel de Montaigne
Taught by one occupational therapy and one humanities faculty, this discussion-based MoI course helps students to look through the lenses of doing as art and art as doing to build their relationship with their own selves and their place in the world.
*Sections 905 and 906 meet at the same time, same day, same topic; enroll in either section.*
CORE 1929H 906 T 11-12:15pm
Melissa Shew, Philosophy & Ann Millard, Occupational Therapy
What I Am To Myself: I care not so much what I am to others as what I am to myself. I will be rich by myself, and not by borrowing. -Michel de Montaigne
Taught by one occupational therapy and one humanities faculty, this discussion-based MoI course helps students to look through the lenses of doing as art and art as doing to build their relationship with their own selves and their place in the world.
*Sections 905 and 906 meet at the same time, same day, same topic; enroll in either section.*
CORE 1929H 907 T 9:30-10:45am
Karalee Surface, UHP & Abigail Kanyer, Engineering
Creating Civilation - A Study in Inovations that Have Shaped our World: This class will define innovation and explored various social, technical, scientific, and cultural innovations that have shaped both our global and local communities throughout history.
*Sections 907 and 908 meet at the same time, same day, same topic; enroll in either section.*
CORE 1929H 908 T 9:30-10:45am
Karalee Surface, UHP & Abigail Kanyer, Engineering
Creating Civilation - A Study in Inovations that Have Shaped our World: This class will define innovation and explored various social, technical, scientific, and cultural innovations that have shaped both our global and local communities throughout history.
*Sections 907 and 908 meet at the same time, same day, same topic; enroll in either section.*
HOPR 1955H Core Honors First-Year Seminar
Taken either fall or spring of the first year. Satisfies the MCC Foundations in Rhetoric requirement.
HOPR 1955H 901 MWF 10-10:50am Robert Bruss, English
Digital Media and Community: Society and culture today are profoundly influenced by the ways we communicate online. This class will examine how the internet and social media has dramatically shaped our media landscape, and the ways we build and foster community in those digital spaces. In particular, we will examine the new ways we actively participate in the media we consume: we 鈥渃omment, like, and subscribe,鈥 we post our fan theories, we make narrative choices in games, and we often become fellow creators ourselves. What are the implications of these new modes of engaging with the world? To help answer that question we will analyze (and sometimes even create) texts such as games, fanfiction, and memes, and we will discuss platforms such as YouTube, Twitch, Snapchat, and Twine. By engaging with such 鈥減articipatory media,鈥 this class will explore questions like: How does creative work develop and maintain community online? In what ways are these spaces of inclusion and/or exclusion? Where does meaning come from when we鈥檙e collaborating creators? How does this media shape our sense of ourselves and others?
HOPR 1955H 902 MWF 3-3:50pm Robert Bruss, English
Digital Media and Community: Society and culture today are profoundly influenced by the ways we communicate online. This class will examine how the internet and social media has dramatically shaped our media landscape, and the ways we build and foster community in those digital spaces. In particular, we will examine the new ways we actively participate in the media we consume: we 鈥渃omment, like, and subscribe,鈥 we post our fan theories, we make narrative choices in games, and we often become fellow creators ourselves. What are the implications of these new modes of engaging with the world? To help answer that question we will analyze (and sometimes even create) texts such as games, fanfiction, and memes, and we will discuss platforms such as YouTube, Twitch, Snapchat, and Twine. By engaging with such 鈥減articipatory media,鈥 this class will explore questions like: How does creative work develop and maintain community online? In what ways are these spaces of inclusion and/or exclusion? Where does meaning come from when we鈥檙e collaborating creators? How does this media shape our sense of ourselves and others?
HOPR 1955H 903 TTh 8-9:15am Jacob Riyeff, English
Humans and the Natural World: Humans have had an ambivalent relationship with the world around them as far back as we can tell, but this ambivalence has accelerated at an unprecedented rate since the Industrial Revolution. Eliciting the loftiest praise from poets, the natural world has also been brutely instrumentalized. Clearly beneficial to our health and well being (and frankly necessary to our survival), the natural world is also something ever more distant from the regular lived experience of more and more humans. As so many of us spend ever more time within the built world and the virtual world, how do we understand our relationships to the natural world? How should we understand them? What are the consequences of different ways of living out these various relationships, especially for human health, social justice, and all the other species who call earth home? How have artists, philosophers, and scientists of various stripes attempted to represent, explore, and encourage our species鈥 interactions with the natural world around us? These are some of the questions we鈥檒l explore this term with such writers as Robinson Jeffers, Pope Francis, Jacques Rousseau, Wendell Berry, and Robin Wall Kimmerer. We鈥檒l also take several field trips and have guest speakers to allow for as many perspectives on this pressing issue as possible.
HOPR 1955H 904 TTh 9:30-10:45am Jacob Riyeff, English
Humans and the Natural World: Humans have had an ambivalent relationship with the world around them as far back as we can tell, but this ambivalence has accelerated at an unprecedented rate since the Industrial Revolution. Eliciting the loftiest praise from poets, the natural world has also been brutely instrumentalized. Clearly beneficial to our health and well being (and frankly necessary to our survival), the natural world is also something ever more distant from the regular lived experience of more and more humans. As so many of us spend ever more time within the built world and the virtual world, how do we understand our relationships to the natural world? How should we understand them? What are the consequences of different ways of living out these various relationships, especially for human health, social justice, and all the other species who call earth home? How have artists, philosophers, and scientists of various stripes attempted to represent, explore, and encourage our species鈥 interactions with the natural world around us? These are some of the questions we鈥檒l explore this term with such writers as Robinson Jeffers, Pope Francis, Jacques Rousseau, Wendell Berry, and Robin Wall Kimmerer. We鈥檒l also take several field trips and have guest speakers to allow for as many perspectives on this pressing issue as possible.
HOPR 1955H 905 TTh 2-3:15pm Jacob Riyeff, English
Humans and the Natural World: Humans have had an ambivalent relationship with the world around them as far back as we can tell, but this ambivalence has accelerated at an unprecedented rate since the Industrial Revolution. Eliciting the loftiest praise from poets, the natural world has also been brutely instrumentalized. Clearly beneficial to our health and well being (and frankly necessary to our survival), the natural world is also something ever more distant from the regular lived experience of more and more humans. As so many of us spend ever more time within the built world and the virtual world, how do we understand our relationships to the natural world? How should we understand them? What are the consequences of different ways of living out these various relationships, especially for human health, social justice, and all the other species who call earth home? How have artists, philosophers, and scientists of various stripes attempted to represent, explore, and encourage our species鈥 interactions with the natural world around us? These are some of the questions we鈥檒l explore this term with such writers as Robinson Jeffers, Pope Francis, Jacques Rousseau, Wendell Berry, and Robin Wall Kimmerer. We鈥檒l also take several field trips and have guest speakers to allow for as many perspectives on this pressing issue as possible.
HOPR 1955H 906 TTh 11am-12:15pm Samantha Majhor, English
Native America in Pop Culture: This class explores the ways in which the idea of Native Americans has been produced in the American imagination over time. We will look at representations of Native America from literature, visual art, and film as well as pop art, sports mascots, public history monuments, and advertising in order to gain a broad sense of how Indigenous peoples have been represented. Along the way, we will look at the way Native people have responded to these mainstream representations through self-representation in writing, filmmaking, and artwork. The course will include primary texts in a variety of media forms from American Literature, Native American Literatures, and pop culture selections.
HOPR 1955H 907 TTh 3:30-4:45pm Melissa Ganz, English
Justice and Judgement in the Western Imagination: How do we decide what is right and fair? When, if ever, is it permissible to break the law? What role should mercy and revenge play in legal and moral judgment? How should we respond to historical wrongs and how can we rectify social and legal injustices today? Such questions have not only preoccupied jurists and philosophers but have also figured prominently in literature. In this seminar, we consider how imaginative writers from the classical period to the present day have examined the nature, problems, and possibilities of justice. At the same time that we examine the contributions of literature to pressing moral and legal debates, we work on honing your close reading and writing skills. Texts may include Sophocles鈥檚 Antigone; William Shakespeare鈥檚 The Merchant of Venice; Herman Melville鈥檚 Billy Budd; Henry David Thoreau鈥檚 鈥淐ivil Disobedience鈥; Frederick Douglass鈥檚 Narrative of the Life; Susan Glaspell鈥檚 鈥淎 Jury of Her Peers鈥; Harper Lee鈥檚 To Kill A Mockingbird; and Ferdinand von Schirach鈥檚 The Collini Case. Our literary texts will be supplemented by selections from jurists, philosophers, and historians, and we will view several film adaptations.
Courses Required for Core Honors Sophomores:
HOPR 2956H - Honors Engaging Social Systems and Values 1: Engaging the City
HOPR 2956H 901 MWF 10-10:50 am Sam Harshner, Political Science
HOPR 2956H 902 MWF 11-11:50 am Sam Harshner, Political Science
HOPR 2956H 903 TTh 8-9:15 am Adam Petersen, History
HOPR 2956H 904 TTh 11-12:15 pm Theresa Tobin, Philosophy
Courses Required for Core Honors Juniors and Seniors:
CORE 4929H 鈥 Honors Service of Faith and Promotion of Justice: Integral Ecology
CORE 4929H 901 M 6-8:45pm Dean Heidi Bostic, Arts & Sciences
This culminating course is designed to integrate the 向日葵视频core curriculum by emphasizing preparation for life beyond Marquette. A special focus on vocation and discernment invites students to evaluate their coursework at 向日葵视频along with their own world view and transcendent commitments in order to identify how they will work for justice in the world. CORE 4929H in Spring 2021 focuses on a collaborative, interdisciplinary analysis of integral ecology. Taking a systems approach, we will study integral ecology from a variety of perspectives including civic engagement, gender, and racial justice. We will consider forces that threaten integral ecology such as environmental degradation, increased competition over scarce resources, social inequality and bias, unchecked individualism, precariousness, loss of community and uprootedness. Integral ecology provides a framework to integrate academic experience and personal faith for the promotion of justice, providing the foundation for designing a good life after Marquette. Readings will include Jesuit core texts, essays on Catholic social teaching and texts that engage identity, values and life design, including Jeske, Making a Living Making a Difference. Each student will have the opportunity to analyze a particular local or global issue and to relate this issue to their future plans. The instructor welcomes questions about the course: heidi.bostic@marquette.edu.
Core Menu Options for all Core Honors Students:
ARBC 3220 鈥 Arab and Muslim Women in the United States*
ARBC 3220 701 W 4-6:30pm Enaya Othman
Uses the disciplines of history, gender, and cultural studies to examine the experiences of Arab and Muslim women in the United States. Special focus on the intersection of globalization and locality, education and tradition, spatial and temporal contexts, individual and collective identities. Taught in English. Knowledge of Arabic language not required.
*This is not officially an Honors section, but those who enroll will earn Honors elective credit for the course.
BIOL 1002H - Honors General Biology 2
BIOL 1002H 901 Lecture, MWF 9-9:50am & Th 6-6:50pm, Thomas Eddinger
Honors Discussion 961 T 8-8:50am
Honors Discussion 962 T 9:30-10:20am
Honors Discussion 963 T 12:30-1:20pm
CHEM 1002H - Honors General Chemistry 2
CHEM 1002H 901 Lecture, W 7-8:00pm, Adam Fiedler
Honors Lab 941 W 2-4:50pm Billy Shone
Honors Discussion 961 W 1-1:50pm Adam Fiedler
CHEM 1002H 902 Lecture, W 7-8:00pm, Adam Fiedler
Honors Lab 942 W 2-4:50pm Billy Shone
Honors Discussion 962 W 1-1:50pm Adam Fiedler
CHEM 1014H - Honors General Chemistry 2 for Majors
CHEM 1014H 901 Lecture, MF 9-9:50am, Scott Reid
Honors Lab 941 W 9-11:50am Mark Mitmoen
Honors Lab 942 W 9-11:50am Mark Mitmoen
LLAC 4930 鈥 Special Topics in Languages, Literatures, and Cultures*
Survival & the Lives that Matter
LLAC 4930 102 TTh 3:30-4:45pm Michael Anthony Turcios
Survival and the Lives that Matter: Under the crushing weight of uncertainty, literary and visual cultures become mediums for artistic, cultural, and political expression and means of survival. How has the meaning of 鈥渟urvival鈥 shifted across time? How does survival inform our understanding of how others survive oppression and legacies of inequality? This course centers the written and visual expressions of Indigenous, Black, Latinx, and other minoritarian groups within the United States and from the so-called Third World. We will study how racialized people employ literature, film, and other expressive cultures to survive, exist, and carve out a space for themselves. Topics include: survival as a relational experience, embodiment and trauma, spatiotemporal resistance, politics of care, and futurisms. Students will complete two projects: a midterm digital humanities component and a final research project on the topic of survival.
*This is not officially an Honors section, but those who enroll will earn Honors elective credit for the course.
PHIL 1001H - Honors Foundations in Philosophy
PHIL 1001H 901 MWF 11-11:50am Michael Olson
PHIL 1001H 902 MWF 12-12:50pm Michael Olson
PHIL 1001H 903 MWF 1-1:50pm Michael Olson
PHIL 1001H 904 MW 2-3:15pm Yoon Choi
PHIL 1001H 905 TTh 2-3:15pm Stephanie Rivera Berruz
PHIL 1001H 906 TTh 11am-12:15pm Desiree Valentine
PHIL 1001H 907 TTh 12:30-1:45pm Kimberly Harris
PHYS 1004H 鈥 Honors General Physics with Introductory Calculus 2
PHYS 1004H 901 Lecture, MWF 9-9:50am & M 6-8pm, David Haas
PHYS 1004H 902 Lecture, MWF 10-10:50am & M 6-8pm, Cosmas Kujjo
PHYS 1004H 903 Lecture, MWF 1-1:50pm & M 6-8pm, David Haas
PHYS 1004H 904 Lecture, MWF 2-2:50pm & M 6-8pm, Cosmas Kujjo
PHYS 1004H 905 Lecture, MWF 3-3:50pm & M 6-8pm, Michael Politano
Honors Lab 941 W 6-7:50pm Melissa Vigil
Honors Lab 942 Th 4-5:50pm Melissa Vigil
Honors Discussion 961 W 5-5:50pm Melissa Vigil
PHYS 1014H - Honors Classical and Modern Physics with Calculus 2
PHYS 1014H 901 Lecture, MWF 1-2:50pm, Andrew Kunz
POSC 2401H 鈥 Honors Comparative Politics
POSC 2401H 901 MWF 10-10:50am Lowell Barrington
POSC 2601 - International Politics*
POSC 2601 104 MW 9:30-10:45am Noelle Brigden
*This is not officially an Honors section, but it is restricted to Honors students and those who enroll will earn Honors elective credit for the course. Students will enroll by permission number.
PSYC 2050H 鈥 Honors Research Methods and Designs in Psychology
PSYC 2050H 901 Lecture, MW, 2-3:15pm, Astrida Kaugars
Honors Lab 941 W 11am-12:50pm Astrida Kaugars
THEO 1001H - Honors Foundations in Theology: Finding God in All Things
THEO 1001H 902 MWF 9-9:50am Jennifer Henery
THEO 1001H 903 MWF 10-10:50am Jennifer Henery
THEO 1001H 904 TTh 9:30-10:45am Karen Ross
THEO 1001H 905 TTh 11am-12:15pm Karen Ross
THEO 1001H 906 TTh 9:30-10:45am Sean Larsen
THEO 1001H 907 TTh 2-3:15pm Mickey Mattox, Veronica Arntz
THEO 1001H 908 MWF 11-11:50am Christopher Gooding
THEO 2210H - Great Moments in Christian Theology (focus on St. Augustine)
THEO 2210H 901 MW 2-3:15pm Sean Larsen