Author: Jaclyn Chancey

MKTG 4895-001/BADM 4895-002: Social Entrepreneurship & Marketing – CONVERSION OPPORTUNITY

Instructor: Narasimhan Srinivasan

Prerequisite: MKTG 3101 or BADM 3750

Social entrepreneurship combines the passion of a social mission with the discipline of business, including innovation, creativity, and rugged determination. The social entrepreneur applies practical solutions to social problems. The result may be a new product, new service, or new approach to a social problem. Entrepreneurial skill and energy can be brought to bear on social problems and unmet needs, transforming them into authentic opportunities to create social value. Social entrepreneurs need to understand the similarities of what they do with the orientation and activities of for-profit entrepreneurs. However, they also face unique issues of measuring social benefits, acquiring donated resources, and knowing what “success” means in a nonprofit environment. This course provides you with the latest thinking in social entrepreneurship and gives you hands-on experience in developing a business plan for a social enterprise.

Honors credit is available for this course, and it is jointly offered on the Storrs campus as MKTG 4895-001 (Business Majors)/BADM 4895-002 (Non-Business Majors) for Fall 2016.

POLS 3613: Congressional Elections

Instructor: Paul Herrnson

The outcome of the 2016 congressional elections will not only determine who controls Congress, it also will have an impact on healthcare policy, taxes, immigration reform, international relations, and who sits on the federal courts. This seminar focuses on congressional elections, drawing on examples from the upcoming election cycle.

Congressional elections will be examined from several perspectives, including those of candidates, party officials, interest group leaders, journalists, and scholars. The class will cover the backgrounds of congressional candidates; the decision to run for office; campaign finance, strategy, and communications; and the activities of political parties, interest groups, and the mass media. We also will examine the factors that separate winners from losers, the impact of elections on policymaking, and election reform.

Students who enroll in the course will receive insider perspectives from internationally-recognized political consultants from firms that have been involved in presidential, congressional, and statewide campaigns. These and briefings from other on and off campus experts will provide networking opportunities. Students who excel in the class may be offered an opportunity to work on a research project with the professor.

Requirements: Each student will become an expert on one congressional election and write a few short reports and a longer paper that draws from the reports to provide an overview of their election. Other assignments include a 2-page paper predicting the net change in the number of congressional seats held nationally by each party.  Class participation is required.

POLS 3613 is defined in the catalog as open to juniors and higher. Honors students without junior standing should email Prof. Herrnson for a permission number.

ENGL 1701-003: Creative Writing I

Instructor: Sean Forbes

Prerequisite: ENGL 1010 or 1011 or 2011 or 3800

The Speaker: The Eye of the Poem and the Short Story

According to Frances Mayes, “the poet ‘finds’ the right speaker and the right listener, usually by trying out several approaches.” In this introduction to creative writing class we will examine the different approaches that a writer can take when trying to establish a speaker in a poem or short story. We will look at exemplary works of poetry and fiction from writers like Robert Hayden, Elizabeth Bishop, Anne Carson, and Justin Torres. Students will produce a final portfolio of their original work. Class participation is an essential component to this largely workshop-based course along with weekly writing prompts such as writing in iambic pentameter and challenging prose sketches.

ENGL 3118W-001: Victorian British Literature

Instructor: Albert Fairbanks

Prerequisite: ENGL 1010 or 1011 or 2011 or 3800

The Victorian Period (1832-1900) was one of enormous social change. The Industrial Revolution and restructuring of agricultural practices provoked a shift of many workers from the countryside to the cities that sprang up in areas favorable to mining and factories. The culture had to invent ways to cope with resulting labor abuses, zoning, pollution, and public health. The discoveries of geologists, paleontologists, and Charles Darwin brought about a crisis in religion, and the new wealth amassed by the growing middle class transformed traditional class structures and patterns of consumption. The political liberation achieved by the Reform Act of 1832 was only partial, and its failure to enfranchise women along with the stifling new conditions for middle-class women provoked intense discussion of their rightful familial and social role. A backlash against the sensibilities associated with the preceding Romantic period arguably exerted oppressive restraints on manners and especially sexual expression.

We will read literary responses to these issues by several novelists, poets, dramatists, and the public intellectuals that came to be known collectively as “the Victorian sage.” Novelists may include George Eliot, Dickens, and Oscar Wilde; poets Tennyson, Arnold, Robert Browning, and the Rossettis (Dante Gabriel and Christina); and social critics Carlyle and Arnold.

The class will be run as discussions, and the writing assignments will consist of a series of short papers (5-8 pp.) amounting to 15 or 20 pages in total. There will be a midterm and final exam.

PSYC 3250W-001: Laboratory in Animal Behavior and Learning

Instructor: Etan Markus

Prerequisites: (1) ENGL 1010 or 1011 or 2011; (2) PSYC 1100; (3) PSYC 2100; and (4) PSYC 2200 or 2500 or 3201 or 3552

Remember how you got to class today? a bad experience? learning to ride a bike? What parts of the brain are involved in these different types of behaviors? How can one examine these questions in the laboratory rat? This hands-on laboratory will provide students with an opportunity to conduct experiments using modern behavioral techniques. The ability of rats to carry out different types of tasks will be related to different brain structures.

Note! This is a hard lab! Really!

  • This is a hands-on lab, most of the time we will only have a brief classroom session. Instead, on about half the weeks students will be training animals for about 1-2 hours/day for 3-4 days a week.
  • On occasion you will have to come in on the weekend to care for your animals.
  • This is also a “W” class with a large amount of writing & re-writing.

UNIV 3784-002: The Canon of American Legal Thought

Instructor: Michael Fischl

Now open to any third-year (or higher) Honors student. Email susan.ruggiero@uconn.edu for a permission number.

This seminar will examine what are widely regarded as the “greatest hits” in American legal thought, essays and articles that have significantly influenced the development of law and legal theory in the U.S. since the early 20th Century. The essays exemplify the principal schools of modern legal thought – including legal realism, law and economics, the law and society movement, and various branches of critical legal theory – and they feature legal thinkers from Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., and Karl Llewellyn to Duncan Kennedy and Catharine Mackinnon.

Class will meet on Wednesdays from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. in Gentry 140, and each week we will analyze and critique selected essays, most of which will be found in our textbook, The Canon of American Legal Thought (David Kennedy & William W. Fisher III, eds. 2006). A handful of additional readings will be available at a later date via email. Please be sure to purchase Kennedy & Fisher ASAP so you can  do the relatively short but very important reading assigned for our first class meeting on January 20.

Grades will be calculated in the following manner: 1/3 will be based on class participation; 1/3 will be based on your performance on a series of weekly quizzes; and 1/3 will be based on a final exam, which will be administered from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. on Wednesday, April 27, our final day of class.

GERM 1169: Contemporary Germany in Europe (Conversion opportunity)

Instructor: Shane Peterson

While this is not an Honors course, Prof. Peterson welcomes Honors students of any major and would be happy to offer Honors conversions for interested students.

Taught in English!

Come find out why Germany is:

  • offering free university tuition to everyone
  • reacting differently to the refugee crisis
  • a leader in renewable energy
  • popular among young Israelis
  • mandating a 30% quota of women in business leadership
  • becoming patriotic about soccer
  • providing generous parental leave
  • reluctant about Google Street View & Facebook
  • much more diverse than you think

(CA 1, CA 4-Int)

GERM 1169: Contemporary Germany in Europe – flyer

EPSY 3830: Individual Differences in Creativity (Conversion opportunity)

Instructor: James Kaufman

While this is not an Honors course, Prof. Kaufman welcomes Honors students of any major and would be happy to offer Honors conversions for interested students.

What makes people creative? What traits, abilities, or personal factors help make you creative (and creative in different ways from your friends)? This class will discuss how your personality, motivation, intelligence, emotional intelligence, and other parts of who you are work together to help you be creative. You’ll learn “best practices” to increase your own (or others’) creativity and you’ll gain insight into related topics such as discovering your personality profile, how IQ tests work, what motivates you, and similar questions.

For the Honors conversion, I will want you to use more original sources and delve deeper in them– so assignments about writing about an article on creativity will ask for higher level analysis, and the final project will ask for more professional articles cited and discussed.

Prof. Kaufman is also willing to waive the prerequisite of EPSY 2810; email him for a permission number.

COMM 1100-035: Principles of Public Speaking

Instructor: Yerina Ranjit

Employers demand strong communication, presentation, and public speaking skills. As a future professional, you must be a confident speaker and have the ability to organize and prepare clear, concise, and interesting presentations. This course will prepare you for the future by helping you to develop specific methods for speaking and delivery as well as critical thinking and analytical skills that focus on how to organize a presentation, solve problems, build arguments, and be creative. As a honors section of this course, students will be expected to deliver clear and effective presentations and be able to write effective and well organized outlines. Students will be expected to demonstrate significant growth and development of skills as the course progresses. Students will also be expected to prepare for speeches by utilizing a variety of techniques, including but not limited to: peer to peer and online speech video recording. Finally, students will also be expected to improve their speech analysis skills by attending on-campus public speaking events.