Instructor: Jeffrey Dudas
Prerequisite: ENGL 1010 or 1011 or 2011
Professor Dudas has opened his graduate seminar on “Law and Social Change” to Honors undergraduates by cross-listing it with POLS 2998W-002. Email Prof. Dudas with any questions.
August 28, 2017
Instructor: Jeffrey Dudas
Prerequisite: ENGL 1010 or 1011 or 2011
Professor Dudas has opened his graduate seminar on “Law and Social Change” to Honors undergraduates by cross-listing it with POLS 2998W-002. Email Prof. Dudas with any questions.
July 26, 2017
UConn Year of Graduation (Undergraduate): 2015
Undergraduate Major(s): Chemical Engineering
Currently Employed By: Teach for America, Corps Member
Updates: I am currently training to be a secondary math teacher through teach for america. I will be teaching in Hartford in the fall!
UConn Year of Graduation (Undergraduate): 2017
Undergraduate Major(s): Molecular and Cell Biology
Currently Employed By: Dental Student
Updates: I am starting dental school on August 9th! I am very excited, but also nervous.
UConn Year of Graduation (Undergraduate): 2014
Undergraduate Major(s): Nursing
Currently Employed By: CT Children’s Medical Center, Clinical Nurse III
Updates: I’ve recently passed a certification exam, earning the title of Certified Pediatric Nurse (CPN). Also, as of June 2017 I have passed my qualifying exams for the PhD program, earning a Master of Science in Nursing along the way.
June 13, 2017
Instructor: Shaun Dougherty
While this is not an Honors course, Prof. Dougherty welcomes Honors students of all levels and majors.
This new course is an in-depth survey of educational policy and reform movements from the last century with applications in contemporary policy. It originated out of Prof. Dougherty’s UNIV 1784 section and will allow for greater depth of discussion than is possible in the one-credit version.
Instructor: Joseph Madaus
While this is not an Honors course, Prof. Madaus welcomes Honors students of all levels and majors and encourages Honors conversions. If you do not have sophomore standing or the PSYC 1100 prerequisite, email honors@uconn.edu for a permission number.
Introduces students to special education in American schools, including the variety of ways services are provided, the types of professionals working within special education, characteristics of different learners, and current issues in special education. It will be a 2000 level course next year, and as such is really designed for freshmen and sophomores who might have an interest in education.
June 7, 2017
UConn Year of Graduation (Undergraduate): 2016
Undergraduate Major(s): Molecular and Cell Biology
Currently Employed By: Med Student
Updates: Will be starting medical school at Albert Einstein College of Medicine this fall, class of 2021!
May 18, 2017
Instructor: Kathleen Feldman
The laboratory portion of the course will meet once a week for 3 hours and focus on developing basic laboratory skills (including but not limited to, developing aseptic technique, culturing, and differentiation of bacteria). Additionally, students will work on a semester-long research project that they design and carryout. Students will also meet weekly for a 75-minute period to discuss and analyze current publications in microbiology research, as well as laboratory methodology and results related to their research projects performed in the lab. Students will write a final research paper based on their findings and will give an oral presentation of their project at the end of the semester.
CHEM 2441 or 2443 is a required pre- or co-requisite. BIOL 1107 is a recommended prerequisite.
March 20, 2017
Instructor: Chris Simon
There’s not just one future, there are Alternative Futures.
Focusing on current events… Interactions of humans and the environment, shifting baselines, tradeoffs, problem-solving, climate change, population growth, biodiversity, restoration, alternative energy, throwaway society, risk assessment, brave
new world, alternative futures.
Suitable for all majors and all class levels.
March 13, 2017
Instructor: Clifford Roth
When you attend class, talk with your roommate, watch television, or surf the Internet, you face decisions about what to believe. Should you accept a newspaper editor’s claim that the pharmaceutical industry has too much power to set drug prices? Should you agree with a website’s conclusion that stem cell research has the potential to cure Muscular Dystrophy? Should you be persuaded by your roommate’s claim that a particular herbal tea can prevent you from getting the common cold? The answers to these questions depend on the quality of the arguments provided in each case.
In this course, you will learn how to identify, evaluate, and construct arguments. Your readings, written assignments, and oral presentations will focus on contemporary issues in the healthcare field. We will examine arguments as they appear in a range of topics, including such questions as: Should euthanasia be legal? Is the Affordable Care Act (ObamaCare) a success or could Congress make improvements? Is the administration of vaccines a public health issue or one of personal choice?
(CA 1)