Important information: This is a DRAFT list of Honors Core courses for Spring 2023. We should be finalizing the list soon.
The following Spring 2023 Honors courses will fulfill the Honors Core requirement for University Honors Laureate. Always check to make sure you are registered for an Honors section.
Course Number & Campus | Title | Instruction Mode | Gen Ed | Honors* |
AH 1030 [Storrs] |
Interdisciplinary Approach to Obesity Prevention | In person | CA 3 | STEM, D&M |
ANTH 2600 [Storrs] |
Microscopy in Applied Archaeobotany Research | In person | CA 3-lab | STEM |
ANTH 3340E [Storrs] |
Culture and Conservation | In person | CA2, CA4-Int, E | SS, D&M |
ARTH/AFRA 2222 [Storrs] |
Race, Gender, Sexuality, and the Power of Looking | In person | CA 1, CA 4 | A&H, D&M |
DRAM 2134 [Storrs] |
Honors Core: Sports as Performance | Hybrid/blended | CA 1 | A&H |
ECON 1108-001 [Storrs] |
Game Theory in the Natural and Social Sciences | In person | CA 2 | SS |
ECON 1108-Z81 [Stamford] |
Game Theory in the Natural and Social Sciences | Distance learning | CA 2 | SS |
ECON 2120 [Storrs] |
Honors Core: Rights and Harms | In person | CA 1 | A&H |
ERTH 1000E [Storrs] |
The Human Epoch: Living in the Anthropocene | In person | CA 3, E | STEM |
HEJS 1103 [Storrs] |
Who Are the Jews? Jewish Identity through the Ages | In person | CA 1, CA 4 | A&H, D&M |
PHIL 2410 [Storrs] |
Know Thyself | In person | CA 1 | A&H |
POLS/WGSS 2807 [Storrs] |
Women and the Law | In person | SS, D&M | |
POLS 3434W [Storrs] |
Honors Core: Excavating the International in Everyday Practices | In person | W | SS |
SOCI 3823 [Storrs] |
Sociology of Law: Global and Comparative Perspectives | In person | CA 2, CA 4-Int | SS, D&M |
* Distribution categories for the University Honors Laureate award
AH 1030: Interdisciplinary Approach to Obesity Prevention
[UConn Storrs]
Obesity is considered a national epidemic and possibly a pandemic as it affects many developed countries around the world. This interdisciplinary course explores the biology of obesity, including genetic predispositions and behaviors that increase obesity risk (dietary, physical activity, social, and psychological); the obesigenic environment, including how communities are physically built as well as the economic relationship to obesity risk; and the policy and ethical implications for obesity prevention and promotion of healthy behaviors and environments for all body sizes. Multi-level obesity prevention approaches that involve the individual, family, organization, community, and policy will be considered. The format will consist of common lectures, weekly discussions, hands-on activities, team projects, and synthesis of material presented.
Note This class is defined in the catalog as open to freshmen and sophomores in the Honors Program. If you are an Honors student who will have 54 or more credits when this course is offered, you may request enrollment by emailing honors@uconn.edu and including (1) your name; (2) your 7-digit Student Admin number; (3) your registration “pick time”; (4) the course number and section; (5) the class number from Student Admin; and (6) confirmation that there are seats available in the course.
ANTH 2600: Microscopy in Applied Archaeobotany Research
[UConn Storrs]
This course uses archaeobotany as a tool to provide instruction on the research process. Each student develops and executes an independent research project using the various microscopes and equipment within the Archaeobotany Laboratory. Archaeobotany, the study of plant use in antiquity, is an inherently interdisciplinary sub-field of archaeology that integrates botany, ecology, archaeology, and social theory to explore a wide range of topics including: 1) the nature, timing, and cause of plant domestication events around the world; 2) the social and environmental dynamics and causes of the transition from hunting-and-gathering to early agriculture; 3) the role that plant-based agriculture, viticulture, or irrigation played in the emergence and collapse of early social complexity, social hierarchies, and the development of the first cities; 4) the ways in which farmers modified plant-based agriculture to suit prevailing environmental conditions and social and economic needs; and 5) the choices that people made in the past to select and procure fuel in order to sustain everyday household activities and emerging craft specializations and industries.
This course integrates lectures on current and emerging trends in archaeobotanical research with hands-on instruction in the use of a range of lab equipment, microscopy, and digital imaging tools commonly found in many labs to address the topics listed above. These tools include: 1) botanical reference material; 2) analytical balances; 3) a muffle furnace; 4) student binocular microscopes; 5) an upright materials microscope with transmitted, incident, and polarized light; and 6) a confocal microscope with NIS Elements imaging software. Hands-on instruction is also provided in the use of a Jeol NeoScope JCM 6000Plus benchtop scanning electron microscope with Energy Dispersive X-Ray Spectroscopy capabilities for elemental mapping. Throughout the course, students actively engage in the research process by using the tools learned in class to design and conduct an individualized research project. Come ready to explore!
ANTH 3340E: Culture and Conservation
[UConn Storrs]
Today, there is growing interest in conservation, and social and environmental scientists, alike, have an important role to play in helping conservation succeed for the sake of humanity, the environment and other species. Many researchers in these fields now argue that ecological data and an expansion of ethics that embrace more than one species, is essential to a well-rounded understanding of the connections between human behavior and environmental wellbeing. Inextricably linked to this, as well, is the fact that we, as the species that causes extinctions, have a moral responsibility to those whose evolutionary unfolding and very future we threaten.
ANTH/EVST 3340E: Culture and Conservation is a rigorous course investigating the ways in which innovative and intensive new interdisciplinary approaches, questions, ethics and subject pools are closing the gap between the study of culture and the implementation of environmental conservation initiatives around the world. The course emphasizes the importance of increased collaboration between anthropologists, climate scientists, Connecticut communities and conservationists and represents an ongoing shift towards an environmentally focused perspective that embraces not only cultural values and social equity, but also the underlying urgency of local level sustainability initiatives.
This course is designed to educate students on (1) the cultural theories that inform cross-cultural community-decision making and (2) the science of climate change underlying contemporary global warming and contributing to heightened concerns regarding food security, coastal resilience, human and environmental health, and increasing storm frequencies, etc. Students will then apply this knowledge to the design and execution of a conservation-based service-learning project that analyzes these interactions in Connecticut. You will be encouraged to bring in your own experiences and expertise, for no productive discussion of conservation should be one-sided. This class, as well as the study and implementation of conservation, in general, should be a multidisciplinary effort.
ARTH/AFRA 2222: Race, Gender, Sexuality, and the Power of Looking
This course is full.
[UConn Storrs]
We are often told that we live in a singularly visual age, where most information is communicated to us via some platform, frame, or program. Yet as we are increasingly dominated by the visual, we seem to be learning less and less about how to read, interpret, engage, or resist the visual culture that swirls around us. This class looks to intervene in that trend and will be a beginning investigation into the issues of what is visual culture and how we might define visual literacy. Thematically then, this class will focus on how we see, or do not see, race, gender, and sexuality.
With those parameters, the major questions the class seeks to engage with are: How do people “know” race visually? Who has been invested in seeing race and racial difference? How have artists and others attempted to intervene or disrupt these sight lines? What does gender look like? Can we remake how we see race and gender? What about how intimacy is viewed and the definitions of sexuality created; how have these categories been visually constructed and how can they be re-imagined? How do different mediums (sculpture, print, film, or digital) affect how we see bodies?
DRAM 2134: Honors Core: Sports as Performance
[UConn Storrs – Distance Learning]
In this course, students will use the lenses of theatre studies and performance studies to identify and analyze parallels between sports and performance. Consideration of identity, race, gender, sexuality, nation, and human rights will be mediated through readings across multiple disciplines, attendance at an athletic event, film/media viewings, written assignments, experiential activities as well as student-led discussions. This class investigates the interrelated aesthetic, performative, and humanistic values in the arts and athletics in several sports ranging from football to figure skating. Students will conduct independent research and synthesize their findings in a multimodal research presentation.
ECON 1108: Game Theory with Applications to the Natural and Social Sciences
[UConn Stamford – Distance Learning]
Introduction to game theory examines applications in the natural and social sciences and technology, which may include electric power auctions, evolutionary biology, and elections. The course is an opportunity for students to begin to think strategically about many types of problems found in science, social settings, and even university life.
In this course, students will learn: To recognize strategic behavior—and the potential for strategic behavior—in a variety of situations, for example, in social and political situations and even in the natural sciences. To solve games, use solutions to predict and explain behavior, and recognize and learn from the successes and failures of their analyses. How to work through a sequence of short directed projects to learn that choosing a topic for the Honors thesis is not quite as daunting as they may believe.
Note This course will be offered online, and registration is open to Honors students across all UConn campuses. If you are a non-Honors student interested in this course and the Honors Program, please email the instructor (vicki.knoblauch@uconn.edu) and Kaitlin Heenehan (kaitlin.heenehan@uconn.edu) to request a permission number.
ECON 1108: Game Theory with Applications to the Natural and Social Sciences
[UConn Storrs]
This course offers an introduction to game theory. Game theory develops analytical tools to study strategic interactions between individuals, to better understand and predict behavior, conflicts and cooperation. Game theory is widely used in many disciplines (e.g., economics, political science, law, computer science, biology). The course introduces basic concepts and tools for solving games (e.g., simultaneous games and a Nash equilibrium, sequential games, repeated games, asymmetric information models) as well as a variety of applications (e.g., auctions, evolutionary biology and voting). Through simple examples, students can develop their ability to think strategically.
ECON 2120: Honors Core: Rights and Harms
[UConn Storrs]
This course will expose students to a conceptual framework at the intersection of law, economics, and philosophy – what we can call the paradigm of rights and harms. Working within this framework, you will analyze and debate a large set of controversial social issues. The goal of the course is to encourage you to think critically and rigorously about such issues and to hone your skills in argument and persuasion. Students from all majors and backgrounds welcome.
Consider a famous legal case analyzed by the Nobel Laureate Ronald Coase. A physician sets up an examination room with a wall that is shared by a candy factory. Noise from the candy machinery makes it impossible for the doctor to examine patients with a stethoscope. If the candy factory has the right to make noise, the doctor is harmed; if the doctor has a right to quiet, the factory is harmed. Economists and philosophers have developed ways of thinking about who should get the right – and thus who should bear the harm – in cases like these. Most if not all controversial social issues take exactly this form: who has the right? Who is harmed, and in what way? As we will see, in many of these cases, the harms are immaterial: there is no tangible emission like noise. I may harm you (make you angry or unhappy) by giving a speech in favor of Marxism or by selling my kidney to the highest bidder – even if you are nowhere in the vicinity and learn of my behavior only through a third party. Should I have the right to engage in these behaviors? Or should you have the right to stop me?
Note This class has a catalog-level pre- or co-requisite of any 1000-level economics course. We can override this requirement. If you are an Honors student, you may request enrollment by emailing honors@uconn.edu and including (1) your name; (2) your 7-digit Student Admin number; (3) your registration “pick time”; (4) the course number and section; (5) the class number from Student Admin; and (6) confirmation that there are seats available in the course.
ERTH 1000E: The Human Epoch: Living in the Anthropocene
[UConn Storrs]
The planetary potency of humankind requires the naming of a new epoch on Earth’s calendar, the Anthropocene. This tipping point is forcing a paradigm shift in our environmental consciousness, one that embraces the Earth system more holistically and which refutes the false binary separating humans from nature. Ironically, this brave new world is one without wilderness, yet with more wildness than ever before.
Learning how the earth works and what its history has been will reframe the way you think about critical environmental issues: climate change, ecosystem collapse, pollution, natural resources, urban infrastructure, and much more. Earth is not fragile. That designation is reserved for species and communities like ours. The fate of humanity has always been in the hands of geothermal, meteorological, cosmic, and evolutionary processes.
Limited to 19 students, this experiential, interdisciplinary, investigative, and collaborative course provides an opportunity for you to engage with the Honors core goals of exploration, creativity, and leadership.
ERTH 1000E also meets the general education requirement for a CA 3 (science) non-lab course.
HEJS 1103: Who Are the Jews? Jewish Identity through the Ages
[UConn Storrs]
Who are the Jews? While this may seem like a straightforward question, in this course you will find out that Jewish identity can be a bit complicated. To clarify the issue, we will have a look at the history, religion, and culture of the Jewish people, with a special emphasis on the role played by each of these elements in defining “the Jews.” The major literatures of the Jews that have shaped their sense of peoplehood are discussed throughout. No prior knowledge of Hebrew or Jewish culture is required.
This course fulfills General Education requirements in Content Areas I (Arts and Humanities) and IV (Diversity and Multiculturalism). One of its main goals is to enable students to develop a keen understanding of who the Jews are and an appreciation of the diverse cultures and traditions that comprise Jewish civilization. The emergence of Judaic ideas and their influence on Christianity and western civilization will be especially emphasized. The so-called “Judeo-Christian” tradition is broken down so that students understand the values and ideas that both Judaism and Christianity share as well as their distinctiveness. Students get a taste of how the earliest, ancient rabbis thought and how they succeeded in transforming a biblical religion into Judaism as we know it. Along the way, you will be challenged to think “talmudicly/midrashicly,” a critical form of analysis that may very well enable you to appreciate literary traditions belonging to other peoples and cultures in an entirely different light.
PHIL 2410: Know Thyself
[UConn Storrs]
We normally take ourselves to be in a privileged position to tell what state of mind we are at any given moment – whether we feel tired, have a headache, want a cup of tea, are nervous about tonight’s date, or are thinking about tomorrow’s exam; and so on. This kind of basic self-knowledge seems effortless by comparison to the knowledge we have of others’ mental states. It also seems much easier by comparison to the ‘lofty’ self-knowledge we may aspire to achieve through deep self-examination, or therapy. In our own case, we don’t appear to have any need to consult evidence, observe our own behavior, or engage in interpretation or analysis. At the same time, basic self-knowledge seems more secure than knowledge of others’ minds. When you say how you feel or what you’re thinking, you seem to be both more certain and much less open to challenge or correction than when you pronounce on the mental states of others. But why is that?
The effortless yet secure character of basic self-knowledge seems especially puzzling if we embrace the contemporary scientific perspective on ourselves. According to that perspective, human minds are an integral part of the natural world, nothing more than brains and central nervous systems, which appears to imply that the commonsense idea that we have privileged knowledge of our own states of mind is due to some kind of an illusion. After all, we are not presumed to be in a special position to know things about chemical processes in our stomachs; why should we be in such a position with respect to neural processes in our brains? Our aim in this course will be to understand the character of basic self-knowledge and the source of its privileged status from both a philosophical and a scientific point of view. We will first consider philosophical problems associated with self-knowledge, and then examine some answers proposed by both philosophers and scientists, assessing their merits and weaknesses.
Note This class has a catalog-level pre-requisite of PHIL 1101/1102/1103/1104/1105/1106/1107. We can override this pre-requisite. If you are an Honors student, you may request enrollment by emailing honors@uconn.edu and including (1) your name; (2) your 7-digit Student Admin number; (3) your registration “pick time”; (4) the course number and section; (5) the class number from Student Admin; and (6) confirmation that there are seats available in the course.
POLS/WGSS 2807: Women and the Law
[UConn Storrs]
What is the status of women under the law in the United States today? How have women’s rights advocates sought political, legal, and social change over the past 300 years? What strategies have their opponents used to prevent significant change? This course starts by examining the legal and social status of women during the years before the formation of the Republic. We will examine the role of women as society extolled the virtues of Republican Motherhood, took steps toward abolishing slavery, faced wars at home and abroad, and debated citizenship and voting rights. By the end of the semester we will reach the present day, where women have greater recognition under the law but inequalities remain. We will examine significant challenges rights advocates faced (and continue to face) advancing and maintaining those rights. We explore theories of leadership, political agenda setting, judicial decision making, and backlash. Students will explore those theories by engaging with a variety of primary sources, including music, advertisements, documents, and artifacts.
POLS 3434W: Honors Core: Excavating the International in Everyday Practices
[UConn Storrs]
Requires ENGL 1007, 1010, 1011, or 2011.
What is “international”? The term translates literally into “between nations” (as opposed to intra/within nations) and typically refers to interactions that occur with other states beyond our borders. It suggests that the international is distinct from the national, that it happens between world leaders somewhere else, and that it has limited relevance to our daily lives. And yet, the international could not exist without our individual, daily participation in it. The international is in the food we eat, the clothes we wear, the furniture we sit on and the music we listen to. It’s embedded in places we think of as strictly national — our school systems, the national holidays we celebrate, the water we drink, the objects we buy and the television shows we watch. Through seminar discussions and research modules on specific everyday objects, we explore international relations as an everyday practice. In so doing, we consider our personal relationship to global power dynamics and inequalities and what this implies for activism, ethical change and social justice.
SOCI 3823: Sociology of Law: Global and Comparative Perspectives
The course will examine the relationship between law and social change. We will examine the impact of Western Law on Third World countries, the ways in which legal strategies can and have challenged inequality based on class, race, sex, religion and sexuality, and the impact of international human rights treaties. Students will become knowledgeable about different types of legal systems and will learn to analyze the ways in which the law contends with issues of difference and inequality. Students will also be able to analyze the interrelationships between the law, social structure, and the ways in which nations are linked globally.
In this course, students examine:
- Theoretical perspectives and empirical studies relating the type of law found in a society to its social structure
- How the law figures into fundamental social change
- Anthropological studies of dispute processing in societies that are structured primarily on the basis of kinship
- What impact the introduction of Western Law into Third World countries has had on economic growth, democratic political development, and human rights protections
- Cross-national influences on law in the post-colonial world
- The ways in which legal strategies can and have challenged inequality based on class, race, sex, religion, and sexuality
- The critiques and limits of legal approaches to social change
- What is the impact of international human rights treaties on the legal systems of different countries?
- To what extent are international treaty obligations relevant in domestic court proceedings?
- What is the relationship between social movements and the law?
Note SOCI 3823 is coded at the catalog level as “open to sophomores or higher” but other Honors students may contact Prof. Bernstein for a permission number. In your email, confirm that you are a member of the Honors Program, provide your PeopleSoft number, and very briefly explain your interest in taking the course.