Graduate Catalog 2009-2010
UDM Academic PoliciesCourse DescriptionsList of All ProgramsFaculty


MLS 5000 Liberal Studies
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


Acquaints students with the various perspectives contained within liberal studies.<p> A second, thematic and interdisciplinary seminar is chosen from a range of three special courses, which vary in content from term to term.<br>
300

MLS 5010 Sem Title Changes
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


Explores problems and questions concerning human values and experiences from the point of view of philosophy and/or religious studies.
300

MLS 5020 Sem-Title Changes
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


Examines aspect f of human experience through the social sciences.
300

MLS 5030 Sem-Title Changes
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


Addresses literature and the fine/performing arts as expressions and reflections of human experience in a social context.
300

MLS 5050 Directed Studies
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


Topic determined in consultation between the faculty member and the student.
100

MLS 5060 Final Project
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


Under the direction of a faculty mentor, the student produces a substantive, integrative project that is submitted for the critical consideration of his or her colleagues.<br>
300

MLS 5120 Modern Rc Theology
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


Exploration of traditional and modern Roman Catholic theology since Vatican II. Focus on the theologies of Karl Rahner, Francis Fiorenza, David Tracy, and Elizabeth Johnson.
300

MLS 5130 Christian Ethics
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


An in-depth study of several methods used in the development of Christian ethics and the underlying assumptions of such methods. Contemporary issues are used to illustrate the diversity that constitutes Christian Ethics.
300

MLS 5140 Organized Crime
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


A study of the impact of organized crime as a social and economic problem with special attention to the role of the criminal justice system as an ameliorative agent. History, nature and extent of various types of organized crime in the United States and abroad.
300

MLS 5150 Christian Gospels
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


A critical, scholarly introduction to the four gospels of the Christian Testament (New Testament) and to the other gospels not included in the Christian Bible.<br>
300

MLS 5170 Judiasm
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


An introduction to the essentials of basic Judaism: beliefs, practices, customs, ceremonies, holidays, and institutions of the Jewish people. Current trends in contemporary Jewish life, as well as the concerns of the Jewish people are examined.<br>
300

MLS 5190 Literature and Crime
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


This course will discuss the unique relationship that exists between literature and crime. This course will also discuss the dynamic facets of crime through the reading of literary works. The symbiotic nature of crime and literature will be constructed through an interactive process. The mystery of this symbiosis will be uncovered by drawing on the combined knowledge of the past, present and future.<p> This course will also examine practical examples of forensic literary analysis that have been applied to real world situations that have led to discovery and attribution. This is not a class in literary criticism, but instead a course in the use of literature as a tool to understanding crime and criminological theory, taught by a criminologist.
300

MLS 5200 Adv Topics in Phil
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


The content of the course will vary with the instructor and the semester in which it is offered, but in all cases it will involve a more sophisticated and in-depth treatment of a major figure in philosophy, and/or a major theme or issue.<br>
300

MLS 5220 Crim Procedure
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


Rules of evidence of particular importance at the operational level in law enforcement. Criminal procedure in important areas such as arrest, search and seizure and force. Supreme Court decisions affecting law enforcement closely analyzed.
300

MLS 5230 World Religions
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


An introduction to the major religious traditions of the world. After an introduction to the study of religion, this course explores the cultural and historical settings and the various forms of Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, and Buddhism. Special attention is given to the spirituality and values fostered by each.
300

MLS 5240 Fem Bible Interp
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


Female subordination/male dominance, images of God, power and leadership in institutional religion, differences in the ways African Americans and white Americans read the Bible. Women in Israelite societies, in early Judaism, in the Jesus movement, and in Gnosticism. Major American and European feminist/womanist literary criticism.
300

MLS 5260 Gangs & Juv Delinq
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


Covers the history of street gangs and other deviant social groups, including cults and drug cartels, in a global c context but with primary focus on the U.S. Students will be introduced to gang-related issues such as: the influence of the media, peers, socioeconomic status, drugs and drug dealing, neighborh9od affiliation, public-housing, and schools on street gang formation, norms, and migration patterns.
300

MLS 5390 Reforms & Utopias
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


This course explores the origins, ideologies, tactics, and outcomes of major utopian communities and reform movements in the United States during the nineteenth century.
300

MLS 5400 Cross-Cultural Soc
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


Designed to promote understanding and appreciation of diverse cultures in America, this course also examines such issues as ageism, racism, sexism and the disparity of power.
300

MLS 5410 Constitutional Law
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


A case law course on the American constitutional system. Topics include: presidential and congressional powers; impeachment; federal-state relations; major state powers; commerce and general welfare clauses.
300

MLS 5420 Social Ethics
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


The positions of major Christian thinkers on the responsibilities of men and women toward each other, government, the legitimacy of dissent, issues of justice.
300

MLS 5430 Child & Adolescent
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


Fundamental theories, principles of development and research trends as they apply to child and adolescent development.
300

MLS 5440 Society & Education
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


A critical review of societal changes in contemporary American society and their impact and implications on the structure of American education. Examination of various movements designed to meet these changes and projections for schools of the future including the status of the American teaching profession, the cultural diversity of the school, and multi cultural education.<br>
300

MLS 5460 Money/Capital Mkts
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


Introduction to international financial system, balance of payments, exchange rates and external currency markets. Course topics include: the nature and economic role of money and credit, financial intermediation and its control by monetary authority, financial markets, institutions and instruments, interest rate theory, level and term structure, yield curve strategies, control of monetary aggregates and their relationship to employment and prices, and controversies in monetary policy.
300

MLS 5480 Topics:African-Am
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


An intensive examination of selected topics or periods in African-American history, such as the Atlantic slave trade, slavery, black abolitionists, the emancipation experience, life in the segregated South, the urban experience, the civil rights movement, African-American culture, and black nationalism.
300

MLS 5490 Slavery Sectinlism
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


An examination of the dramatic transformation and expansion of the United States between 1815 and 1861, with a focus on the growing sectional tensions that emerged over slavery. Major topics include the rise of mass politics and the Second Party System, the emergence of mass culture, the market revolution in the North, the growth and maturation of slavery in the South, movement for reform, westward movement, and the growing division between North and South.<br>
300

MLS 5500 Religion & Psych
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


An exploration of the interface between psychology and religion, as each addresses such issues as the nature of human beings, the development of conscience, freedom, the quest for meaning, the origins of the idea of God, the nature of faith, etc. A blend of readings from both disciplines will be included, with special attention to humanistic psychology and its approach to the problem of becoming fully human and fully alive.
300

MLS 5550 Poets/Mystics/God
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


The reality of the divine, as revealed to the great mystics and poets of the western tradition, including Juliana of Norwich, St. John of the Cross, Gerard Manley Hoskins, and T.S. Eliot. Beginning with such classic studies as those of William James and Evelyn Underhill, the course examines mysticism in the Jewish and Christian scriptures as well as its later manifestation.
300

MLS 5570 Spiritual Autobiog
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


A careful reading of some of the great religious autobiographies, beginning with The Confessions of St. Augustine and proceeding on to such 20th century classics as the works of Gandhi, Dorothy Day, and Anne Frank. Each student also writes an account of his or her own spiritual journey up to the present.
300

MLS 5580 Theol Imagination
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


A study of human creativity and the way the imagination works to disclose the divine. The role of imagining in dreams, scientific discovery, art and literature are explored en route to a deeper understanding of the process of religious revelation.<br>
300

MLS 5590 Violence & Religi
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


Exploration of different relationships between religion and violence through the consideration of various theories about the origins and nature of violence.
300

MLS 5650 Topics in Gender
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


Topics courses examine texts brought together under a particular interpretive approach, as well as the cultural contexts and factors that influence the creation, consumption, and evaluation of literary works. Emphasis also is given to the ways in which literature can shape those contexts. The specific emphasis of any "topics" section will be announced in the schedule book, but the titles below indicate the focus of each course.
300

MLS 5663 Gender in Asian Religions
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


Diverse Asian traditions such as Hindu traditions, Buddhism, Daoism, Confucianism, Shinto, and shamanism, are often intertwined with one another. Together they present a complicated mixed picture when it comes to women and gender relation. This course focuses on the tension between the elevation of the life-giving feminine, the cosmic subordination of women in the male scripts, and the confluence and contestation among different sub-traditions.
300

MLS 5670 Topics in U.S. History
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


A reading or research seminar involving an intensive examination of a particular topic in U.S. history. Term content varies. May be repeated for credit when topic changes.
300

MLS 5700 Econ Development
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


An explanation of alternative approaches to economic growth for both developed and underdeveloped countries. Focuses on: meaning, measurement and theories of development; factors contributing to economic growth, government policies, welfare issues in economic development and a critique of current development policies.
300

MLS 5880 Abolitionist Wkshp
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


A workshop approach to the problems and issues of research and writing in African-American history, using the resources of the Black Abolitionist Archives. Students work collaboratively on ongoing projects examining personalities, communities, and social movements between 1830 and the end of the Civil War.
300

MLS 5920 Violence/Workplace
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


An examination of various categories of workplace violence, including both worker-instigated and outsider-instigated. A look at the relative roles of organizational climate compared to person-centered variables as factors in producing workplace aggression. Programs to reduce workplace aggression are also examined.
300

MLS 5940 Intro Public Histo
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


Aimed at students interested in career opportunities in History beyond teaching and the law. Readings, projects, speakers, and field trips will introduce students to work in museums, archives, editing and publishing, historic preservation agencies, and historical societies.
300

MLS 5960 Topics in Public History
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


A reading or research seminar involving an intensive examination of a particular topic in public history, such as archives, museums, editing and publishing, and historic preservation. Term content varies. May be repeated for credit when topic changes.
300

MLS 5970 Topics in Theology
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


Topics may include Contemporary Christologies; Protestant Theology; Modern Christian Theologians; or the Theology of Karl Rahner.
300

MLS 5980 Topics in Ethics
Credit HoursRecitation/Lecture HoursStudio HoursClinical HoursLab Hours


Topics may include Ethics and Economic Theories; Theology, Ethics and Health Care; Contemporary Ethical Theories; or American Religious Social Thought.
300

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