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| Home ClassicsGeneral Catalog Class Schedule MAP Student Handbook Humanities FacultyEvents Students Scholarships Alumni and Friends Administrative Coordinator Melissa Bolthouse mbolthou@mail.sdsu.edu College of Arts & Letters Phone 619.594.5186 Arts & Letters 662 Last Update: |
Classics>Handbook for Classics Majors and Minors
Contents
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COURSES |
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SEM., YR. |
EITHER Clas 101G-202G or 101L-202L or 250L |
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EITHER Clas 303G or 303L |
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EITHER Clas 304G or 304L |
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ZERO TO ONE COURSE FROM Clas 599G OR 599L |
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ONE COURSE FROM Clas 310, 320, 330, 340 |
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Classics Minor: Nonlanguage Option
Minor Code: 15041-111560
Six total courses
18 total units = 0-6 lower division units + 12-18 upper division units
COURSES |
CHOICE |
SEM., YR. |
ZERO TO TWO COURSES FROM Clas 120, 140, 296C, 310, 320, 330, 340, 350, 496C, 599C |
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TWO TO FOUR COURSES FROM Clas 310,320, 330, 340, 350 |
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TWO TO FOUR COURSES FROM Art 568, Clas 310, 320, 330, 340, 350, 496C, 599C, Hist 502, 503, Phil 411 |
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Class Major: Classical Humanities Emphasis
Major code: 15041-111525
13-14 total courses
44-46 total units= 14-16 lower division units + 30 upper division units
14-16 units in Greek or in Latin + 30 units in nonlanguage courses
Foreign language requiremcnt met by three semesters of Greek or of Latin Minor not required Graduation Writing Assessment Requirement
Senior portfolio
COURSES |
CHOICE |
SEM., YR. |
EITHER Clas 101G-202G OR Clas |
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TWO COURSES FROM Clas 120, 140, Comp Lit 270A, Hist 105, Hum 140 |
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EITHER Clas 303G-304G OR Clas 303L-304L |
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Clas 320 |
Clas 320 |
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Clas 330 |
Clas 330 |
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Hist 502 |
Hist 502 |
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Hist 503 |
Hist 503 |
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THREE COURSES FROM Clas 310, 340, 350, 496C, 599C, Art 568, Hist 501, Hum 402, Phil 411 |
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Hum 490 |
Hum 490 |
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A Three Part Presentation
Spring Semester 2008
Here are the guidelines for the submission of your Senior Portfolio, the culminating exercise of your major in Humanities or Classics. The portfolio project is transitioning from its earlier purpose—to highlight all the work you did across all your major classes (including some new work, such as a literary passage in the language of your emphasis, along with an epideictic display of your translation skill)—to its new, modified purpose—to highlight a single, culminating work of your original research (“The Senior Seminar Paper”) and to provide you an opportunity to display your research via a “translation” from the most traditional format of a formally written presentation in the seminar paper into a visual presentation (an epideictic display, if you will) suitable for non-specialists and interested spectators of your work who will see it at the Department “Recognition Ceremony.” The old-style portfolio has tended to be a personally tailored, private (given that much of it was graded) collection of materials. The new-style portfolio is intended to be a public presentation, meant for the entertainment and delight of your parents, friends, fellow graduates: the portfolio is intended as a means for the Department to show you off to your well-wishers on Commencement Day and, at the same time, show ourselves off in light of your hard work.
We are aided this semester as we transition to the new portfolio style by the strange calendar of graduation. There is a week’s gap between the end of finals and Commencement Day. This effectively allows for either Portfolio style to be submitted in finals and allow for time for evaluation of the finished product.
So, if you would like to produce the earlier, totalizing portfolio project, the directions remain the same as always (printed in your major handbook) and the portfolio should be submitted in its binder to the office by the end of finals week for the inspection and approval of the faculty in your area of concentration.
If, on the other hand, you would like to produce the new style of portfolio, your directions are as follows:
Submit to the department a collection of three items having to do with your senior research paper:
I. A Précis of the Project
On a single page, write up a summary in a few paragraphs—100 to 200 words in length—of your project. This page will serve as the title page and introduction to the portfolio. The précis should include the following:
***Your full name (as you present yourself in formal writing) and the semester date (just as you would put on a submitted paper)
***The title of your Project (which may simply be the title of your paper, if you like)
***A few paragraphs describing your project. This précis should tell us the topic, scope and argument of your paper (II, below). And then provide us a short description of your presentation (III, below) letting us know the medium (or media) and the intended effect of the presentation.
This précis should be submitted as soon as you are able (by the end of April is when you’ll get pestering emails from me) so that we can give initial approval to the project and we have time to plan what is needed for the proper display of your project (III below).
II. A Culminating Research Paper
Submit your research paper in its finished, complete form as you have submitted it to your Senior Seminar professor. You may want to “publish” this version of your paper a vinyl or binder cover of some sort in anticipation of many fingers thumbing through it in curiosity and interest. The due date for the departmental submission of your paper will be the end of finals week (at the latest).
III. A Creative Presentation of Research
This project can represent either the entire argument and scope of your research paper, or just one facet or section of your work. The idea here is to convert (“to translate”) your research paper into either an attractive, eye-catching poster, a slick PowerPoint presentation, a digital slide show, a brief video presentation, an assemblage of items integrally connected to your subject (or some variation of these, or something else that my limited imagination hasn’t suggested here). The point and purpose is to make your formal research presentable to non-specialists who will want to know what is interesting and important about your work.
For those of you taking Hum 490 now, the in-class presentations you are already doing should be perfectly suited to this presentation. You have the opportunity to make that presentation as handsome and polished as you can with the time you have leading to the end of the semester.
We’ll be able to display your presentations (by projecting computer files and video projects) in the Burnett Seminar Room, which is where we all end up for the Department recognition ceremony on May 23.
The submission deadline of your project, along with your research paper, will be the end of finals week. (Those working on this project from the disadvantageous confines of that most repressed city in Europe will be given certain flexibility in their submission: Prof. Skwara will confirm for us completion of the project. Prof. Smith has copies of your research paper from last spring.)
All faculty in the department are at your disposal for generating ideas—should you for any reason be at a loss for them—that you can reasonably and enthusiastically execute by the end of the semester. We want these to be clearly the product of your love and irrepressible interest in your topics.
Special Study in Classics, Greek, or Latin (Classics 599) is available by special arrangement only to qualified students. To register for Classics 599C, 599G, or 599L, you must first consult with the Department Chair or Major Adviser and with the prospective supervising professor. When you have determined the content and requirements of the Special Study and have completed the form, you must submit it for the Department Chair's approval. You will then be given the suppressed course schedule number.
Greek or Latin
Special Study in Greek or Latin is strictly reserved for students who have completed Classics 304G or 304L. Each semester the Department will announce the title and supervising professor for Greek and Latin Special Study. These courses will usually be conducted as three-unit tutorials meeting once a week at a mutually convenient time. Most frequent topics Horace, Ovid, Vergil, Latin Prose Composition, Euripides, Sophocles, Herodotus, Plato; however, other appropriate topics may be chosen according to student request.
Travel-Study
Students awarded a Friends of Classics Summer Scholarship and those engaged in approved travel· study abroad can earn up to three units credit in Classics 599C. There are no prerequisites, but you must follow the regular procedure in securing permission to enroll. (See Scholarships and Readerships, above).