Anthropology

Courses

ANT-210: General Anthropology

Credits 3

This course introduces the physical, archaeological, linguistic, and ethnological fields of anthropology. Topics include human origins, genetic variations, archaeology, linguistics, primatology, and contemporary cultures. Upon completion, students should be able to demonstrate an understanding of the four major fields of anthropology.

This course has been approved to satisfy the Comprehensive Articulation Agreement general education requirement in social/behavioral sciences.

ANT-221: Comparative Cultures

Credits 3

This course provides an ethnographic survey of societies around the world covering their distinctive cultural characteristics and how these relate to cultural change. Emphasis is placed on the similarities and differences in social institutions such as family, economics, politics, education, and religion. Upon completion, students should be able to demonstrate knowledge of a variety of cultural adaptive strategies.

This course has been approved to satisfy the Comprehensive Articulation Agreement general education requirement in social/behavioral sciences.

ANT-240: Archaeology

Credits 3

This course introduces the scientific study of the unwritten record of the human past. Emphasis is placed on the process of human cultural evolution as revealed through archaeological methods of excavation and interpretation. Upon completion, students should be able to demonstrate an understanding of how archaeologists reconstruct the past and describe the variety of past human cultures.

This course has been approved to satisfy the Comprehensive Articulation Agreement general education requirement in social/behavioral sciences.

ANT-240A: Archaeology Field Lab

Credits 2

This course provides practical applications of archaeological methods. Emphasis is placed on basic archaeological methods and techniques required in site surveys, site classification, excavation, recording, processing, presentation, chronometry, and analysis of materials. Upon completion, students should be able to participate in applying archaeological methods and techniques to the excavation of a specific site.

This course has been approved to satisfy the Comprehensive Articulation Agreement for transferability as a premajor and/or elective course requirement.