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ENGLISH, RHETORIC, AND HUMANISTIC STUDIES Department of English, Rhetoric, and Humanistic Studies
Department Head: Colonel Miller
Requirements for a major in English are specified in English, Rhetoric, and Humanistic Studies .
Note: A minimum grade of C in ERH 101 , WR 101, or EN 101 is a prerequisite for ERH 102 , and a minimum grade of C in ERH 102 , WR 102, or EN 102 is a prerequisite for all 200- and 300-level English, Rhetoric, and Humanistic Studies courses. All 400-level courses have additional prerequisites, which are listed in the course descriptions or provided in registration materials. These prerequisites may be waived by the department head if there is evidence that the cadet is well prepared for the 400-level course.
200-level courses: These courses build on research-informed writing skills developed in ERH 102 - Writing and Rhetoric II . Major writing assignments are typically 1000 words each, totaling at least 2000 words, and emphasizing close reading, synthesis of ideas, and guided use of sources.
300-level courses: Intermediate courses stressing critical reading of more complex works and research-informed writing. Major writing assignments are typically 1500 words each, totaling at least 3000 words, and emphasizing analysis. Assignments require cadets to demonstrate some originality of thought.
400-level courses: Advanced courses requiring more independent work, substantial reading assignments, writing totaling 400 words, and typically a major course project. |
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• ERH 470-479 - Seminar in Rhetoric and Writing
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• ERH 481 - Senior Capstone Course
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• ERH 495 - Honors Thesis I
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• ERH 496 - Honors Thesis II
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FRENCH Department of Modern Languages and Cultures
Department Head: Colonel Bulger-Barnett
- All cadets who enter with two or more entrance units in a modern foreign language are given placement tests and are placed in appropriate courses on the basis of the test results, their previous high school language coursework, and after consultation with the department head of modern languages.
- A single year of a foreign language shall count toward meeting graduation requirements only when the cadet is studying a second language or is taking a language as an elective.
- Classroom work is supplemented with computer-aided language instruction in a wellequipped Language Learning Center.
Prerequisites: Cadets must demonstrate proficiency in ML 101 in order to be admitted into ML 102. They must, similarly, demonstrate proficiency in ML 102 before enrolling in ML 201, and in ML 201 before enrolling in ML 202/204. Proficiency in ML 202/204 is a prerequisite for admission to 300-level courses. Completion of two 300-level courses or their equivalent is expected before enrollment in any 400 -level course. Once a cadet has completed work at the 202/204 level, he/she may not return to the elementary level course for credit.
Cadets who present three or more years of a high school language or demonstrate native or near-native language abilities may not enroll at the elementary level of that language. Such students will have the choice of enrolling either in the first semester intermediate level of that language or in the first semester elementary course of a different language. |
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• FR 101 - Elementary French I
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• FR 102 - Elementary French II
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• FR 201 - Intermediate French I
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• FR 202 - Intermediate French II
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• FR 252 - France and the French
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• FR 304 - French Composition and Conversation
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• FR 305W - French Thought Across the Centuries I
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• FR 306W - French Thought Across the Centuries II
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• FR 307 - Intensive Review of French Grammar and Phonetics
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• FR 310 - Introduction to French Literature
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• FR 314 - French Civilizations and Cultures
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• FR 315 - Introduction to Francophonic Texts
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• FR 316W - Topics in French
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• FR 335 - Intermediate French Converstion
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• FR 365 - Professional Communication in Government and Enterprise
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• FR 404W - Applied French Grammar and Composition
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• FR 405 - Independent Reading
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• FR 406 - Independent Reading
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• FR 421 - French Literature and Civilization I
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• FR 425 - French Literature and Civilization II
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• FR 430 - Indroduction to Francophone Studies
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• FR 435 - Advanced French Converstion
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• FR 450 - Modern Language Capstone Course
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• FR 455 - France Today
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• FR 460 - Studies in French and Francophone Culture
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• FR 470 - Special Topics in French
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GEOLOGY Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Department Head: Captain Riester
Requirements for a major in civil engineering are specified in Civil and Environmental Engineering . |
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• GE 306 - Engineering Geology
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GERMAN Department of Modern Languages and Cultures
Department Head: Colonel Bulger-Barnett
- All cadets who enter with two or more entrance units in a modern foreign language are given placement tests and are placed in appropriate courses on the basis of the test results, their previous high school language coursework, and after consultation with the department head of modern languages.
- A single year of a foreign language shall count toward meeting graduation requirements only when the cadet is studying a second language or is taking a language as an elective.
- Classroom work is supplemented with computer-aided language instruction in a well-equipped Language Learning Center.
Prerequisites: Cadets must demonstrate proficiency in ML 101 in order to be admitted into ML 102. They must, similarly, demonstrate proficiency in ML 102 before enrolling in ML 201, and in ML 201 before enrolling in ML 202/204. Proficiency in ML 202/204 is a prerequisite for admission to 300-level courses. Completion of two 300-level courses or their equivalent is expected before enrollment in any 400-level course. Once a cadet has completed work at the 202/204 level, he/she may not return to the elementary level course for credit.
Cadets who present three or more years of a high school language or demonstrate native or near-native language abilities may not enroll at the elementary level of that language. Such students will have the choice of enrolling either in the first semester intermediate level of that language or in the first semester elementary course of a different language. |
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• GR 303W - Introduction to Contemporary German Culture I
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• GR 304W - Introduction to Contemporary German Culture II
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• GR 307 - Literature Survey (1100-1700)
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• GR 308 - Literature From the Enlightenment to Revolution
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• GR 316 - Topics in German
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• GR 331X - The Resistance in Nazi Germany: The Best and Brightest and the “Oath-Breakers”
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• GR 332X - From Wehrmacht to Bundeswehr: A Tradition Destroyed and Rebuilt
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• GR 405 - Seminar in German Literature I
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• GR 406 - Seminar in German Literature II
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• GR 411 - Vienna, Berlin, and Between: Germany and Austria From 1911-1950
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• GR 412 - German On Both Sides of the Iron Curtain
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• GR 413 - Germany and the Military
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• GR 420W - Advanced Conversation and Composition
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• GR 421 - Immigration to and From Germany Since 1850
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• GR 450 - Modern Language Capstone Course
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HISTORY Department of History
Department Head: Colonel Wilkinson
Requirements for a major in history are specified in History . |
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• HI 103 - World History I
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• HI 104 - World History II
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• HI 200 - Introduction to Historical Methodology
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• HI 205 - History of the United States I
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• HI 205W - History of the United States I
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• HI 206 - History of the United States II
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• HI 210-299 - Special Courses
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• HI 301 - Ancient Egypt
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• HI 302 - Ancient Greece
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• HI 303 - Ancient Rome
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• HI 304 - The Medieval World
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• HI 307 - English History I
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• HI 308 - English History II
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• HI 309 - History of the Holocaust
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• HI 310X - War and Society in Modern China
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• HI 311 - History of the Cold War
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• HI 313 - The United States, 1900-1945
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• HI 314 - The United States Since 1945
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• HI 315 - The History of Everyday Life
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• HI 316 - Food and Hunger in History
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• HI 319 - African American Experience
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• HI 321 - The Old South
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• HI 322 - The Civil War and Reconstruction
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• HI 323 - History of the South From 1865
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• HI 324 - American Foreign Relations to 1919
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• HI 325 - American Foreign Relations Since 1919
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• HI 327 - India From the Age of the Harrapans to the Present Day
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• HI 328 - British Imperialism
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• HI 330 - Topics in Ancient History
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• HI 331 - Colonial America
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• HI 332 - North American Indians
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• HI 333 - History of the Middle East I
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• HI 334 - History of the Middle East II
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• HI 335 - The Vietnam War
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• HI 346 - Modern Japan
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• HI 348 - Africa in Modern Times, 1700 to Present
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• HI 350 - French Revolution and Napoleon
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• HI 355 - Grand Strategy in the Twentieth Century
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• HI 356 - Twentieth-Century China
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• HI 357 - Late Imperial China
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• HI 361 - The Age of Blood and Iron. Europe, 1871-1918
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• HI 365 - France and the French Empire 1815 to the Present
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• HI 368 - Europe, 1919-1939
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• HI 372 - Reading Course for Honors
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• HI 373 - Colonial Latin America
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• HI 374 - Modern Latin America
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• HI 375 - Germany and Eastern Europe From Bismarck to Brandt
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• HI 377 - Insurgency and Terrorism
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• HI 378 - European Warfare, 1600-1871
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• HI 379 - European Warfare Since 1871
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• HI 380 - Europe in Renaissance and Reformation
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• HI 382 - Modern Russian History
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• HI 383 - Virginia History I
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• HI 384 - Virginia History II
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