Requirement(s)
One course
Two credits
Can be taken from either
- 7A Human Diversity in the United Stated
- 7B Race, Power, & Justice
GOAL AREA 7A: HUMAN DIVERSITY IN THE UNITED STATES
Goals
To increase students' understanding of individual and group differences (e.g., race, gender, class) and their knowledge of the traditions and values of various groups in the United States. Students should be able to evaluate the United States' historical and contemporary responses to group differences.
Critical Thinking
The practice of critical thinking skills required for clear understanding of human diversity, including the ability to gather and apply factual information, analysis of logical connections between facts and assumptions, skill at recognizing and articulating the value assumptions made by ourselves and others.
Student Competencies
Students will be able to:
- understand the development of and the changing meanings of group identities in the United States, history and culture.
- demonstrate an awareness of the individual and institutional dynamics of unequal power relations between groups in contemporary society.
- analyze their own attitudes, behaviors, concepts and beliefs regarding diversity, racism, and bigotry.
- describe and discuss the experience and contributions (political, social, economic, etc.) of the many groups that shape American society and culture, in particular those groups that have suffered discrimination and exclusion.
- demonstrate communication skills necessary for living and working effectively in a society with great population diversity.
Goal 7A courses that satisfy goal area include
ANTH 2710 Anthropology of World Religions (3 credits)
ENGL 2337 American Literature from 1865 to Present (3 credits)
ENVR 3710 Indigenous Environmental Knowledge: Global Perspective (3 credits)
GEOG 1400 World Regional Geography (3 credits)
GEOG 2200 Introduction to Human Geography (3 credits)
GEOG 2925 People of the Environment: Geography Perspective (3 credits)
GEOG 3410 Geography of North America (3 credits)
GWS 1110 Introduction to Gender Studies (3 credits)
HLTH 2800 Multicultural Health in America (2 credits)
HST 1114 United States History to 1865 (3 credits)
HST 1115 United States History since 1865 (3 credits)
HST 2610 Minnesota History (3 credits)
INST 1107 Introduction to Turtle Island (3 credits)
INST 2201 Creation to Contact (3 credits)
INST 2202 Survivance Since Contact (3 credits)
INST 3170 Indigenous Education (3 credits)
INST 3307 Ojibwe History (3 credits)
INST 3710 Indigenous Environmental Knowledge: Global Perspective (3 credits)
INST 3888 Indigenous Women Writers (3 credits)
JUST 3307 Victimological Theory and Practice (3 credits)
MUS 3130 History of Rock and Roll (3 credits)
OJIB 1100 Ojibwe Culture (4 credits)
PHIL 3340 Twentieth and Twenty-First Century Philosophy (3 credits)
POL 1400 Introduction to Comparative Politics (3 credits)
PSY 2200 Human Sexuality (4 credits)
PSY 2490 Disability and Ableism (4 credits)
SOC 2230 Race and Ethnic Relations (3 credits)
SOC 2240 Sociology of Gender - Current Topics (3 credits)
SOC 3250 Religion and Politics: A Sociological Analysis (3 credits)
SOC 3320 Social Class and Inequality (3 credits)
SOC 3340 Sociology of Education (3 credits)
SOWK 2110 Intercultural Communication (3 credits)
GOAL AREA 7B: RACE, POWER, & JUSTICE
Goals
To build knowledge and understanding of historic and contemporary structures of racism in the United States, which systemically shape complex social, political, economic, and environmental inequities experienced by marginalized groups and identities, and promote agency to address matters of structural inequality.
Student Competencies
Students will be able to:
- understand historical and contemporary systemic structures of racism that sustain social, politial,economic, and/or environmental inequities, particularly for Black, Indigenous lands and people, and other communities of color.
-
describe individual and institutional dynamics of unequal power relations among racial groups in the United States and how inequality is maintained by redefining race and other social identities and structures.
-
examine significant challenges of and contributions by people in the United States who have experienced racism and other forms of oppression such as sexism, classism, ableism, heterosexism, transphobia, antisemitism, and Islamophobia.
-
identify communication and relational skills necessary for living and working effectively in a racially, culturally, ethnically, and linguistically stratified society with historic and ongoing practices and structures of exclusion.
-
identify socially just and antiracist practices that increase equitable outcomes and inclusion in the United States.
Goal 7B courses that satisfy goal area include
COMM 1090 Interpersonal Communication (3 credits)
COMM 3120 Communication in a Diverse Society (3 credits)
COMM 3130 Family Communication (3 credits)
COMM 3150 Gender Communication (3 credits)
COMM 3170 Health Communication (3 credits)
ENGL 2330 Diverse American Literatures to 1865 (3 credits)
ENGL 3590 Race, Power, and Justice in Global Literatures (3 credits)
HST 2500 Native Americans and the United States, 1600s-Present (3 credits)
POL 1200 Introduction to American Politics (3 credits)
SOWK 3730 Anti-Oppressive Practices in Social Work and Helping Professions (3 credits)
OTHERS:
All-University course numbers 1955 and 2955 are available to any department for use as study-travel courses, subject to approval, and will satisfy this goal area.
*This course will satisfy Core Curriculum at BSU, but does not qualify for inclusion in the Minnesota Transfer Curriculum as currently interpreted by Minnesota State, and may not be accepted as a Core Curriculum/General Education course at other Minnesota State institutions or the University of Minnesota.