- Teacher: Suzanne Groth
Lewis & Clark Moodle
搜索结果: 711
Readings, critiques, and more involved assignments leading to in-depth discussions and approaches to understanding and exploring sculpture.
- Teacher: Jess Perlitz
Readings, critiques, and more involved assignments lead to in-depth discussions and approaches to understanding and exploring sculpture.
- Teacher: Jess Perlitz
- Teacher: Jess Perlitz
- Teacher: Jess Perlitz
civilizations, other major early Central and South
American cultures. Examination of architecture,
sculpture, ceramics, painting; how the arts played
a key role in developing a sense of continuity
within these societies across time and distance.
- Teacher: Matthew Johnston
civilizations and other major early Central and
South American cultures. Examination of
architecture, sculpture, ceramics, painting; how
the arts played a key role in developing a sense
of continuity within these societies across time
and distance.
- Teacher: Matthew Johnston
- Teacher: Matthew Johnston
civilizations and other major early Central and
South American cultures. Examination of
architecture, sculpture, ceramics, painting; how
the arts played a key role in developing a sense
of continuity within these societies across time
and distance.
- Teacher: Matthew Johnston
- Teacher: Matthew Johnston
as integral components of an emerging modernity in
the United States and Europe during the 19th
century. Focus on technical innovations and the
examination of primary writings by artists,
critics, authors, and other cultural figures to
assess their aspirations for and anxieties about
the innovations' social and cultural implications.
Realism as a movement in academic art; debates
about the artistic value of mass media and the
impact on artistic practice; early mass media and
the pursuit of political change; the relationship
between art and science; the shaping of national,
racial, class, and gender identities; the
emergence of the modern commercial market and
industrial production.
- Teacher: Matthew Johnston
century to the present, focusing on the way
historical developments in architecture reflect
and influence social values and on architecture as
a unique artistic medium. Specific issues include:
entirely new types of buildings and structures for
a modern industrial and commercial society, new
building materials, the decline of craftsmanship,
the constraints and opportunities of urban
planning, and the impact of new
design/reproduction technologies. Provides a set
of architectural concepts and terms for describing
structure and space and a critical overview of the
aesthetic, technical, and social issues
confronting architects over the past two and a
half centuries. Finally, investigates how
architects themselves conceptualized the
challenges facing them as architecture responded
to and shaped an evolving modern world, through
close readings of their writings in relation to
the buildings and structures they designed.
- Teacher: Matthew Johnston
- Teacher: Dawn Odell
century to 1949, with a focus on work created in
four cities: Suzhou, Guangzhou, Beijing, and
Shanghai. Considerations of relationships between
the built environment and artist production;
definitions of modernity; artistic conventions and
religious beliefs of the Manchu court; impacts of
trade with Europe and America on visual culture;
responses to new reproductive technologies,
including lithography and photography; woodblock
print and film as mediums of political protest.
- Teacher: Dawn Odell
Professional Orientation and Ethics provides a
survey of current issues related to ethical
practice and legal responsibilities within the
disciplines of art therapy and related fields.
Professional organizations and associations;
preparation standards and credentialing, history
and trends, ethical and legal standards and
supervision are addressed.
- Teacher: Beth Ann Short
Professional Orientation and Ethics provides a
survey of current issues related to ethical
practice and legal responsibilities within the
disciplines of art therapy and related fields.
Professional organizations and associations;
preparation standards and credentialing, history
and trends, ethical and legal standards and
supervision are addressed.
- Teacher: Beth Ann Short
survey of current issues related to ethical
practice and legal responsibilities within the
disciplines of art therapy and related fields.
Professional organizations and associations;
preparation standards and credentialing, history
and trends, ethical and legal standards and
supervision are addressed.
- Teacher: Mary Andrus
- Teacher: Beth Ann Short
- Teacher: Stephanie Solano
survey of current issues related to ethical
practice and legal responsibilities within the
disciplines of art therapy and related fields.
Professional organizations and associations;
preparation standards and credentialing, history
and trends, ethical and legal standards and
supervision are addressed.
- Teacher: Juleen Norling
- Teacher: Beth Ann Short
- Teacher: Stephanie Solano
- Teacher: Mary Andrus
- Teacher: Mary Andrus
- Teacher: Kristine Bella
- Teacher: Stephanie Solano
- Teacher: Kristine Bella
- Teacher: Stephanie Solano
- Teacher: Kristine Bella
- Teacher: Stephanie Solano
- Teacher: Kristine Bella
- Teacher: Kristine Bella
- Teacher: Stephanie Solano
- Teacher: Kristine Bella
- Teacher: Kristine Bella
Supervised practice bridging theoretical and, clinical skills. Students engage in art therapy, and related professional activities in community, settings. Students prepare art therapy, assessments, submit clinical samples for, supervisory review, and present case findings.
- Teacher: Kristine Bella
- Teacher: Missy Satterberg
- Teacher: Kristine Bella
clinical skills. Students engage in art therapy
and related professional activities in community
settings. Students prepare art therapy
assessments, submit clinical samples for
supervisory review, and present case findings.
- Teacher: Kristine Bella
Supervised practice bridging theoretical and
clinical skills. Students engage in art therapy
and related professional activities in community
settings. Students prepare art therapy
assessments, submit clinical samples for
supervisory review, and present case findings.
- Teacher: Kristine Bella
- Teacher: Kristine Bella
- Teacher: Kristine Bella
- Teacher: Kristine Bella
- Teacher: Stephanie Solano
- Teacher: Kristine Bella
- Teacher: Stephanie Solano
- Teacher: Kristine Bella
- Teacher: Stephanie Solano
- Teacher: Kristine Bella
clinical skills. Students engage in art therapy
and related professional activities in community
settings. Students prepare art therapy
assessments, submit clinical samples for
supervisory review, and present case findings.
- Teacher: Missy Satterberg
- Teacher: Missy Satterberg
clinical skills. Students engage in art therapy
and related professional activities in community
settings. Students prepare art therapy
assessments, submit clinical samples for
supervisory review, and present case findings.
- Teacher: Missy Satterberg
- Teacher: Missy Satterberg
clinical skills. Students engage in art therapy
and related professional activities in community
settings. Students prepare art therapy
assessments, submit clinical samples for
supervisory review, and present case findings.
- Teacher: Missy Satterberg
- Teacher: Missy Satterberg
clinical skills. Students engage in art therapy
and related professional activities in community
settings. Students prepare art therapy
assessments, submit clinical samples for
supervisory review, and present case findings.
- Teacher: Missy Satterberg
- Teacher: Missy Satterberg
- Teacher: Kristine Bella
- Teacher: Kristine Bella
and biological environment. Ecology of
populations, communities, and ecosystems,
theoretical and empirical approaches. Through
reading original literature and designing their
own studies, students learn to conduct ecological
studies and interpret results. Applications of
ecological principles to conservation issues and
other environmental problems. Lecture and
laboratory; weekend field trip.
- Teacher: Heidi Liere
- Teacher: Heidi Liere
- Teacher: Randall Long
plant, and animal systems. Topics will include
causes of disease emergence, host-pathogen
interactions and co-evolution, interactions
between disease and community diversity, and
anthropogenic effects on disease, among others. We
will use case studies, mathematical theory, and
examples from the primary literature to understand
the causes and consequences of host-pathogen
interactions for populations, communities, and
ecosystems. Intended for biology, biochemistry and
molecular biology, and environmental studies
majors.
- Teacher: Margaret Metz
- Teacher: Margaret Metz
- Teacher: Margaret Metz
in global consumer cultures, the gendering and
objectification of bodies, and the
commodification of bodies in looksist societies.
Raising awareness of body politics in the
counseling process is reviewed to promote
individual and relational wellbeing.
- Teacher: Center for Community Engagement
- Teacher: Justin Henderson
scholarship that explores best practices in
working with transgender and gender diverse
clients (TGDCs) experiencing eating disorders
and/or disordered eating (Eds/DE). This course
will also include an introduction to understanding
the intersections of TGDCs, neurodivergence and
EDs/DE. Ultimately, this course will explore the
prevalence of EDs/DE in transgender communities,
address gaps in current models based on cisgender
populations, and provide TGD and neurodivergent
affirming considerations that reduce barriers to
care, and increase and provide ethical, competent,
and gender-affirming care for all gender diverse
clients.
- Teacher: Xander Hayden
DISABILITY STUDIES AND UNIVERSAL DESIGN:
Every educator will encounter students who meet the criteria for disability within public education and grapple with how to successfully foster learning, equity and inclusion in diverse classrooms and schools. This online course, introduces Disability Studies in Education-- a liberation movement discipline distinct from Special Education-- that offers unique insight into these endeavors and proposes Universal Design as a guiding principle.
Disability Studies proposes that "disability" is contextualized within particular social, cultural and political environments according to the acceptable limits of human variability in those environments. This contrasts with the "medical, model," which positions disability as a deficit inherent to an individual, to be rehabilitated, remediated or cured. Contrasting these two different theoretical models helps us to explore the ideology that may underlie ableism, stigma and privilege. Our inquiry will include lived experience and counter culture narratives associated with various disability groups. We will conclude by investigating how we may employ the principle of Universal Design to create embracive learning environments where all students feel valued and empowered, as well as how we may work to dismantle systemic barriers to equity and inclusion within Education.
Disability Studies intersects with other critical disciplines such as Critical Race Studies, Feminist Studies and Gender Studies, all of which foreground lived experience and de-center dominant narratives that cast particular individuals or groups as the "Other." These intersections are also considered in the course, shedding light on the persistent over-representation of minorities in Special Education and exploring whether disablement may function as a mechanism of marginalization for various groups.
Through assigned readings and communal online discussion among professional peers, we will investigate the philosophical, pedagogical, and pragmatic approaches to dis/ability, equity, and, inclusion in education. Teachers, counselors, administrators, psychologists, specialists and academics should all emerge from this course with the historical context, intellectual framework, and practical skills to deepen their professional practice and help promote social justice-both within the sphere of education and in the wider world.
- Teacher: Denise Herrenbruck
- Teacher: Maureen Healy
Welcome to our January 2025 Clinical Supervision for Professional
Counselors 4-day, 30 hour training! All the materials for our four-day
training will be available for your review, so please feel free to read
ahead if you'd like. Our training will be distance-based, and consist of both live Zoom and
"off-line" Moodle assignments, each of which we'll review and clarify
along the way.
This training is designed to be both educational and interactive, with a high level of trainee participation encouraged! Feedback from recent Zoom trainings have helped shape this course into a (hopefully) well-paced and user-friendly experience, while still capturing all of the essential elements of the full clinical supervision training.
I look forward to meeting each of you during our first morning of introductions. After a brief survey of your accumulated supervisory experiences, we will move into our training activities. Thank you in advance for your engagement and participation. "See" you on Thursday, January 23, 2025 at 8:30 am!
James Gurule, MA, LPC
Adjunct Faculty
- Teacher: Center for Community Engagement
- Teacher: James Gurule
Welcome to our January 2025 Clinical Supervision for Professional
Counselors 4-day, 30 hour training! All the materials for our four-day
training will be available for your review, so please feel free to read
ahead if you'd like. Our training will be distance-based, and consist of both live Zoom and
"off-line" Moodle assignments, each of which we'll review and clarify
along the way.
This training is designed to be both educational and interactive, with a high level of trainee participation encouraged! Feedback from recent Zoom trainings have helped shape this course into a (hopefully) well-paced and user-friendly experience, while still capturing all of the essential elements of the full clinical supervision training.
I look forward to meeting each of you during our first morning of introductions. After a brief survey of your accumulated supervisory experiences, we will move into our training activities. Thank you in advance for your engagement and participation. "See" you on Thursday, January 23, 2025 at 8:30 am!
James Gurule, MA, LPC
Adjunct Faculty
- Teacher: Center for Community Engagement
- Teacher: James Gurule
Welcome to our August 2025 Clinical Supervision for Professional Counselors 4-day, 30 hour training! All the materials for our four-day training will be available for your review, so please feel free to read ahead if you'd like. Our training will be distance-based, and consist of both live Zoom and "off-line" Moodle assignments, each of which we'll review and clarify along the way.
This training is designed to be both educational and interactive, with a high level of trainee participation encouraged! Feedback from recent Zoom trainings have helped shape this course into a (hopefully) well-paced and user-friendly experience, while still capturing all of the essential elements of the full clinical supervision training.
I look forward to meeting each of you during our first morning of introductions. After a brief survey of your accumulated supervisory experiences, we will move into our training activities. Thank you in advance for your engagement and participation. "See" you on Thursday, July 10, 2025 at 8:30 am!
James Gurule, MA, LPC
Adjunct Faculty
- Teacher: Center for Community Engagement
- Teacher: James Gurule
Welcome to our May 2024 Clinical Supervision for Professional
Counselors 30 hour training! All the materials for our four-day
training will be available for your review, so please feel free to read
ahead if you'd like. Our training will be distance-based, and consist of both live Zoom and
"off-line" Moodle assignments, each of which we'll review and clarify
along the way.
This training is designed to be both educational and interactive, with a high level of trainee participation encouraged! Feedback from recent Zoom trainings have helped shape this course into a (hopefully) well-paced and user-friendly experience, while still capturing all of the essential elements of the full clinical supervision training.
I look forward to meeting each of you during our first morning of introductions. After a brief survey of your accumulated supervisory experiences, we will move into our training activities. Thank you in advance for your engagement and participation. "See" you on Thursday, May 16, 2024 at 8:30 am!
James Gurule, MA, LPC
Adjunct Faculty
- Teacher: Center for Community Engagement
- Teacher: James Gurule
- Teacher: Lydia Loren
This section will focus on one of the key features of being a literate and active member of a democracy: the ability to locate, think about, and make arguments with data. While we will indeed use numbers to explore the scientific and social ramifications of alcohol and substance use, this will not be a “math” class in the conventional sense. Nor, it must be said, will this be a “humanities” class in the conventional sense. We will likely spend less time dissecting texts than other E&D sections, or at least not in the same way. Instead, we will think about how quantitative reasoning can shape and strengthen arguments about academic research, public policy, literature, and the choices we make in our daily lives.
- Teacher: Todd Watson
COURSE OVERVIEW, THIS SECTION:
What is the self? How do we come to know the self? What is consciousness and where does it reside? These questions have fascinated philosophers and scientists for centuries. In the age of virtual reality and artificial intelligence, they have become more relevant than ever. Legal scholars, neuroscientists, and ethicists are embroiled in inquiry about the rights and responsibilities of artificial intelligence and downloaded consciousness (also known as “whole brain emulations”). But how do experts determine the answers to these questions, and what assumptions are best left behind? This course will draw on scientific journals, the popular press, and internet sources to examine identity in the virtual age. In the course of our quest, we will expand our ability to locate, think about, and make arguments with data.
While the heart of this E&D section is in Psychological Science, we will use a broad and interdisciplinary approach. We will use numbers and data visualization to explore virtual identities and bring these resources in conversation with long standing philosophical case studies such as Plato’s Allegory of the Cave. We will also draw on scholarship grounded in the social sciences regarding inequalities in our digital lives, particularly as they impact racial and sexual minorities. Alongside these content questions, we will evaluate the role quantitative reasoning can play in shaping the future of human-tech interaction.
- Teacher: Diana Leonard
- Teacher: Todd Watson
- Teacher: Gordon Kelly
significance of texts via close reading and
analysis, and to express that analysis orally and
in writing. Specific content and topics will vary
with instructors.
"People, Paleography & the Past: Analyzing the Slavery Archive"
The sources we use to study the history of slavery in North America exist in multiple forms and archives. Written and unwritten narratives, diaries, newspapers, legal codes, trial transcripts, ledgers, material culture, visual art, music–all found in archives, libraries, museums, family papers, and memories. How do we discover and recover these materials? How do we analyze them to understand their origins, their purpose, and their significance? How do we interpret them to answer questions about the institution of slavery, the experience of slavery, and the end of slavery? Do the voices of the enslaved speak in these records? How do we use the slavery archive to work through the silences and fathom the realities of their lives? What are the stakes of this kind of research?
In this course, we will address these questions by exploring major themes in the history of slavery and annotating the world’s largest document collection on this topic, Slavery & Anti-Slavery: A Transnational Archive (SAAS). This database contains over five million pages of archival material from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries written in multiple languages, including Spanish, English, and French. With a combination of collaborative research, discussion, and writing, students will develop skills in paleography (deciphering handwritten historical manuscripts) and historical analysis to examine the archive’s role in the study of enslaved peoples and the people who enslaved them.
- Teacher: Nancy Gallman
- Teacher: Reiko Hillyer

This course asks the central question: how might we understand the complicated relationship between our understanding of the “ideal” city, our experiences in cities, and the numbers and images we use to describe the City? We will explore the ways in which statistics, maps, and images may corroborate or belie what we understand to be true of lived experience within urban spaces. Our course considers the city a living and dynamic organism, both a human construct and ever-present agent subtly shaping social performance. The curriculum will highlight diverse academic disciplines, ranging from art history to sociology, philosophy to urban planning. Participating students should be interested in working creatively with fellow classmates and making occasional off-campus site visits. Prior experience with statistics and mapping is not required or expected.
- Teacher: Read McFaddin

This course asks the central question: how might we understand the complicated relationship between our understanding of the “ideal” city, our experiences in cities, and the numbers and images we use to describe the City? We will explore the ways in which statistics, maps, and images may corroborate or belie what we understand to be true of lived experience within urban spaces. Our course considers the city a living and dynamic organism, both a human construct and ever-present agent subtly shaping social performance. The curriculum will highlight diverse academic disciplines, ranging from art history to sociology, philosophy to urban planning. Participating students should be interested in working creatively with fellow classmates and making occasional off-campus site visits. Prior experience with statistics and mapping is not required or expected.
- Teacher: Read McFaddin
- Teacher: Justin Henderson
- Teacher: Justin Henderson
Considers the relationship between body and power, in global consumer cultures, the gendering and, objectification of bodies, and the, commodification of bodies in looksist societies., Raising awareness of body politics in the, counseling process is reviewed to promote, individual and relational wellbeing.
- Teacher: Justin Henderson
Considers the relationship between body and power, in global consumer cultures, the gendering and, objectification of bodies, and the, commodification of bodies in looksist societies., Raising awareness of body politics in the, counseling process is reviewed to promote, individual and relational wellbeing.
- Teacher: Justin Henderson
scholarship that explores best practices in
working with transgender and gender diverse
clients (TGDCs) experiencing eating disorders
and/or disordered eating (Eds/DE). This course
will also include an introduction to understanding
the intersections of TGDCs, neurodivergence and
EDs/DE. Ultimately, this course will explore the
prevalence of EDs/DE in transgender communities,
address gaps in current models based on cisgender
populations, and provide TGD and neurodivergent
affirming considerations that reduce barriers to
care, and increase and provide ethical, competent,
and gender-affirming care for all gender diverse
clients.
- Teacher: Xander Hayden
Explores the interdisciplinary field of
scholarship that explores best practices in
working with transgender and gender diverse
clients (TGDCs) experiencing eating disorders
and/or disordered eating (Eds/DE). This course
will also include an introduction to understanding
the intersections of TGDCs, neurodivergence and
EDs/DE. Ultimately, this course will explore the
prevalence of EDs/DE in transgender communities,
address gaps in current models based on cisgender
populations, and provide TGD and neurodivergent
affirming considerations that reduce barriers to
care, and increase and provide ethical, competent,
and gender-affirming care for all gender diverse
clients.
- Teacher: Xander Hayden
- Teacher: Tod Sloan
- Teacher: Meg Jeske
- Teacher: Alexia Deleon
- Teacher: Alexia Deleon
mental health and the natural environment and
explores ways in which psychological knowledge and
practices can contribute to the solution of
environmental problems. This course provides an
introduction to ecopsychology theory, findings and practices, and a survey of related research findings in environmental and conservation
psychology. Topics include health benefits
of natural settings, the development of
environmental identities, and promotion of
conservation behaviors. Students will be guided
toward self-reflection regarding their own
environmental identity, their motivations for
integrating environmental approaches into
their professional work, and ways to integrate ecopsychology
into their existing theory and practice base.
- Teacher: Thomas Doherty
- Teacher: Ryan Francis
- Teacher: Thomas Doherty
- Teacher: Thomas Doherty
- Teacher: Carol Doyle
- Teacher: Christopher Russo
- Teacher: Thomas Doherty
Summer 2016
CPSY 598 Topics in Applied Ecopsychology: Nature-Based
Therapy Retreat
Through field-based experiences, students will gain first-hand
experience in outdoor and nature based counseling and
psychotherapy contexts including horticultural therapy, urban
walking and outdoor therapy, equine-assisted therapy,
nature-based mindfulness exercises and group retreat work. The
course includes one night of overnight camping at an equine
therapy retreat center with facilities. Food and group equipment
is provided. No previous experience is necessary. Students will
receive a personal gear and clothing list before the course.
CPSY 598-01 is crosslisted with CECP 898-01.
CPSY 598-01 course dates are 5/14 and 5/15. Final assignments
due by 6/2.
- Teacher: Thomas Doherty
- Teacher: Matthew Geraths
- Teacher: Stella Kerl-Mcclain
- Teacher: Greta Binford
- Teacher: Ethan Davis
- Teacher: Jeremy McWilliams
- Teacher: Amelia Pruiett
theory and real-world application in the domain of
data science. Students enrolled in this course
will work eight to 10 hours per week in small
teams to solve problems and extract value from
data. The problems and data sets will vary by year
and course offering, but will universally provide
opportunities to students to frame research
questions, manage and clean data, execute
analyses, and communicate results.
- Teacher: Greta Binford
- Teacher: Ethan Davis
- Teacher: Jeremy McWilliams
- Teacher: Emily O'Sullivan
- Teacher: Abby Joffe-Aalto
- Teacher: Katheryne Lewis
ecopsychology concepts and nature based practices
in the context of a multi-day outdoor experience.
Topics include backcountry safety, outdoor
leadership, wilderness philosophy and
conservation, benefits of immersion in natural
settings and retreats from modern technologies;
multicultural rites of passage; and techniques for
counseling/therapy in the outdoors. The course
typically features an off-campus weeklong or
multi-weekend residential format including tent
camping along with other activities such as day
and/or overnight hiking; mindfulness and team
building exercises; and other nature based and/or
adventure based activities. Outdoor experience not
required. There is a course fee.
- Teacher: Katheryne Lewis
- Teacher: Christopher Russo
This course provides an opportunity to explore
ecopsychology concepts and nature based practices
in the context of a multi-day outdoor experience.
Topics include backcountry safety, outdoor
leadership, wilderness philosophy and
conservation, benefits of immersion in natural
settings and retreats from modern technologies;
multicultural rites of passage; and techniques for
counseling/therapy in the outdoors. The course
typically features an off-campus weeklong or
multi-weekend residential format including tent
camping along with other activities such as day
and/or overnight hiking; mindfulness and team
building exercises; and other nature based and/or
adventure based activities. Outdoor experience not
required. There is a course fee.
- Teacher: Abby Joffe-Aalto
- Teacher: Katheryne Lewis
- Teacher: Alejandra Favela
- Teacher: Alejandra Favela
- Teacher: Robert Unzueta
- Teacher: Alejandra Favela
- Teacher: Rebecca Brooks
- Teacher: Alejandra Favela
- Teacher: Lina Darwich