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Academic Catalog 2025-26

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Your search for courses · during 25FA, 26WI, 26SP · tagged with EDUC 2 Social Cultural Context · returned 15 results

  • AMST 115 Introduction to American Studies 6 credits

    This overview of the “interdisciplinary discipline” of American Studies will focus on the ways American Studies engages with and departs from other scholarly fields of inquiry. We will study the stories of those who have been marginalized in the social, political, cultural, and economic life of the United States due to their class, race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, religion, citizenship, and level of ability. We will explore contemporary American Studies concerns like racial and class formation, the production of space and place, the consumption and circulation of culture, and transnational histories.

    Sophomore Priority

    • Fall 2025, Spring 2026
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • CL: 100 level HIST Pertinent Courses CCST Seeing and Being Cross-Cultural EDUC 2 Social Cultural Context HIST United States
    • AMST  115.01 Fall 2025

    • Faculty:Christopher Elias 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • M, WLeighton 402 9:50am-11:00am
    • FLeighton 402 9:40am-10:40am
    • AMST  115.01 Spring 2026

    • Faculty:Adriana Estill 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • M, WLaird 206 9:50am-11:00am
    • FLaird 206 9:40am-10:40am
  • EDUC 275 Inclusion or Refusal?: Educational Justice Models 6 credits

    This era of local, state, and national pushback against policies and practices of “diversity, equity, and inclusion” provides us with an opportune moment to examine the possibilities and limitations of this framing as a pathway for educational justice. Drawing on critiques of liberal frameworks of educational equity by Indigenous scholars and scholars of color, this course will ask what educational justice might look like beyond representation and belonging, especially in higher educational institutions.

    Recommended Preparation: One 100-level Educational Studies course.

    Extra Time Required: There will likely be off-campus site visits to schools and/or engagement with relevant campus programming around the topic.

    • Fall 2025
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies
    • CL: 200 level EDUC 2 Social Cultural Context
    • EDUC  275.01 Fall 2025

    • Faculty:Anita Chikkatur 🏫 👤
    • Size:20
    • T, THWillis 114 1:15pm-3:00pm
  • EDUC 367 Culture Wars in the Classroom 6 credits

    This course examines past and present school controversies, including school prayer, banned books, and student protests. Who controls the curriculum? How do we teach contentious issues such as evolution, racism, and climate change? To what extent do teachers and students enjoy the right to free expression? These are the kinds of questions “Culture Wars in the Classroom” will explore, as we consider the purpose of public education in a diverse, multicultural nation.

    • Winter 2026
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies No Exploration
    • CL: 300 level EDUC 2 Social Cultural Context EDUC 3 Public Policy Educational Reform
    • EDUC  367.01 Winter 2026

    • Faculty:Jeff Snyder 🏫 👤
    • Size:15
    • T, THWillis 114 10:10am-11:55am
  • GWSS 110 Introduction to Gender, Women’s & Sexuality Studies 6 credits

    This course is an introduction to the ways in which gender and sexuality structure our world, and to the ways feminists challenge established intellectual frameworks. However, since gender and sexuality are not homogeneous categories, but are crosscut by class, race, ethnicity, citizenship and culture, we also consider the ways differences in social location intersect with gender and sexuality.

    Sophomore Priority

    • Fall 2025, Winter 2026, Spring 2026
    • SI, Social Inquiry
    • CL: 100 level GWSS Gateway EDUC 2 Social Cultural Context
    • GWSS  110.01 Fall 2025

    • Faculty:Meera Sehgal 🏫 👤
    • Size:30
    • T, THLeighton 304 10:10am-11:55am
    • GWSS  110.01 Winter 2026

    • Faculty:Iveta Jusová 🏫 👤
    • Size:30
    • M, WLeighton 236 9:50am-11:00am
    • FLeighton 236 9:40am-10:40am
    • GWSS  110.01 Spring 2026

    • Faculty:Cynthia Marrero-Ramos 🏫 👤
    • Size:30
    • M, WLeighton 426 1:50pm-3:00pm
    • FLeighton 426 2:20pm-3:20pm
  • HIST 114 Indigenous Histories, Time Immemorial to 1887 6 credits

    Indigenous presence in North America pre-dates the United States by millennia and persists in spite of colonial attempts to eliminate Indigenous peoples. As Part I of the Indigenous Histories in the United States survey, we begin with Indigenous Knowledges of place, time, and identity since time immemorial. We then move through thousands of years of stories of diplomacy, captivity, colonialism, resistance, removal, and reconstitution. We conclude in the mid-1880s, a drastic period of change for lands, humans, and more-than-human relations. This course takes an ethnohistorical approach which centers Indigenous perspectives and draws on History, Indigenous Studies, and Anthropology.

    Extra Time Required: If the ACE collaboration continues, students will travel to Hocokata Ti in Prior Lake, MN for a training and archives tour.

    • Spring 2026
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies
    • ACE Applied AMST Democracy Activism AMST Survey 2 CL: 100 level HIST Modern MARS Supporting AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity EDUC 2 Social Cultural Context HIST United States
    • HIST  114.01 Spring 2026

    • Faculty:Meredith McCoy 🏫 👤
    • Size:30
    • T, THWillis 203 1:15pm-3:00pm
  • HIST 122 U.S. Women’s History to 1877 6 credits

    Gender, race, and class shaped women’s participation in the arenas of work, family life, culture, and politics in the United States from the colonial period to the late nineteenth century. We will examine diverse women’s experiences of colonization, industrialization, slavery and Reconstruction, religion, sexuality and reproduction, and social reform. Readings will include both primary and secondary sources, as well as historiographic articles outlining major frameworks and debates in the field of women’s history.

    • Winter 2026
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies
    • AMST Survey 2 CL: 100 level GWSS Elective HIST Modern AMST Production Consumption of Culture AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity EDUC 2 Social Cultural Context HIST United States
    • HIST  122.01 Winter 2026

    • Faculty:Annette Igra 🏫 👤
    • Size:30
    • T, THLeighton 330 10:10am-11:55am
  • HIST 123 U.S. Women’s History Since 1877 6 credits

    In the twentieth century women participated in the redefinition of politics and the state, sexuality and family life, and work and leisure as the United States became a modern, largely urban society. We will explore how the dimensions of race, class, ethnicity, and sexuality shaped diverse women’s experiences of these historical changes. Topics will include: immigration, the expansion of the welfare system and the consumer economy, labor force segmentation and the world wars, and women’s activism in civil rights, labor, peace and feminist movements.

    • Spring 2026
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies
    • AMST Democracy Activism AMST Survey 2 CL: 100 level GWSS Elective HIST Modern POSI Elective/Non POSC AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity EDUC 2 Social Cultural Context HIST United States
    • HIST  123.01 Spring 2026

    • Faculty:Annette Igra 🏫 👤
    • Size:30
    • T, THLeighton 330 3:10pm-4:55pm
  • HIST 126 Black Freedom: Reconstruction to #BlackLivesMatter 6 credits

    This course analyzes Black Freedom activism, its goals, and protagonists from Reconstruction until today. Topics include the evolution of racial segregation and its legal and de facto expressions in the South and across the nation, the Great Migration and Harlem Renaissance, Black activism in the New Deal era, the effects of World War II and the Cold War, mass activism in the 1950s and 1960s, white supremacist resistance against Black rights, Black Power activism and Black Internationalism, the “War on Drugs,” racialized welfare state reforms, and police brutality, the election of Barack Obama, and the path to #BlackLivesMatter today.

    • Winter 2026
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies
    • AFST Survey Course AMST Democracy Activism AMST Space and Place AMST Survey 2 CL: 100 level HIST Modern AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity EDUC 2 Social Cultural Context HIST Africa & Its Diaspora HIST United States
    • HIST  126.01 Winter 2026

    • Faculty:Rebecca Brueckmann 🏫 👤
    • Size:30
    • T, THLeighton 402 1:15pm-3:00pm
  • HIST 203 American Indian Education 1600-Present 6 credits

    This course introduces students to the history of settler education for Indigenous students. In the course, we will engage themes of resistance, assimilation, and educational violence through an investigation of nation-to-nation treaties, federal education legislation, court cases, student memoirs, film, fiction, and artwork. Case studies will illustrate student experiences in mission schools, boarding schools, and public schools between the 1600s and the present, asking how Native people have navigated the educational systems created for their assimilation and how schooling might function as a tool for Indigenous resurgence in the future.

    Extra time

    • Winter 2026
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies
    • AMST Space and Place CL: 200 level HIST Modern PPOL Education Policy AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity EDUC 2 Social Cultural Context HIST United States
    • HIST  203.01 Winter 2026

    • Faculty:Meredith McCoy 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • T, THLeighton 304 1:15pm-3:00pm
  • IDSC 100 Civil Discourse in a Troubled Age 6 credits

    As we listen to people discussing critical issues facing individuals, communities, countries and the planet, what do we see happening? Is communication occurring? Do the sides hear each other and seek to understand another point of view, even if in disagreement? Is the goal truth or the best policy or victory for a side? What skills, approaches, and conditions lead to genuine discussion and productive argument? How can we cultivate these as individuals and communities? This Argument and Inquiry seminar addresses these questions in both theory and practice by allowing students the opportunity to read, view, discuss, and analyze theoretical discussions and case studies drawn from the past and present on a range of controversial topics.

    Held for new first year students

    • Fall 2025
    • AI/WR1, Argument & Inquiry/WR1
    • Student is a member of the First Year First Term class level cohort. Students are only allowed to register for one A&I course at a time. If a student wishes to change the A&I course they are enrolled in they must DROP the enrolled course and then ADD the new course. Please see our Workday guides Drop or 'Late' Drop a Course and Register or Waitlist for a Course Directly from the Course Listing for more information.

    • CL: 100 level EDUC 2 Social Cultural Context
    • IDSC  100.02 Fall 2025

    • Faculty:William North 🏫 👤 · Sindy Fleming 🏫 👤
    • Size:15
    • M, WWillis 204 11:10am-12:20pm
    • FWillis 204 12:00pm-1:00pm
  • PHIL 203 Bias, Belief, Community, Emotion 6 credits

    What is important to individuals, how they see themselves and others, and the kind of projects they pursue are shaped by traditional and moral frameworks they didn’t choose. Individual selves are encumbered by their social environments and, in this sense, always ‘biased’, but some forms of bias are pernicious because they produce patterns of inter and intra-group domination and oppression. We will explore various forms of intersubjectivity and its asymmetries through readings in social ontology and social epistemology that theorize the construction of group and individual beliefs and identities in the context of the social world they engender.

    Extra time

    • Winter 2026
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies QRE, Quantitative Reasoning WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • ACE Theoretical CGSC Elective CL: 200 level PHIL Social and Political Theory 2 PHIL Theoretical Area PHIL Value Theory 1 EDUC 2 Social Cultural Context
    • PHIL  203.01 Winter 2026

    • Faculty:Anna Moltchanova 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • T, THLeighton 426 3:10pm-4:55pm
  • POSC 302 Subordinated Politics and Intergroup Relations 6 credits

    How do social and political groups interact? How do we understand these interactions in relation to power? This course will introduce the basic approaches and debates in the study of prejudice, racial attitudes, and intergroup relations. We will focus on three main questions. First, how do we understand and study prejudice and racism as they relate to U.S. politics? Second, how do group identities, stereotyping, and other factors help us understand the legitimation of discrimination, group hierarchy, and social domination? Third, what are the political and social challenges associated with reducing prejudice?

    • Spring 2026
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies SI, Social Inquiry
    • AFST Social Inquiry AMST Democracy Activism AMST Space and Place CL: 300 level POSI Elective AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity EDUC 2 Social Cultural Context
    • POSC  302.01 Spring 2026

    • Faculty:Christina Farhart 🏫 👤
    • Size:15
    • T, THHasenstab 002 1:15pm-3:00pm
  • PSYC 384 Psychology of Prejudice 6 credits

    This seminar introduces students to major psychological theories and research on the development, perpetuation and reduction of prejudice. A social and historical approach to race, culture, ethnicity and race relations will provide a backdrop for examining psychological theory and research on prejudice formation and reduction. Major areas to be discussed are cognitive social learning, group conflict and contact hypothesis. Psychology 256 or 258 recommended preparation.

    • Winter 2026
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies SI, Social Inquiry
    • Student has completed any of the following course(s): PSYC 110 with a grade of C- or better or received a score of 4 or better on the Psychology AP exam or received a score of 6 or better on the Psychology IB exam.

    • AFST Social Inquiry CL: 300 level PSYC Seminar PSYC Upper Level AMST Production Consumption of Culture AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity EDUC 2 Social Cultural Context
    • PSYC  384.01 Winter 2026

    • Faculty:Sharon Akimoto 🏫 👤
    • Size:15
    • T, THHulings 120 10:10am-11:55am
  • SOAN 114 Modern Families: An Introduction to the Sociology of the Family 6 credits

    What makes a family? How has the conception of kinship and the ‘normal’ family changed over the generations? In this introductory class, we examine these questions, drawing on a variety of course materials ranging from classic works in sociology to contemporary blogs on family life. The class focuses on diversity in family life, paying particular attention to the intersection between the family, race and ethnicity, and social class. We’ll examine these issues at the micro and macro level, incorporating texts that focus on individuals’ stories as well as demographics of the family.

    • Winter 2026
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies QRE, Quantitative Reasoning SI, Social Inquiry
    • AMST Democracy Activism AMST Space and Place CL: 100 level GWSS Elective AMST Production Consumption of Culture AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity EDUC 2 Social Cultural Context
    • SOAN  114.01 Winter 2026

    • Faculty:Liz Raleigh 🏫 👤
    • Size:30
    • M, WLeighton 426 8:30am-9:40am
    • FLeighton 426 8:30am-9:30am
  • SOAN 283 Immigration, Citizenship, and Belonging in the U.S. 6 credits

    Immigration has been a defining feature of the United States that is tied to legal and cultural forms of citizenship, and more broadly, to questions of belonging. This course explores these three concepts through multiple aspects of immigration, including the migration experience, immigration policy, community, education, culture, and others, for both immigrants and the children of immigrants. Special attention is given to how differences among immigrants—such as race, gender, class, national origin, and others—matter in all of these areas. These questions and issues are explored through academic readings, popular and public discourse, immigrant voices, and civic engagement in local communities. 

    The department strongly recommends that 110 or 11 be taken prior to enrolling in courses numbered 200 or above.

    The department strongly recommends that 110 or 11 be taken prior to enrolling in courses number 200 or above.

    • Winter 2026
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies SI, Social Inquiry WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • ACE Applied AFST Social Inquiry AMST America in the World CL: 200 level AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity EDUC 2 Social Cultural Context EUST Transnational Support
    • SOAN  283.01 Winter 2026

    • Faculty:Daniel Williams 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • T, THLeighton 305 10:10am-11:55am

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2025–26 Academic Catalog

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Registrar: Theresa Rodriguez
Email: registrar@carleton.edu
Phone: 507-222-4094
Academic Catalog 2025-26 pages maintained by Maria Reverman
This page was last updated on 10 September 2025
Carleton

One North College StNorthfield, MN 55057USA

507-222-4000

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