INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES

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Environmental Studies | Gender Studies | International & Area Studies
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Medieval & Renaissance Studies | Public Policy | Theater | Urban Studies |

ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES

Faculty are drawn from throughout the College.  The Environmental Studies Area of Concentration is coordinated by the Environmental Studies Steering Committee, Margaret Lowman, Professor of Biology and Environmental Studies and Director of Environmental Initiatives, and Director of Environmental Studies, Jonathan Miller.

An interdisciplinary program, Environmental Studies draws students from varied backgrounds. Ideally students bring skills from several disciplines to bear on questions regarding the relationship between people and the environment. The program is built around five key concepts: scale, systems, place, values, and change. Environmental problems (and solutions) occur at different scales from local to global. Ecological systems, political systems, and social systems interact in complicated ways. Sense of place, place attachment and values are key factors that must be incorporated in successful solutions to environmental problems. Understanding change, and effecting change, are key skills for anyone working in the environmental field.

There has always been a risk in liberal arts education that knowledge will become detached from practice, that students will become intellectual jugglers of arcana, unable to affect the world. Recently undergraduate education has been criticized for disconnecting academic ideas and scholarship from social and environmental settings. The Environmental Studies Program seeks to "ground" students in two ways - first, by emphasizing demonstrated competence in real-world skills and second, by attempting to connect students with a landscape or community.

The Environmental Studies Program emphasizes demonstrated competence in these areas: understanding of ecological theory; skill in descriptive observation; skill in quantitative measurement and statistical analysis; computer literacy and comfort with several types of software; communication skill in both writing and public speaking; service to the community; and local sense of place.

Environmental Studies students are drawn out of the classroom to consider complex issues that require multi-track thinking - analysis from the natural sciences and solutions from the social sciences and humanities. Students are encouraged to find a site or a community, distant or close at hand, that they will seek to understand, communicate about, and possibly improve. Naturally enough, many students find research topics or sites in southwest Florida, a provocative mix of burgeoning sprawl and shrinking natural areas. In addition, the campus itself has become an object of recent study, as the focus of several classes and tutorials. For example, one recent student project turned expanse of lawn into educational gardens.

The most successful students are able to align their personal academic interests with the needs of some community, asking and answering questions that have real application. While most choose the Environmental Studies Area of Concentration, students can meet requirements in two areas for a double Area of Concentration such as Environmental Studies and psychology. An increasingly popular Area of Concentration is Environmental Science, a special program Area of Concentration negotiated with faculty.

In addition to an emphasis on areas of competence described above, the following are required for an Area of Concentration in Environmental Studies:

  • Introduction to Environmental Studies

  • Environmental Practicum

  • Environmental Studies Senior Research Seminar

  • Ecological literacy: one ecology class and an additional ecology activity, and additional biology activity, and a fourth natural science activity (chemistry, biology, physics or math)

  • A minimum of six activities from the following categories, with at least one activity in each:
     

    1. public policy and government (typically political science and economics)

    2. self and community -sense of place (typically sociology, anthropology, psychology)

    3. humanistic reflection (typically philosophy or religion);

    4. expressive arts (typically literature, arts, music, theater);

    5. research methods (typically ecology, sociology, anthropology, psychology).
       

  • One ISP conducting fieldwork, an internship, or service in Florida.

  • Preparation of a research grant proposal and approval by thesis sponsor and Environmental Studies Steering Committee.

  • Preparation for thesis work that goes beyond the minimum requirements in those disciplines that underpin the thesis.

  • Satisfactory completion of a senior thesis or project related to the environment.

  • Satisfactory completion of a baccalaureate exam with a faculty member of the Environmental Studies Steering Committee serving as a member of the committee.

  • Representative senior theses:

    • Garbage and Government: Recycle Now, Sarasota County, and the Politicalization of Urban Waste

    • Managing Fisheries: a Case Study of Conceptual Frameworks for Policy Design

    • Sea Level Rise in Southwest Florida: An Economic Benefit-Cost Analysis of Policy Alternatives

    • Herbicide Resistant Crops: Can Genetic Engineering Contribute to Sustainable Agriculture?

    • Longleaf Pine:Florida's Sunflower Forest

    • An Ecological Assessment of the Caples Stormwater Detention Pond

    • Spiraling Toward Sustainability: Permaculture Design at New College


    GENDER STUDIES 

    Faculty:  Kim Anderson (Art), Anthony P. Andrews, (Anthropology), Uzi Baram (Anthropology), Maribeth Clark (Music), Glenn R. Cuomo (German Language and Literature), Andrea Dimino (English), Aron Z. Edidin (Philosophy), Keith  A. Fitzgerald (Political  Science), April N. Flakne (Philosophy), Sandra L. Gilchrist (Biology), David A. Harvey (History), Cris Hassold (Art History), Sarah Hernandez (Sociology), Barbara Hicks (Political Science), Sonia Labrador-Rodríguez (Spanish Language and Literature),  Margaret Lowman (Biology and Environmental Studies), Susan Marks (Religion), Nova Myhill (English), Eirini Poimenidou (Mathematics), Amy B. Reid (French Language and Literature), David S. Rohrbacher (Classics), Kimberly Ryan (Psychology), Mariana Sendova (Physics), Suzanne E. Sherman (Chemistry) Frederick R. Strobel  (Economics), Wendy Sutherland (German Language and Literature), Jocelyn C. Van Tuyl  (French Language and Literature), Miriam L. Wallace (English), Katherine M. Walstrom (Biochemistry).

    "One is not born a woman, but rather becomes one." – Simone de Beauvoir

    Gender Studies is a dynamic interdisciplinary field of academic study and research. Drawing on continuing scholarly developments in the Natural and Social Sciences and in the Humanities, Gender Studies invites us to consider and to question the assumptions and values that shape our individual self-image and our interactions with others in society. Some students approach Gender Studies from the angle of Environmental Studies, others with the cross-cultural concerns of anthropology, or with an interest in how gender inflects the field of ethics; what joins them in conversation is a will to examine how human understandings of gender and sexual identity have changed over time and how they continue to shape our experience of the world. Broadly defined at New College, Gender Studies encompasses work that could also be called women’s studies, masculinity studies, lesbian and gay studies, queer studies, or feminist studies; it also intersects with the issues raised in the various fields of ethnic studies.

    Here at New College, students combine their work in Gender Studies with work in another established discipline, completing what we call a "joint disciplinary" Area of Concentration. Students thus enhance their interdisciplinary work in Gender Studies with a solid grounding in a complementary discipline (such as biology, literature, or sociology). In addition to the requirements listed below, students are encouraged to take foundational courses in several different disciplines, so that they can build on that grounding as they develop their own Gender Studies curriculum in consultation with their sponsors. Much Gender Studies course work takes the form of group Tutorials or Independent Research Projects. Internships and activist and service-learning opportunities are strongly encouraged. Students interested in considering a Gender Studies Area of Concentration should download the “Gender Studies Worksheet” early in their academic career and use it to track their progress toward fulfilling the requirements in consultation with an affiliated faculty member.  http://www.ncf.edu/academics/gender/pdf/worksheet.pdf 

    The Joint-Disciplinary AOC in Gender Studies complies with the New College Academic Learning Compact, which ensures that graduates have demonstrated the requisite oral and written communication skills, appropriate content knowledge, and creative and critical thinking skills for the Bachelor of Arts degree. These skills are assessed in each academic and service-learning component. The senior thesis project and the baccalaureate examination are the final capstone requirement, demonstrating the student’s achievement of the required skills and abilities for the Gender Studies portion of the AOC.

    Course of study: 

    To fulfill the following requirements, students may combine gender-oriented courses offered in established disciplines with Tutorials, Independent Research Projects, and Independent Study Projects. In addition to selecting courses from among those cross-listed under Gender Studies in the Course Schedule, students may also arrange with faculty at the start of term to focus on gender issues in the papers and assignments for other appropriate courses, which may then count towards a Gender Studies concentration.

    Students are strongly encouraged to seek out appropriate internships, activist projects, or service-learning opportunities during the semester, the January Independent Study Period, or the summer. Faculty and Career Services can help students find local or national placements. Students may also want to consider participating in one of the intensive off-campus semesters offered by various universities around the country, which combine Gender Studies-related internships with research opportunities in cities such as Washington, D.C. or Atlanta. We encourage students to pursue Gender Studies in an international context by studying a foreign language and/or by undertaking a semester of study abroad.

    In what follows, a "course" is defined as an activity or pair of activities equivalent to a full term of work (i.e., a semester-long course or Tutorial, IRP, or an ISP). Students need to complete at least:

    • two courses each in the Humanities and in the Social Sciences with papers or projects focused on gender;

    • one course in the Natural Sciences with papers or projects focused on gender;

    • a course or tutorial on gender or feminist theory;

    • a senior project/thesis that raises gender-related issues but which may be sponsored by any member of the faculty (not only those listed above). The senior thesis will usually have a strong Gender Studies focus, and is often inter or cross-disciplinary in nature.

    • At least one of the projects must be cross-cultural or deal with gender as it intersects with race, ethnicity, and/or social class.

    It is recommended that students complete:

    • One broadly interdisciplinary project. Although a specifically interdisciplinary course may not be offered regularly, an interdisciplinary undertaking could productively combine coursework in one field with course, tutorial, or Independent Study work on a related topic in another disciplinary field. For instance, coursework in Psychology on parenting practices and attitudes could be effectively combined with a tutorial in Philosophy on embodiment and maternity, OR in Literature on representations of motherhood and alternative families, OR in Biology on women’s health issues.

    • A Methods course is highly recommended for serious students of Gender Studies, ideally surveying both qualitative and quantitative methods. Regularly offered courses in the Social and Natural Sciences in methods may, at the discretion of the instructor, fulfill this recommendation.

    When undertaking courses or projects not cross-listed under Gender Studies, students should be sure to ask faculty to indicate on their term evaluation that their work fulfills Gender Studies requirements. They may then list the course on their Gender Studies Worksheet.

    Recent course offerings have included:

    • In Humanities: Music, Gender and Culture; An-Other Story: the Art of Women through the Ages; Anglo-American Feminist Theory: Problems in Conceiving  Women, Feminist Ethics, Women and Religion

    • In the Natural Sciences: Women and Science; Gender Development in Science Fiction; Current Issues in Genetics, Role of Women in Natural History.

    • In Social Sciences: Social Movements; The Colonial Encounter; Race and Ethnicity in Global Perspective.

    • Interdivisional: Women in the United States of America: Our Voices and Experiences, Gender Studies Across the Disciplines: Tutorial; Challenges for African Women: Tutorial

    Sample senior thesis titles:

    • Gender Bias in Physiological Stress Research (Biology/Gender Studies)

    • Inanimate Abjections: Configuring Identity in the Work of Hans Bellmer, Cindy Sherman, and Mike Kelley (Art History/Gender Studies)

    • The Healing Power of Narrative: The 1937 Haitian Massacre and Two Literary Representations (Literature/Gender Studies)

    • Gazing the Streets: A Visual Arts Installation Project (Visual Arts/Gender Studies)

    • Jewish Women’s Lives in the Interwar Polish Shtetl (Special Area of Concentration)

    • Existence in the Inquiry: The Dynamism of Feminist Existentialism(Religion/Gender Studies)

    • Strange Fruits: An Academic Journal on Issues of Gender and Race (Special Area of Concentration)

    • Queening/Queering: Gender in Edmund Spenser’s The Faerie Queene and the Practice of Queer Criticism (Literature/Gender Studies)

    • Dancing with Desire: Theorizing the Possibility of Feminist Dance (Sociology/Gender Studies)

    • You Don’t Have to Be Straight to Shoot Straight: Military Formations and the Impossibility of Masculinity (Special Area of Concentration) 


    INTERNATIONAL AND AREA STUDIES

    In response to the unique challenges of global interdependence, the International and Area Studies (IAS) concentration is designed to meet the need for a new generation trained to enter the international arena with a more comprehensive view of the international system and an in-depth understanding of a major region or issue in world affairs.  The IAS area of concentration offers three tracks to meet a range of student interests and still provide solid training for future study or work in the area.  The “area studies” track combines fundamental courses on the international political and economic systems with the student’s choice of specialization in a regional area; the “systemic track” focuses on a deeper understanding of the international political and economic systems; and the “issue” track is designed for students with a specific interest in a major international issue that affects more than one region, e.g. global health issues or peace and conflict.  In addition to these three tracks in the IAS AOC, we offer separate AOCs in Latin American Studies and in European Studies.  These two AOCs are designed for students with intensive interests in one of these regions and less of a focus on the international system.  Students are free to concentrate in other regional areas either under the IAS area studies track or as an individually designed major.  International and Area Studies, Latin American Studies, and European Studies are also very appropriate “slashes” for students combining them with disciplinary AOCs, so we offer a reduced set of requirements for those options.

    The requirements listed below are the minimum expected; students are encouraged to take more classes and do ISPs and tutorials in areas that interest them.  In exceptional cases, students may petition the International Studies Committee to substitute a different course for a requirement.  (For example, a biology student doing fieldwork in Latin America might count that experience toward the study abroad requirement or toward his or her “area course” requirements.)  The student’s baccalaureate committee would also have to approve the substitution. 

    NOTE:  Students who declare an AOC in International and Area Studies by Spring 2007 or who entered New College by Fall 2005 may choose whether they prefer to go by the old set of requirements or one of these new sets.

    Requirements for a single AREA OF CONCENTRATION or double major

    International and Area Studies

    Faculty Frank Alcock (Political Science), Uzi Baram (Anthropology), Carrie Beneš (History), Glenn Cuomo (German Language and Literature), Kathryn Dungy (History), David Harvey (History), Sarah Hernandez (Sociology), Barbara Hicks (Political Science), Sonia Labrador-Rodriguez (Spanish Language and Literature), John Newman (Religion), José Alberto Portugal (Spanish Language and Literature), Amy B. Reid (French Language and Literature), Fred Strobel (Economics), Wendy Sutherland (German Language and Literature), Jocelyn van Tuyl (French Language and Literature)

    Note
    :
    Students doing the area studies track in Europe or Latin America may also have faculty from those AOCs as committee members, even if they are not listed under the general IAS heading.

    Area Studies Track
    Completion of the 5th-semester course (or equivalent) of a language appropriate to your area of specialization

    Intro to World Politics

    1 Comparative Politics course
    Intro to Economic Analysis or Intro Macroeconomics
    International Economics or Development Economics

    At least 4 courses in your regional area of specialization, including the following:

    1 non-language Humanities course
    1 History course
    1 non-History Social Science course
    1 elective in any area

    Systemic Track
    Completion of the 4th-semester course (or equivalent) of a foreign language

    Intro to World Politics
    1 Comparative Politics course
    Race and Ethnicity in Global Perspective
    At least 3 of the following economics courses:
         Intro to Economic Analysis
         Intro Macroeconomics
         International Economics
         Development Economics

    2 Modern History courses

    1 Environmental Politics course covering international or cross-border issues

    If possible, an ecology or science course dealing with a major global ecosystem (climate, oceans)

    Issue Track
    Completion of the 4th-semester course (or equivalent) of a foreign language

    Intro to World Politics

    1 Comparative Politics course
    Intro to Economic Analysis or Intro Macroeconomics
    International Economics or Development Economics

    At least 4 courses in your issue of specialization, e.g. global health.  The following activities may count for this course requirement:
         Courses taught here (usually on an occasional basis)
         Courses taken at other institutions, if they meet NCF standards
         Courses taken abroad, if they meet NCF standards
         Up to 2 tutorials

    European Studies 

    Faculty:  Carrie Beneš (History), Glenn Cuomo (German Language and Literature), April Flakne (Philosophy), David Harvey (History), Barbara Hicks (Political Science)Amy Reid (French Language and Literature), David Schatz (Russian Language and Literature), Fred Strobel (Economics), Wendy Sutherland (German Language and Literature), Jocelyn van Tuyl (French Language and Literature), Miriam Wallace (English)

    Completion of a 6th semester course (or equivalent) of a major European language (culture/literature in the original).
    1 other European literature, art, music, culture, or philosophy course
    the 2-course core history sequence on Modern Europe
    1 Medieval or Renaissance course on Europe
    1 Politics course that addresses Europe

    1 Economics course that addresses Europe (Leading World Economies,
         international economics, or intermediate macro – these courses require an intro
         level econ course) 

    2 electives in any field covering Europe

    Latin American Studies

    Faculty:  Anthony Andrews (Anthropology), Al Beulig (Biology), Kathryn Dungy (History), Sandra Gilchrist (Biology), Sarah Hernandez (Sociology), Sonia Labrador-Rodriguez (Spanish Language and Literature), José Alberto Portugal (Spanish Language and Literature), Jesus Ramos-Kitrell (Music), Amy Reid (French Language and Literature), Fred Strobel (Economics)

    Completion of a 6th semester course (or equivalent) of Spanish (culture/literature in the original).  Students must complete an advanced course or tutorial in Spanish during their senior year at NC.
         *Students working primarily in a country using a language other than Spanish
         may substitute 2 semesters of that language (e.g. Portuguese or French) for the
         5th and 6th semesters of Spanish, although they are encouraged to attain
         advanced-level Spanish as well.

    1 other Latin American literature, art, music, or culture course
    the 2-course core History sequence on Latin America
    1 Politics course that addresses Latin America or developing countries

    1 Economics course that addresses developing countries or international
         economics (these courses require an intro level econ course)
    3 electives in any field covering Latin America or focusing on the issues of developing countries

    African Studies, Asian Studies, Middle Eastern Studies

    We do not currently offer enough courses in these areas to allow us to devise structured AOCs.  Students wanting to complete an AOC in one of these areas are encouraged either to complete the International and Area Studies area track with a concentration in their regional area of choice or to design their own special combined majors with strong training in another discipline. They should consult with both their advisors and other International and Area Studies faculty in designing such special majors.

    For All Students in the AOCs Listed Above

    Every student should study abroad for a semester or summer.  (A full semester is preferable.)  In unusual circumstances, another significant multicultural experience may be substituted for this requirement upon approval of the International Studies Committee and the student’s own baccalaureate committee.  Language courses taken abroad may be counted to your requirements if they lead to at least as much progress as we would expect in a semester here.  You are also likely to be taking a few area courses, which can count toward your area course requirements if they are substantial.  (Please bring home your syllabi and copies of your work for your committee to review.)  

    Students completing a double major should not count more than two classes toward both majors.
    The thesis or thesis project must be on an international or area studies topic.

    At least two members of the affiliated faculty for your program must be on your baccalaureate committee.

    Requirements for a combined AREA OF CONCENTRATION (“slash”)

    International and Area Studies

    Area Studies Track
    Completion of 3rd-semester course (or equivalent) of a foreign language  

    Intro to World Politics or Comparative Politics course

    Intro to Economic Analysis or Intro Macroeconomics

    International Economics or Development Economics

    3 courses in your regional area of specialization, including at least one History course. 

    *Students combining IAS with an AOC in Political Science, Economics, or History will have already met some of the requirements above and should take additional courses outside of their AOC as substitutes.
     

    Systemic Track

    Intro to World Politics

    1 Comparative Politics course

    Intro to Economic Analysis or Intro Macroeconomics

    International Economics or Development Economics

    2 Modern History courses

    *Students combining IAS with an AOC in Political Science, Economics, or History will have already met some of the requirements above and should take additional courses outside of their AOC as substitutes.


    Issue Track

    Intro to World Politics

    1 Comparative Politics course

    Intro to Economic Analysis or Intro Macroeconomics

    International Economics or Development Economics

    3 courses in your issue of specialization. 

    *Students combining IAS with an AOC in Political Science or Economics will have already met some of the requirements above and should take additional courses outside of their AOC as substitutes.

    European Studies

    If the disciplinary concentration you are combining is not in a European language and literature
         Completion of the 3rd-semester course or equivalent of a major European
               language

         1 European Humanities elective outside of language
         the 2-course core history sequence on Modern Europe

               (History AOC’s should replace this requirement with 2 other electives, 1 of
               which is in Social Sciences)
         2 Social Science electives (outside of the other AOC you are combining) that
               address Europe or developed countries
    If the disciplinary concentration you are combining is in a European language and literature

         1 European Humanities elective outside of your AOC
         the 2-course core history sequence on Modern Europe

         3 Social Science electives that address Europe or developed countries (2 of
               them must be outside History)

    Latin American Studies

    If the disciplinary concentration you are combining is not Spanish Language and Literature
         Completion of the 3rd-semester course (or equivalent) of Spanish language
         1 Latin American Humanities elective outside of language
         the 2-course core History sequence on Latin America

                (History AOC’s should replace this requirement with 2 other electives, 1 of
                which is in Social Sciences)
         2 Social Science electives (outside of the other AOC you are combining) that
                cover Latin America or developing countries

    If the disciplinary concentration you are combining is in Spanish Language and Literature
         1 Latin American Humanities elective outside of your AOC
         the 2-course core history sequence on Latin America

         3 Social Science electives that address Latin America or developing countries (2
                of them must be outside History)

    For All Students in the Combined AOC’s Listed Above

    Study abroad is highly recommended.  Language courses taken abroad may be counted to your requirements if they lead to at least as much progress as we would expect in a semester here.  You are also likely to be taking a few area courses, which can count toward your area course requirements if they are substantial.  (Please bring home your syllabi and copies of your work for your committee to review.)  

    The thesis or thesis project should have some international or area studies content.

    You must have at least one faculty member affiliated with your program on your baccalaureate committee.


    MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE STUDIES

    Faculty:  Carrie Beneš (History); Magdalena E. Carrasco (Art History), Douglas C. Langston (Philosophy/Religion), Nova Myhill (English), David S. Rohrbacher (Classics); Jing Zhang (Chinese Language and Culture)

    This interdisciplinary program is focused on the critical period in Western history between the end of antiquity and the birth of modernity. The medieval and renaissance period is a period of vast and exciting transformations which saw the creation of many of the institutions and habits upon which our world and worldview rest. Study of the period will provide students with the valuable perspective on the contemporary scene which can only be acquired at a considerable distance.

    In many cases, students will be best served by pursuing medieval and Renaissance interests in concentrations such as Literature or History. An interdisciplinary approach, however, recognizes that the modern division into academic disciplines does not adequately reflect European culture during the period, when theology might be argued in verse, or in painting, and when history, literature, and religion were inextricably entwined.

    An Area of Concentration in Medieval and Renaissance Studies normally includes the following:

    Acceptance: Students may apply to one of the above faculty members to discuss requirements and evaluate previous work dealing with the period. Applications should be made in the second year but no later than the beginning of the third year. Acceptance is based on the student's demonstrated aptitude for the field.

    Program: Students are encouraged to seek both a broad historical and cultural knowledge of the period as a whole and knowledge in depth of some important segments of it, by taking appropriate courses and tutorials. To ensure breadth, students must take at least one Medieval/Renaissance class in each of the following areas: (1) art history/music, (2) history, (3) literature, (4) philosophy/religion. At least three classes or tutorials should be in one of the four areas, to provide the student with a disciplinary “base.” Students should also take at least two courses in related fields such as classical antiquity, early Judaism and Christianity, Byzantium, classical Islam, or the 17th Century. Students must take three semesters of a foreign language. Normally, this will be Latin, but for some programs, at the sponsor’s discretion, another language might be substituted. Finally, a senior thesis in some area of Medieval and Renaissance Studies is required.

    Representative senior theses:

    • Love and War in Medieval Spain

    • The Political Evolution of Renaissance Italy

    • The Thomistic Idea of Law

    • The Political Thought of Ibn Khaldun

    • A Study of Catharism


    PUBLIC POLICY
    (See also POLITICAL SCIENCE)

    Faculty:  Richard D. Coe (Economics), Catherine S. Elliott (Economics), Keith A. Fitzgerald (Political Science), Frederick R. Strobel (Economics)

    This Area of Concentration is of growing interest to students, since it offers insight into the decision-making process within government and business. The core of the program is economics and political science. The goal is to prepare a student to analyze technical reports, to understand the behavior of decision makers, and to appreciate the complexity of social issues. Many students have found the study of Public Policy a good preparation for law, business, government service, and other vocations that involve the large institutional structures of our society.

    Typically, a student begins the program with introductory work in American government and in both macroeconomics and microeconomics. From there, most participants pursue political theory, bureaucracy, executive or legislative decision-making, and public finance. In addition, course work in the sociology of formal organizations, social ethics, statistics, mass media, modern history, and social psychology is suggested to support the emphasis on politics and economics.

    Even before the introductory classes are complete, students may select issue areas on which to focus their research. In the past, the issues selected have included local energy policy, coastal zone management, neighborhood governance, racial discrimination, arts policy, condominium development, bicycle pathways, utility pricing, the governance of small towns, legislative reform, legislative staffing, educational policy-making, and bureaucratic leadership. Internship opportunities expose students to the way decisions concerning these policies are made.

    Public Policy students write senior theses that bring to bear their analytic skills on the policy issue of their choice. Often such reports are shared with policy makers, and they have proven to be useful in admission to graduate and professional schools. However, the purpose of the senior thesis in Public Policy, as well as the program as a whole, is not to train students to be experts in particular issue areas or methodologies. Rather, Public Policy majors gain wide exposure to a variety of ideas, values, and methods that may prove useful in their later lives. The direction of debate and discussion is more open than professional training allows. Public Policy here is not a technique, but another avenue to the liberal arts.


    THEATER

    Faculty:  Maribeth Clark (Music), Glenn R. Cuomo (German Language and Literature), Aron Z. Edidin (Philosophy), Stephen T. Miles (Music), Nova Myhill (British and American Literature), Amy B. Reid (French Language and Literature), Jocelyn C. Van Tuyl (French Language and Literature), Maria D. Vesperi (Anthropology)

    Currently it is not possible to graduate from New College with an Area of Concentration entirely in theater; the College has neither the faculty nor the facilities to support such a concentration. However, due in part to the College's collaborative relationship with the Florida State University/Asolo Conservatory of Actor Training, a highly selective graduate acting school located adjacent to the College campus in Sarasota, it is possible to include theater as a component within a "joint disciplinary" Area of Concentration: (e.g.. Literature/Theater, Visual Arts/Theater, Anthropology/Theater, Psychology/Theater.)

    A component in theater should be undertaken by students as part of their undergraduate liberal arts education. Theater of course lends itself to this context, having many conceptual and historical relations to other liberal arts disciplines. Although over the years a few New College students have gone on to graduate study or professional employment in theater, it should be understood that theater study at the College is not preprofessional training; and students should be aware that making a career in theater remains extremely difficult.

    Students planning to declare an Area of Concentration combining theater with another discipline should first consult with one of the faculty members listed above, and also with a faculty member in the other discipline, about requirements for such combinations. A Provisional Area of Concentration form filled out in consultation with faculty from both disciplines, indicating any further work needed to complete the Area of Concentration for graduation, must be submitted no later than the semester of the student's fifth contract. The signature of one of the faculty members listed above must appear on the completed Provisional Area of Concentration form.

    Note: the procedure above applies to combinations of theater with another discipline (e.g., literature, anthropology). Combining theater with a component of study covering an entire division, such as “Social Sciences/Theater," requires a different procedure - see the rules for "Special Programs" in the New College Faculty Handbook.

    Requirements for the theater component:

    By graduation, students need to have taken the equivalent of 8-10 courses in theater, or about half the total courses for their entire, joint-disciplinary Area of Concentration.

    1. Practical Study

    a.   REQUIRED Undertakings:

    • Introduction to Acting (Module course or group ISP, taught by FSU/Asolo faculty

    • Advanced Acting (Module course or group ISP, taught by FSU/Asolo faculty.)

    • Stagecraft Internship at the Asolo Conservatory (See a New College faculty member listed above to make arrangements; should be entered and evaluated as a
      semester or module Independent Reading Project on one of the student's New College contracts.)

                b.  Production Involvement:

    • Normally after completing at least one of the required Asolo courses, students begin to take part in play production tutorials that have academic sponsorship from one of the faculty members listed above. The student's work in play productions should include not just acting, but also "behind the scenes" work (as stage manager, director, or in some other capacity).

    1. Literary, Historical, and Theoretical Study

    Students need to take New College courses or tutorials involving study of the following kinds: literary analysis of dramatic texts; study of theater's historical development and social context; study of diverse theoretical approaches to theater. A student may be able to study more than one of these kinds within a single course: for instance, a course on Spanish Drama of the Golden Age may involve both analysis of play texts and study of performance practices of the period; a course on Brecht may involve analysis of his play texts and of his theoretical ideas. But the student must have done all three kinds of study by graduation. Interdisciplinary courses would be very appropriate here; thus, courses on Anthropology and Performance or on Aesthetics (Philosophy) of Performance would meet the requirement for theoretical work. A course or tutorial on playwriting might help meet the requirements for literary study, but should not be the only work in literary study the student undertakes.

    1. . The senior project may or may not involve theater.


    URBAN STUDIES

    Faculty:  Anthony P. Andrews (Anthropology), David Brain (Sociology),  Malena E. Carrasco (Art History),  Maria D. Vesperi (Anthropology)

    The various academic disciplines define the city in differing ways, but they agree on one thing: the city is a revolutionary human achievement. At New College, the flexibility of the academic contract encourages students to use tools provided by several disciplines to understand cities and the role they play in the development and functioning of civilization.

    The New College curriculum does not include a core of regular course offerings on Urban Studies. While courses on urbanism are occasionally offered in some disciplines, majors in this area may pursue their interests through tutorials with the above-listed faculty.

    Students become interested in Urban Studies through introductions in any number of fields – anthropology, economics, history, art and architecture – or through their participation in urban projects in Sarasota and other cities. Faculty offer a variety of perspectives on urbanism, including the study of prehistoric and preindustrial cities, the history of urban architecture, urban sociology, contemporary urban cultures and ethnic groups in the United States, and urban politics. Students may also take advantage of internship opportunities in Sarasota – one of the nation's fastest-growing cities – and opportunities for off-campus study in the U.S. and abroad to develop their own senior thesis topics. Throughout students' preparation, this combination of a multi-disciplinary perspective and active involvement in urban affairs characterizes the Urban Studies concentration.

    Students learn about cities throughout the world, as well as about a range of problems and solutions that shape modern cities. Whether planning recreational space for the Florida coast or dealing with the problems of the homeless in Sarasota, or examining the historic urbanization of Europe or Latin America, Urban Studies students learn from and contribute to the city as a vital part of modern human life.

    Representative senior theses in Urban Studies:

    • The Homeless in Sarasota
    • Housing: Policy and Practice
    • Historic Preservation in Sarasota
    • The City and Settlement
       

     

     
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