El Centro College  Fall 2015 Credit - Honors and Honors Option

Honors and Honors Option courses challenge talented students with expanded opportunities for intellectual and personal growth. Honors courses contain only honors students; classes are usually small and discussion-oriented. In Honors Option courses, both honors and nonhonors students attend the same class sections. Honors students in these classes work independently with the instructor on honors projects.

When you are awarded honors credit in a class, that class is annotated on your academic transcript.

 

See Honors and Honors Option Classes for All Colleges

Night classes listed in shaded color
Controlled enrollment classes listed in shaded color
Course-Num-Sect(Reg#)
Title
Class Meeting
Information
Faculty Loc
Credits
Start/End
Date
Co-req
Sections
Class
Features
ACCT-2301  Prin of Financial AccountingEl Centro College [ECC]
ACCT-2301-51422 (973091)
Prin of Financial Accounting
INET   INET  
M T W R F S U    
Burnett, Patricia  Vita
ECC
3
8/31/15
12/17/15
  eCampus
Internet Based
Honors Option
 
 Section 51422 on-line (HONORS OPTION AVAILABLE). Please contact the instructor for more information. This course requires access to the Internet, e-mail, Microsoft Word and Excel. Students without a home computer have access to El Centro's College Accounting Lab (A441). Exams must be taken at an approved proctored testing site per district policy. Email pburnettt@dcccd.edu by the first class day for orientation information.
BUSI-1301  Business PrinciplesEl Centro College [ECC]
BUSI-1301-51421 (973145)
Business Principles
INET   INET  
M T W R F S U    
Schmidt, Ronald  Vita
ECC
3
8/31/15
12/17/15
  eCampus
Internet Based
Honors Option
 
 Section 51421 on-line (HONORS OPTION AVAILABLE). Please contact the instructor for more information. This course requires access to the Internet, e-mail, Microsoft Word and Excel. Students without a home computer have access to El Centro's College Accounting Lab (A441). Email rschmidt@dcccd.edu by the first class day for orientation information.
HIST-2312  Western Civilization IIEl Centro College [ECC]
HIST-2312-51771 (982739)
Western Civilization II
A541   LEC  
T R   2:30 PM   3:50 PM
Milwicki, Alon  Vita
ECC
3
8/31/15
12/17/15
PSYC-2319-51771
 
Honors Option
 
 PSYC 2319/51771: History and Social Psychology of the Holocaust This is a six-core-credit hours Learning Community consisting of PSYC 2301/51771 (Social Psychology) and HIST 2312/51771 (Western Civilization II). STUDENTS MUST REGISTER FOR BOTH COURSES - HIST 2312/51771 and PSYC 2319/51771. This course will rely on primary sources, to include (1) Neighbors: The Destruction of the Jewish Community in Jedwabne, Poland (Gross, J. T., 2002) and (2)selected additional readings provided by instructors. Topics that will be covered include the situational and environmental conditions in pre-World War II Germany that allowed individuals as well as the government to initiate persecution of so-called "inferior races," rise of the German propaganda machine, the Bystander effect, human response to occupation and totalitarianism, the German campaign of Anti-Semitism, and the "brutalization of interpersonal relations."
PSYC-2319  Social PsychologyEl Centro College [ECC]
PSYC-2319-51771 (982741)
Social Psychology
A541   LEC  
T R   1:00 PM   2:00 PM
Weston, Melissa  Vita
ECC
3
8/31/15
12/17/15
HIST-2312-51771
 
eCampus
Honors Option
 
 PSYC 2319/51771: History and Social Psychology of the Holocaust This is a six-core-credit hours Learning Community consisting of PSYC 2301/51771 (Social Psychology) and HIST 2312/51771 (Western Civilization II). STUDENTS MUST REGISTER FOR BOTH COURSES - HIST 2312/51771 and PSYC 2319/51771. This course will rely on primary sources, to include (1) Neighbors: The Destruction of the Jewish Community in Jedwabne, Poland (Gross, J. T., 2002) and (2)selected additional readings provided by instructors. Topics that will be covered include the situational and environmental conditions in pre-World War II Germany that allowed individuals as well as the government to initiate persecution of so-called "inferior races," rise of the German propaganda machine, the Bystander effect, human response to occupation and totalitarianism, the German campaign of Anti-Semitism, and the "brutalization of interpersonal relations."
 
 
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