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Humanities/Social Science Credit (University) Options
zmike
Posted: Wednesday, June 25, 2008 3:10:37 PM
Rank: Senior Student
Groups: Member

Joined: 3/4/2008
Posts: 130
Location: Canada
What was your favorite humanities/Social Science Credit (University)? or which was the easiest course you've taken?

I need some suggestions choosing a one full-credit at the university level in Humanities/Social Science. Something that I can get a really high mark in and/or is interesting or useful but NOT too time consuming (relative to bio class, chem, etc).

thanks

U of T life sci


Wordsworth
Stringer
Posted: Wednesday, June 25, 2008 3:20:02 PM

Rank: Student Body President
Groups: Member

Joined: 3/5/2008
Posts: 1,711
Location: Wilfrid Laurier University
Sociology.

-Stringer
CRAZYBUBBA
Posted: Wednesday, June 25, 2008 4:41:23 PM

Rank: Student Council
Groups: Member

Joined: 5/22/2008
Posts: 414
Location: Kingston, ON
Fave? Rels 353- It's theory and method of religious studies... basically what all the psychologists/anthropologists of religion have done before us.

Easiest: Phys 020- "Physics in a nuclear age." Watch movies and write papers about why nukes are bad.

BAH '08 (Queen's) MA'11 (Queen's)
dansflObtch
Posted: Wednesday, June 25, 2008 4:56:50 PM

Rank: Senior Student
Groups: Member

Joined: 6/14/2008
Posts: 80
Location: East York/Toronto
Well i got got exempted from one but my school does not offer any kind of art.... whatsoever....

and guess what!

there's art and painting class as a humanities credit!

SCORE! I'm taking it!

I took art all the way through High School and I dropped out of my first year of Graphic Design in College back in 1999-2000 as well.

I'm pretty sure I can at least PASS the course smile

It sure beats doing any REAL work............ it's the only art credit offered at the entire campus!

MY SECOND CHOICE: (i wanted to take it but it was full)

Prisoners, Penitents and Postulants: The Inmates' Experience of Institutional Environments

The course describes and examines the conditions of being an inmate, from the inmate viewpoint, with respect to settings such as prisons, asylums, schools, communes through the use of a variety of sources: scholarly texts, novels, memoirs, documentary and commercial films


Glendon/York Universty - Specialization in Psychology
Child and Youth Worker Graduate


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