SUMMER 2024 COURSES Courses are offered in multiple modalities, such as in-person, online, and hybrid, and multiple formats, such as full-term courses and short-term courses. For the most current class information, scan the QR code for the searchable online class schedule at www.chabotcollege.edu/courses ACCOUNTING* (See course listing under Business) ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE See page 53 for more information about the Administration of Justice department. ADMJ 50 INTRODUCTION TO ADMIN OF JUSTICE 3 Units This course covers the history, theory, and philosophy of administration of justice in the United States. Particular emphasis is placed on the principles, operational practices, and structure of the police, courts, and corrections agencies. Students are introduced to the origins and development of criminal law, legal processes, and sentencing and incarceration policies. Students examine the methods of crime measurement, explanations of crime, and the challenges and opportunities for law enforcement in a diverse society. ADMJ 55 INTRODUCTION TO CORRECTIONAL SCIENCE 3 Units This course focuses on the major programs within the corrections component of the criminal justice system. It includes analysis of probation, institutional treatment, parole, and community corrections programs. Development of corrections philosophy, theory, and practice will be presented with emphasis on constitutional rights of offenders. Strongly Recommended: ADMJ 50 ADMJ 60 CRIMINAL LAW 3 Units This course offers an analysis of the doctrine of criminal liability in the United States and classification of crimes against persons, property, morals, and public welfare. Emphasis is placed on the classification of crime, elements of particular crimes, and defenses to crime. This course utilizes case law and case studies to introduce students to criminal law. ADMJ 80 CRIMINAL COURT PROCESS 3 Units This course examines due process and the constitutional, statutory and rule-based issues that arise in the formal processing of a criminal case from pre-arrest through that and appeal. Strongly Recommended: ADMJ 50 , ADMJ 60 ADMJ 89 FAMILY VIOLENCE 3 Units Origins of violence in the family including child abuse from the administration of justice perspective. Specific types of violent interactions and abuse among family members and responsible adults. Emphasis on techniques for use by peace officers and other social service professionals to intervene effectively. ANTHROPOLOGY See page 53 for more information about the Anthropology department. ANTH 1 BIOLOGICAL/PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY 3 Units Humans as a biological species through the examination of human evolutionary biology and genetics, comparative primate anatomy and behavior, and fossil evidence. Strongly Recommended: Eligibility for ENGL 1A or , Eligibility for ENGL 1 ANTH 1L BIOLOGICAL/PHYSICAL ANTHRO LAB 1 Unit Laboratory activities and exercises developed as an adjunct to Anthropology 1. Topics include evolutionary theory, genetics, human diversity, primate comparative anatomy and behavior, and the human fossil record. Prerequisite: ANTH 1 may be taken concurrently Strongly Recommended: Eligibility for ENGL 1A or , Eligibility for ENGL 1 ANTH 3 SOCIAL/CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY 3 Units How human beings in different cultures meet basic biological, social and cultural needs, including kinship and marriage practices, political and social organization, economic institutions, religious and childrearing practices, behavior. Emphasis on understanding other cultures on their own terms. Includes the many subcultures making up North American populations. Strongly Recommended: Eligibility for ENGL 1 or , ENGL 1A ANTH 4 LANGUAGE AND CULTURE 3 Units An introduction to the core concepts of linguistic anthropology and the study of language in culture and society, including how language perpetuates the identity of individuals through their social interactions and their culture in everyday speech events. Topics such as identity, social status, gender, race, and institutional power, are examined in contemporary language use. The course includes traditional study of the methods of linguistic anthropologists as well as the study of biological basis of communication and speech, the structure of language, language origins, language through time, language variation, the ethnography of communication, sociolinguistics, nonverbal communication and writing, and how cultural context sets meaning. Strongly Recommended: Eligibility for ENGL 1A ANTH 5 CULTURES OF THE U.S. IN GLOBAL 3 Units Issues relevant to understanding constructs of race, class, gender and culture in U.S. society from a global perspective. Factors affecting at least three major U.S. cultural communities (such as African American, Asian American, Latino American and others) including impacts of globalization, patterns of migration, permeability of cultural communities in the U.S., the cultural politics of identity and inclusion and exclusion, and other factors influencing modern U.S. society. Strongly Recommended: ENGL 1A or ENGL 1 ANTH 12 MAGIC, RELIGION, WITCHCRAFT AND HEALING 3 Units Cross-cultural perspectives on spirituality, religious practice, myth, ancestor beliefs, witchcraft and the variety of religious rituals and practitioners found in the cultures of the world. Examination of the cosmologies of different cultures through the anthropological perspective. Emphasis is placed on how knowledge of the religious practices and beliefs of others can help us to understand the multicultural world in which we live. Comparison of the ways in which diverse cultures confront the large and fundamental questions of existence: those dealing with the meaning of life, birth and death, and with the relationship of humans to each other and to their universe. Strongly Recommended: Eligibility for ENGL 1A or , ENGL 1 Chabot College • Summer and Fall 2024 Class Schedule 34 510.723.6600 • www.chabotcollege.edu/welcome24
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