2011-12 Pomona College Catalog 
    
    Jun 16, 2024  
2011-12 Pomona College Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG] Use the dropdown above to select the current 2023-24 catalog.

Courses


Check major and minor requirement sections in the Departments, Programs and Areas of Study section to determine if specific courses will satisfy requirements. Inclusion on this list does not imply that the course will necessarily satisfy a requirement.

Click here  to view a Key to Course Listings and Discipline codes.

 

Philosophy

  
  • PHIL 031 PO - Ethical Theory: Ancient to Early Modern


    CrsNo PHIL031 PO


    When Offered: Each fall.

    Instructor(s): P. Thielke; J. Tannenbaum

    Introduction to ethical theory through the major writings of several leading figures in ethical theory from ancient to early modern times. Touches on several figures such as Plato, Aristotle, Hume and Kant, examining the arguments motivating their ethical theories and critiques of these arguments and theories.

  
  • PHIL 032 PO - Ethical Theory: Contemporary


    CrsNo PHIL032 PO


    When Offered: Each spring.

    Instructor(s): J. Tannenbaum

    Introduction to contemporary ethical theory. Focuses on such views as Virtue Theory, Deontology and Consequentialism, their approaches to such issues as the nature of value, the justification of action and the psychology of moral choice, as well as critiques of these approaches.

  
  • PHIL 033 PO - Social and Political Philosophy


    CrsNo PHIL033 PO


    When Offered: Last offered spring 2011.

    Instructor(s): M. Green

    Classical and modern sources on the nature of the state, justice and rights. Addresses questions such as these: Should we have a state at all? What is a just society? What powers does the state have? Must individuals obey the state?

  
  • PHIL 034 PO - Philosophy of Law


    CrsNo PHIL034 PO


    When Offered: Each spring.

    Instructor(s): A. Davis; M. Green

    Concerns the nature and substance of law. Addresses questions such as these: What is law? How should judges interpret the Constitution? When, if ever, is punishment justified? When does one private party commit a tort against another?

  
  • PHIL 035 PO - Normative Ethics: Principles, Problems, Applications


    CrsNo PHIL035 PO


    When Offered: Each spring.

    Instructor(s): J. Tannenbaum; A. Davis

    This course approaches the study of ethics through a focus on principles, problems and applications, rather than (as ethical theory does) through the study of classical ethical theories and the foundations of ethics. The course will focus on different problems in different years.

  
  • PHIL 036 PO - Environmental Ethics


    CrsNo PHIL036 PO


    When Offered: Last offered Spring 2009.

    Concerned with humans’ place in and responsibility for the ‘natural world.’ Topics will include: the moral status of non-human animals and non-animate beings, the environmental consequences of our reliance on industrialized agriculture and biotechnology, the social and psychological factors that stand in the way of our making ‘green’ choices, and the desirability and possibility of our formulating a coherent and compelling ‘global ethic.’

  
  
  • PHIL 037 PO - Values and the Environment


    CrsNo PHIL037 PO


    When Offered: Last offered spring 2010.

    Instructor(s): Staff

    We will discuss various issues in the area of environmental health and environmental public policy and consumption/consumerism.

  
  • PHIL 038 PO - Bioethics


    CrsNo PHIL038 PO


    When Offered: Last offered fall 2010.

    Instructor(s): A. Davis

    Focuses on issues and themes in the conduct of scientific research and the application of its results and about the nature and practice of medicine. One year we may explore the conceptual underpinnings that help us understand and assess the efficacy and morality of medical treatment. Another year, the orientation of the course may be a more policy-centered one.

  
  • PHIL 039 PO - Women, Crime and Punishment


    CrsNo PHIL039 PO


    When Offered: Last offered spring 2008.

    Instructor(s): Staff

    Critical consideration of issues of crime and punishment through lenses of gender, race and class, with attention to, e.g., the criminalization for women’s behaviors; the impact of the growing prison-industrial complex; incarceration and motherhood; the role of violence in women’s incarceration; and alternative sentencing. Opportunities for involvement in projects with incarcerated women and prison activists.

  
  • PHIL 040 PO - Ancient Philosophy


    CrsNo PHIL040 PO


    When Offered: Each fall.

    Instructor(s): R. McKirahan

    Origins of Western philosophy through reading and discussion of its classical sources, including the Presocratics, Stoics, Epicureans, Sceptics, Plato and Aristotle.

  
  • PHIL 042 PO - History of Modern Philosophy


    CrsNo PHIL042 PO


    When Offered: Each spring.

    Instructor(s): P. Thielke

    Major philosophers of the 17th and 18th centuries (e.g., Descartes, Locke, Berkeley, Leibniz, Hume), emphasizing their views on metaphysics, epistemology and philosophy of mind.

  
  • PHIL 043 PO - Continental Thought


    CrsNo PHIL043 PO


    When Offered: Spring 2013.

    Instructor(s): S. Erickson

    Beginning with a review of Kant, German idealism (Fichte through Hegel), Kierkegaard, Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, Heidegger, Foucault and Derrida will be considered.

  
  • PHIL 052 PZ - Philosophy of Religion


    CrsNo PHIL052 PZ


    The philosophy of religion is concerned with philosophical reflection on a broad range of questions concerning religious belief. The nature of religious belief is quite varied across cultures. In Western theism belief in God and a belief in personal immortality are two central religious beliefs. So philosophy of religion in the West is largely concerned with explicating and clarifying the concept of God and life after death, as well as considering the alleged reasons for supposing God exists or that there is life after death. However, in other traditions, belief in reincarnation and karma are central beliefs, and so questions regarding the nature, meaning and justification of the concepts of reincarnation and karma are important for an Eastern philosophy of religion. In this course, we will examine similar philosophical questions from Western and Eastern religious traditions as well as African, Native American and a variety of other world religions.

  
  • PHIL 054 PO - Existentialism


    CrsNo PHIL054 PO


    When Offered: Fall 2011.

    Instructor(s): S. Erickson

    The origins of existentialism and its impact on philosophy, literature, theology and psychoanalysis. Extensive source readings in Kierkegaard, Sartre, Camus and others. Letter grade only.

  
  • PHIL 060 PO - Logic


    CrsNo PHIL060 PO


    When Offered: Each fall or spring.

    Instructor(s): P. Kung; L. Perini

    Introduction to mathematical logic through the development of proof techniques (natural deduction and semantic tableaux) and model theory for sentential logic and quantification theory. Properties of logical systems, such as consistency, completeness and decidability.

  
  • PHIL 070 PO - Aesthetics and the Philosophy of Art.


    CrsNo PHIL070 PO


    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered spring 2012.

    Instructor(s): L. Perini

    This class will focus on issues in contemporary aesthetics and philosophy of art, including the nature of art and its value, the nature of creativity and its role in the production of artwork and the moral significance of art.

  
  • PHIL 071 PO - History of Aesthetics


    CrsNo PHIL071 PO


    When Offered: Last offered fall 2010.

    Instructor(s): P. Thielke

    A survey of various aesthetic theories, from antiquity to the 19th century. Topics will include the nature of beauty, the epistemological status of aesthetic judgments and the connection between art and morality. Readings from Plato, Aristotle, Kant, Schopenhauer and Nietzsche, among others.

  
  • PHIL 080 PO - Philosophy of Mind


    CrsNo PHIL080 PO


    When Offered: Last offered spring 2011.

    Instructor(s): P. Kung

    What can philosophers tell us about the mind? This course explores approaches—including scientific approaches—to explaining what the mind is. Can any of these views account for consciousness? Do they explain how thoughts can be about things? Do they allow that our mental states cause our actions? How can we know when something has a mind?

  
  • PHIL 081 PO - Epistemology: Truth, Justification, Knowledge


    CrsNo PHIL081 PO


    When Offered: Last offered fall 2009.

    Instructor(s): P. Kung

    The facts seem to matter: Does the movie start at 7? Do the brakes on the school bus work? Should we teach evolution, creationism or both? But how do we know what the truth is? What makes some of our beliefs justified and others unjustified? Can we have any objective grasp on the truth?

  
  • PHIL 084 PZ - Islamic Philosophy


    CrsNo PHIL084 PZ


  
  • PHIL 101 HM - History of Philosophy: Ancient Philosophy


    CrsNo PHIL101 HM


    A survey of Western philosophy from antiquity to the present. Representative philosophers are read and their thoughts are discussed in relation to the historical background of each period.

  
  
  • PHIL 102 PO - Science and Values


    CrsNo PHIL102 PO


    When Offered: Spring 2012, alternate years.

    Instructor(s): A. Davis

    Science and Values. Addresses issues at the intersection of science and policy. Focuses on different specific issues in different years, including such things as the “junk science” wars, debates about teaching “Intelligent Design,” pharmaceutical companies’ mark- eting practices and FDA regulations, eugenics, “Frankenfoods,” etc. Letter grade only.

  
  
  • PHIL 103 PO - Philosophy of Science: Historical Survey


    CrsNo PHIL103 PO


    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered fall 2011.

    Instructor(s): L. Perini; B. Keeley

    The development of theories of science will be traced from the Vienna Circle and early 20th-century logical positivism, through the work of Thomas Kuhn ending with more contemporary views, such as feminist philosophy of science. Prerequisite: College-level science or philosophy course.

  
  • PHIL 103 PZ - Philosophy of Science: History


    CrsNo PHIL103 PZ


    See the Pitzer College catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • PHIL 104 PO - Philosophy of Science: Topical Survey


    CrsNo PHIL104 PO


    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered spring 2013.

    Instructor(s): L. Perini; B. Keeley

    Introduction to a selection of topics in the philosophy of science, which might include the structure of scientific theories, the nature of scientific explanation, confirmation of scientific hypotheses, the difference between science and non-science, the reality of theoretical entities and contemporary critiques of science. Prerequisite: College-level science or philosophy course.

  
  • PHIL 106 PO - Philosophy of Biology


    CrsNo PHIL106 PO


    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered spring 2012.

    Instructor(s): L. Perini

    In the life sciences, distinctive methods and concepts play key roles in the production of knowledge. This course investigates biological explanation; examines concepts such as fitness, adaptation, gene and species; and addresses questions about whether biology reduces to physics, and the role of evolutionary and genetic claims in explaining human behavior. Prerequisite: one college-level philosophy or biology course.

  
  • PHIL 120 PO - Metaphysics


    CrsNo PHIL120 PO


    When Offered: Last offered spring 2010.

    Instructor(s): J. Atlas

    An advanced introduction to causality, the existence of God, freedom of the will, the nature of particulars, attributes and events.

  
  • PHIL 121 PO - Philosophy of Language


    CrsNo PHIL121 PO


    An advanced introduction to truth, reference, meaning, speech acts and metaphor. Lectures and discussions.

  
  • PHIL 125 HM - Ethical Issues in Science and Engineering


    CrsNo PHIL125 HM


    See the Harvey Mudd catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • PHIL 140 HM - Enviromental Philosophy


    CrsNo PHIL140 HM


    See the Harvey Mudd catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • PHIL 150 SC - Philosophy of Feminism


    CrsNo PHIL150 SC


    Examines several different theories of feminism, their relation to traditional political theories, and their analyses of the causes and solutions to women’s oppression. The course considers as well specific moral and political issues relevant to feminism: abortion, motherhood, reproductive technologies and pornography.

  
  • PHIL 151 SC - Feminist Ethics


    CrsNo PHIL151 SC


    This course will explore feminist approaches to ethics, including the ethics of care, maternal ethics, lesbian ethics and other feminist ethics, how they contrast with traditional approaches to ethics, and the controversies they have generated. The application of feminist ethics to specific issues of importance to women, such as abortion, reproductive technologies and health care, will also be considered.

  
  • PHIL 155 PZ - Islam vs. Islam


    CrsNo PHIL155 PZ


    In this course we will examine the major theological/ philosophical traditions: the “rationalist” and the “traditionalist,” that emerged in early Islamic history and continues to exist to the present day. In the course of the examination, we will see how these two traditions fundamentally disagree on how to determine the nature of God, the status of the Quran, the significance of the prophetic tradition and the roles of human reason on Muslim society. We will investigate these topics in the writings of thinkers from the classic period to the present-day, such as al-Ash’ari, al-Baqilani, al-Qadi, al-Ghazali, Aricenna, Averroes,, Ibn Taymiyyah ‘Abd al-Wahab, etc.

  
  • PHIL 170 SC - Faith and Reason


    CrsNo PHIL170 SC


    An examination of questions such as: (1) Can God’s existence be proved? (2) Does the existence of evil prove that there can be no God? (3) Is religious faith ever rational? (4) What are the alternative, secular explanations of our universe, and how could we decide which is most probable? We will read from historical and contemporary sources. Y. Avnur.

  
  
  • PHIL 185A PO - Topics in Metaphysics


    CrsNo PHIL185A PO


    When Offered: Last offered spring 2011.

    Instructor(s): J. Atlas

    Conceivability, possibility, necessity and related notions have played a role in philosophy from Anselm’s 11th-century ontological argument to Kurt Goedel’s 20th-century one; from Descartes’s 17th-century argument for mind-body dualism to Saul Kripke’s 20th-century one. Seminar reviews the elements of formal modal logic and assesses the role of modal notions in metaphysical arguments.

  
  • PHIL 185E PO - Self, Language and Imagination


    CrsNo PHIL185E PO


    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered fall 2012.

    Instructor(s): S. Erickson

    Seminar on recent reflections on continental themes generated by such thinkers as Rorty and Taylor. Emphasis on the role of language and imagination in political and existential discourses.

  
  • PHIL 185L PO - Topics in Epistemology, Metaphysics and the Philosophy of the Mind


    CrsNo PHIL185L PO


    When Offered: Each fall or spring.

    Instructor(s): P. Kung

    An examination of various issues in contemporary epistemology, metaphysics and philosophy of mind. Topics may include the nature of consciousness, mental causation, the relationship between the mental and the physical, the nature of epistemic justification and the status of testimony as a source of knowledge. May be repeated for credit.

  
  • PHIL 185M PO - Topics in Mind and Language: Thought, Talk and Mind


    CrsNo PHIL185M PO


    When Offered: Last offered fall 2010.

    Instructor(s): J. Atlas

    What is it for a word/phrase/sentence to be meaningful, what role truth and inference play in understanding language, how language describes our mental states and their contents, what a mental representation is and how it compares with a sentence, the nature of consciousness and the first-person point of view, philosophical consequences for our theory of mind from computer science and neuroscience.

  
  • PHIL 185P PO - Topics in Value Theory


    CrsNo PHIL185P PO


    When Offered: Last offered spring 2011.

    Instructor(s): J. Tannenbaum

    Contemporary treatments of some of the dominant topics in value theory. Egoism, ethical relativism, realism, objectivity, the fact/value distinction and weakness of will. Prerequisite: PHIL 031 PO , PHIL 032 PO  or PHIL 035 PO .

  
  • PHIL 186E PO - Heidegger and the Tradition


    CrsNo PHIL186E PO


    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered spring 2013.

    Instructor(s): S. Erickson

    A selective examination of Heidegger’s understanding of poetry, tradition and truth. Comparisons with Hegel, Nietzsche, Wittgenstein and Derrida.

  
  • PHIL 186H PO - Topics in History of Modern


    CrsNo PHIL186H PO


    When Offered: Last offered fall 2010.

    Instructor(s): P. Thielke

    An examination of issues central to 17th to 19th century philosophy. Topics might include the debate between rationalism and empiricism, the limits of reason, the nature of substance and mind and the nature of human experience. Letter grade only. Prerequisite: PHIL 042 PO .

  
  • PHIL 186K PO - Kant


    CrsNo PHIL186K PO


    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered fall 2011.

    Instructor(s): P. Thielke

    A detailed examination of the works of Immanuel Kant, focusing on issues that arise from Kant’s transcendental idealism. Topics may include Kant’s account of cognition, the nature and limits of human knowledge, the force of the moral law and the warrant of aesthetic judgment. Prerequisite: PHIL 042 PO .

  
  • PHIL 187A PO - Tutorial in Philosophy


    CrsNo PHIL187A PO


    When Offered: Last offered spring 2011.

    Instructor(s): J. Atlas

    Selected topics, determined jointly by the student and the tutor, conducted through frequent student papers evaluated in Oxford-style tutorial sessions. Prerequisite: written permission of instructor. PHIL 187A, full course; PHIL 187B PO , half-course. May be repeated for credit. Offered by arrangement.

  
  • PHIL 187B PO - Tutorial in Philosophy


    CrsNo PHIL187B PO


    When Offered: Last offered spring 2009.

    Instructor(s): J. Atlas

    Selected topics, determined jointly by the student and the tutor, conducted through frequent student papers evaluated in Oxford-style tutorial sessions. Prerequisite: written permission of instructor. PHIL 187A PO , full course; PHIL 187B, half-course. May be repeated for credit. Offered by arrangement.

  
  • PHIL 187C PO - Tutorial in Ancient Philosophy


    CrsNo PHIL187C PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): R. McKirahan

    Selected topics in ancient philosophy. Requires regular meetings with the instructor to discuss original texts, interpretations and the student’s written work. Sample topics: pre-Socratic philosophy, Socrates and the Sophists, Plato’s theory of forms, Aristotle’s philosophy of science, ancient ethical theories. PHIL 187C, full course; PHIL 187D PO , half-course. May be repeated for credit. Letter grade only. Prerequisite: One course in ancient philosophy.

  
  • PHIL 187D PO - Tutorial in Ancient Philosophy


    CrsNo PHIL187D PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): R. McKirahan

    Selected topics in ancient philosophy. Requires regular meetings with the instructor to discuss original texts, interpretations and the student’s written work. Sample topics: pre-Socratic philosophy, Socrates and the Sophists, Plato’s theory of forms, Aristotle’s philosophy of science, ancient ethical theories. PHIL 187C PO , full course; PHIL 187D, half-course. May be repeated for credit. Letter grade only. Prerequisite: One course in ancient philosophy.

  
  • PHIL 188A PO - Tutorial in Philosophy


    CrsNo PHIL188A PO


    When Offered: Last offered fall 2007.

    Instructor(s): Staff

    Offered in the tutorial style to a few qualified students on a topic of the instructor’s choosing. PHIL 188A, full course; PHIL 188B PO , half-course. May be repeated. Offered by arrangement.

  
  • PHIL 190 PO - Senior Seminar


    CrsNo PHIL190 PO


    When Offered: Each fall.

    Instructor(s): Staff

    Senior Seminar. Senior exercise required for all philosophy majors. A focused discussion of central themes and methods in philosophy. Topics will vary by year. Open to senior philosophy majors only. Letter grade only.

  
  • PHIL 191 PO - Senior Thesis


    CrsNo PHIL191 PO


    When Offered: Each fall or spring.

    Instructor(s): Staff

    Senior exercise for philosophy majors. A year-long sequence leading to the completion of a thesis supervised by faculty members. Half-course each semester of the senior year.

  
  • PHIL 192 PO - Senior Comprehensive Seminar


    CrsNo PHIL192 PO


  
  • PHIL 198 PO - Summer Reading & Research


    CrsNo PHIL198 PO


    When Offered: Last offered summer 2010.

    Instructor(s): Staff

    Summer reading and research on a topic agreed to by the student and the instructor. Normally, such study involves a set of short papers and/or culminates in a research paper of substantial length. Course or half-course.

  
  • PHIL 199DRPO - Philosophy: Directed Readings


    CrsNo PHIL199DRPO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): Staff

    Directed Readings. Syllabus reflects workload of a standard course in the department or program. Examinations or papers equivalent to a standard course. Regular interaction with the faculty supervisor. Weekly meetings are the norm. Available for full- or half-course credit.

  
  • PHIL 199IRPO - Philosophy: Independent Research


    CrsNo PHIL199IRPO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): Staff

    Independent Research or Creative Project. A substantial and significant piece of original research or creative product produced. Pre-requisite course work required. Available for full- or half-course credit.

  
  • PHIL 199RAPO - Philosophy: Research Assistantship


    CrsNo PHIL199RAPO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): Staff

    Research Assistantship. Lab notebook, research summary or other product appropriate to the discipline is required. Half-course credit only.


Philosophy, Politics and Economics

  
  • PPE 160 PO - Freedom, Markets and Well-Being


    CrsNo PPE 160 PO


    When Offered: Fall 2011.

    Instructor(s): E. Brown; M. Green; A. Davis

    Our society embraces commitments both to safeguarding basic liberties and to facilitating the pursuit of happiness. This course examines the interplay of philosophy, politics and economics in social and political theory and explores scholarship that relates theory to issues of public policy such as health care and development policies towards Third World countries. Prerequisites: ECON 102 PO  and one course in each of philosophy and politics.  May be taken for the Pomona Economics major and minor.

  
  • PPE 190 PO - Senior Seminar


    CrsNo PPE 190 PO


    When Offered: Offered as needed.

    Instructor(s): E. Brown; M. Green

    Exposes students to scholarship that works across disciplinary boundaries in the fields of philosophy, politics and economics. Attention is paid to theoretical discourse and to policy applications. The course prepares PPE majors to write an integrative senior thesis and is designed to be taken prior to/or concurrently with the senior thesis.

  
  • PPE 195 PO - Senior Exercise


    CrsNo PPE 195 PO


    When Offered: Each spring.

    Instructor(s): Staff

    Thesis plus designated sections of the Senior Exercise in the student’s department of primary focus. PPE-politics majors must take the Politics Department oral examination (no credit). PPE-economics majors must take the Major Field Achievement Test in economics. The thesis shall be original and integrative across at least two of the participating disciplines, including the student’s discipline of primary focus. Faculty readers for theses shall be drawn from the departments concerned. Full course.

  
  • PPE 199DRPO - Philosophy Politics and Economics: Directed Readings


    CrsNo PPE 199DRPO


    Directed Readings. Syllabus reflects workload of a standard course in the department or program. Examinations or papers equivalent to a standard course. Regular interaction with the faculty supervisor. Weekly meetings are the norm. Available for full- or half-course credit.

  
  • PPE 199IRPO - Philosophy Politics and Economics: Independent Research


    CrsNo PPE 199IRPO


    Independent Research or Creative Project. A substantial and significant piece of original research or creative product produced. Pre-requisite course work required. Available for full- or half-course credit.


Physical Education

  
  • PE 001 PO - Aerobics


    CrsNo PE 001 PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): J. Ferguson

  
  • PE 002 PO - Pilates Method


    CrsNo PE 002 PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): V. Cowan

  
  • PE 003 PO - Personalized Fitness Training


    CrsNo PE 003 PO


    When Offered: Spring 2012.

    Instructor(s): K. Connell

  
  • PE 006 PO - Core Training


    CrsNo PE 006 PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): V. Cowan

  
  • PE 007 PO - Strong Method/Weight Training


    CrsNo PE 007 PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): V. Cowan

  
  • PE 008 PO - Conditioning - Advanced


    CrsNo PE 008 PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): R. Caron

  
  • PE 009 PO - Jogging/Running


    CrsNo PE 009 PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): K. Reynolds; J. Ferguson

  
  • PE 010 PO - Hiking/Geocaching


    CrsNo PE 010 PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): K. Connell

    Hiking/Geocaching.

  
  • PE 011 PO - Fitness:Speed & Agility Training


    CrsNo PE 011 PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): J. Scanlon; J. Ferguson

  
  • PE 012 PO - Beginning Backpacking


    CrsNo PE 012 PO


    When Offered: Fall 2011, offered occasionally.

    Instructor(s): M. Crawford

    Beginning Backpacking. An introduction to travelling in the backcountry with groups.

  
  • PE 013 PO - Aqua Fit


    CrsNo PE 013 PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): K. Reynolds

  
  • PE 014 PO - Beginning Rock Climbing


    CrsNo PE 014 PO


    When Offered: Spring 2012, offered occasionally.

    Instructor(s): M. Crawford

    Beginning Rock Climbing. An introduction to rock climbing and mountaineering.

  
  • PE 015 PO - Swim Fitness


    CrsNo PE 015 PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): A. Rodriguez

  
  • PE 016 PO - Weight Training


    CrsNo PE 016 PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): T. Boston; F. Pericolosi; J. Scanlon; P. McDevitt; A Rodriguez; J. Ferguson; K. Connell

  
  • PE 016C PO - Weight Training - Advanced


    CrsNo PE 016C PO


  
  • PE 018 PO - Weight Training & Cardio


    CrsNo PE 018 PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): L. Beckett; J. Scanlon

  
  • PE 021 PO - Yoga - Hatha Method I


    CrsNo PE 021 PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): T. Brennan

  
  • PE 022A PO - Yoga - Anusara Inspired I


    CrsNo PE 022A PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): J. Stark

  
  • PE 022B PO - Yoga - Anusara Inspired II


    CrsNo PE 022B PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): J. Stark

  
  • PE 023 PO - Yoga - Kundalini


    CrsNo PE 023 PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): K. May

  
  • PE 026 PO - Martial Arts Shotokan Karate


    CrsNo PE 026 PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): T. Aponte

  
  • PE 027 PO - Martial Arts Tai Chi


    CrsNo PE 027 PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): M. Giordano

  
  • PE 030 PO - Contra Dance


    CrsNo PE 030 PO


    When Offered: Fall 2011.

    Instructor(s): T. Moore

  
  • PE 032 PO - Dance - Hip Hop


    CrsNo PE 032 PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): C. Krisinger

  
  • PE 033A PO - Dance - Intl Latin Beginning


    CrsNo PE 033A PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): P. Roach

  
  • PE 033B PO - Dance - Intl Latin Intermediate


    CrsNo PE 033B PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): P. Roach

  
  • PE 033C PO - Dance - Intl Latin Advanced


    CrsNo PE 033C PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): P. Roach

  
  • PE 034A PO - Dance - Intl Standard Beginning


    CrsNo PE 034A PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): P. Roach

  
  • PE 034B PO - Dance - Intl Standard Intermed


    CrsNo PE 034B PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): P. Roach

  
  • PE 034C PO - Dance - Intl Standard Advanced


    CrsNo PE 034C PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): P. Roach

  
  • PE 037A PO - Dance - Social Beginning


    CrsNo PE 037A PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): P. Roach

  
  • PE 037B PO - Dance - Social Intermediate


    CrsNo PE 037B PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): P. Roach

  
  • PE 046 PO - Archery


    CrsNo PE 046 PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): J. Scanlon; F. Pericolosi; K. Connell

  
  • PE 048 PO - Badminton


    CrsNo PE 048 PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): J. Scanlon; T. Boston

  
  • PE 050 PO - Bowling


    CrsNo PE 050 PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): F. Pericolosi; R. Canron; W. Swartz

  
  • PE 055A PO - Fencing Beginning


    CrsNo PE 055A PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): G. Clovis

  
  • PE 056 PO - Fencing Sabers


    CrsNo PE 056 PO


    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): G. Clovis

 

Page: 1 <- Back 1010 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 -> 22