|
Asian
Studies Major
The Asian Studies Major at the William Paterson University of New
Jersey brings together highly qualified faculty and interested students
from different departments of the university. With its distinguished
faculty's solid and broad background on historical and contemporary
Asia, the program provides students with various career goals a
multi-disciplinary education in the language, culture, art, anthropology,
geography, history, philosophy, political science, and sociology
of Asia.
Biopsychology
Honors Program
The Honors
Program in Biopsychology draws on newly emerging discoveries in
such fields as behavior, the brain sciences, genetics, psychopharmacology
and many others to unravel the biology of the mind and behavior.
We were awarded two grants by the National Science Foundation to
support the development of this exciting program. As all honors
programs at William Paterson, biopsychology is not itself a major,
but a distinctive cluster of courses that deepens, broadens and
adds challenge to students' chosen majors. This program is highly
recommended for students planning graduate study, including pre-medical,
pre-dental, pre-veterinary, and pre-graduate nursing studies and,
in general, for those students interested in clinical or research
careers. In addition, the Biopsychology Program offers an applied
component in its curriculum with a focus in Human Neuropsychology.
As an honors program, biopsychology is designed for highly motivated
individuals. For further information, contact Prof. Robert Benno,
Biology Department, at (973) 720-3440, or by e-mail at
bennor@wpunj.edu
Cognitive
Science Honors Program
A center for
the study of Cognitive Science, a field bringing together Philosophy,
Psychology, Computer Science, Linguistics, Neuroscience, and Anthropology,
in order to develop a unified theory of the mind/brain. Since Fall
1999 there has been a new University honors program in cognitive
science. Students in this program take courses from each of the
constituent disciplines and all take three new courses designed
to introduce them to Cognitive Science, foster interdisciplinary
communication and collaboration, and provide intense one-on-one
supervision in the construction of their own research project and
its accompanying thesis. The department has a Cognitive Science
Laboratory staffed by the Philosoghy Department Faculty. For information
please contact professors Katherine Makarec, makareck@wpunj.edu
Peter Mandik mandikp@wpunj.edu.
Critical
Languages -- Department of Languages and Cultures
The term “Critical Languages” or “Critical-Needs Languages” has gained usage since 2001 to indicate world languages for which there is high demand and relatively little expertise in the U.S. Once subsumed under the rubric “Less Commonly Taught Languages,” their importance in our increasingly global economy and society demands that higher education address the need for training professionals in a wide variety of fields who will have linguistic proficiency in these languages.
The Department of Languages and Cultures at WPUNJ offers well-designed programs combining language skills, cultural competencies, and grounding in the literary traditions of some of the world’s most-widely spoken languages. In recent years, the Department has added faculty expertise and course offerings in seven Critical Languages: Arabic, Chinese, Hindi, Japanese, Korean, Russian, and Turkish. Persian will be added as its eighth critical language in academic year 2007-2008.
William
Paterson University, recognizing the need for instruction in the
critical languages and in international and area studies, began the
millennium with new B.A.
programs in Asian Studies and Latin American Studies
and complementary language programs.
The new Asian Studies degree program supports a full-range of
language offerings from basic through the advanced level in Chinese
and Japanese, and of basic and intermediate level in Hindi and
Korean. Courses in
Chinese, Indian and Japanese literature and culture complement these
language offerings. WPUNJ
students may concentrate in the study of language, culture and
general competencies in either regions of East Asia or South Asia,
reflecting the political, economic and cultural importance of China, India and Japan.
Recently,
the Languages department has added offerings in basic and
intermediate level Arabic and basic level Turkish, and soon will be
adding basic level Persian. The
introduction of Arabic, Persian, and Turkish supplements campus-wide
faculty strengths in Islamic Studies, another critical area of
study. (See History, Sociology and Women’s Studies course
offerings.)
PROGRAM STRENGTHS:
- TEACHER PREPARATION: WPUNJ has a 150-year history as educator of teachers.
It plans to train licensed teachers with degrees in Asian
Studies and language tracks in Chinese and Japanese. (Hindi
may be added later, depending on the demand for licensed teachers of
Hindi.)
- FACULTY: A diverse and dynamic faculty of
internationally-reputed scholars of Chinese, Indian, Japanese, and
Islamic cultures shares its expertise with the University, business
community, and non-profit agencies.
- EXTERNAL RECOGNITION:
- 2
competitive
U/S. DOE Title VI awards recognized the high quality of the programs
and the faculty.
- WPUNJ
was selected as a partner with Asia Society in a program designed to
train faculty to integrate the study of Asia in the undergraduate
curriculum and especially in teacher preparation programs.
- WPUNJ
participates in the Fulbright Language Teaching Fellowship program,
and has hosted 8 visiting fellows who have expanded offerings in
Arabic, Turkish, and Swahili.
- STUDENT DEMAND. Enrollments in Asian Studies courses
and in particular Asian languages have grown in recent years; since
2001 more than 2,000 students have enrolled in Asian Studies
courses.
- INFRASTRUCTURE: Solid institutional support and
infrastructure, including an excellent Multimedia Language
Laboratory, sustain WPUNJ’s state-of-the-art language training.
- PUBLIC
EVENTS: The University sponsors a major Annual
Bilingual/ESL Conference, an Annual
Poetry Recitation Contest, and public lectures by faculty and
guest speakers.
- TRAINING THE FUTURE: WPUNJ has been offering
college-level advanced placement courses in less-commonly-taught
languages to area high schools over Interactive Television (ITV).
This year (2006), more than 60 high school students from
Passaic County Technical Institute are taking Basic Japanese with
Professor Maiko Sato. The
course uses a hybrid delivery, combining a traditional classroom
format with ITV instruction.
Humanities
Honors
Taught by different
members of the school, the honors courses in humanities are designed
to challenge the superior student's capacities through structured
multidisciplinary seminars and individual study. The courses general
aims are (1) to promote intellectual excellence within a common
scholarly community; (2) to foster an awareness of various disciplines
and their unity; (3) to offer opportunities for self-direction toward
future goals. The humanities honors program is taken in addition
to the student's major and it usually started in the freshman or
sophomore year. A 3.2 minimum GPA is required for admission; special
coordinators are available for advisement and supervision. For further
information, contact John Peterman at (973) 720-3030, or by e-mail
at petermanj@wpunj.edu
Latin American Studies
Latin American Studies, an interdisciplinary program, provides students with a comprehensive academic grounding in the literary, historic, economic, social, political, and cultural traditions and issues facing the region. Students will study Latin America in the context of the transnational, multilateral, and bilateral relations that shape the region's political, social, and economic structures. The program prepares students for careers in government, international organizations, private enterprise, journalism and communications, or for graduate study in the humanities, social sciences and law.
Liberal Stuies Major
The Liberal Studies Major combines interdisciplinary training in the arts, humanities and social sciences, allowing students to design a flexible yet rigorous program. In traditional majors, students complete all their coursework in a single discipline, but in Liberal Studies, students select two "tracks" from a wide variety of disciplinary and interdisciplinary programs, and complete half of their major credits in each track. The Liberal Studies major is housed in the Department of Philosophy. It is excellent for anyone seeking a broad education and for pre-service teachers seeking certification in P-3, K-5, and 5-8 education. Go to http://www.wpunj.edu/hmss/LiberalStudies/default_LS.htm for a more detailed description.
Pre-Law
Support services
for students of all majors who are interested in attending Law School.
Click
here for details.
Writing
Across the Curriculum
The Writing
across the Curriculum Program at William Paterson University consists
at present of writing roundtables, faculty teams working on writing
in their various disciplines, and a three-day workshop on "Writing
as Process" for faculty in May. With strong support from the
administration, the program will expand to include writing-intensive
courses in General Education and in upper-division majors by fall
of 1999. For more information, contact Jim Hauser, English Department,
at (973) 720-3063 or via email at hauserj@wpunj.edu
Race
and Gender Project
The William
Paterson University Race & Gender Project focuses on faculty
development for teachers of the General Education course, "Racism
and Sexism in the U.S.," and for teachers of other courses
who wish to better integrate issues of race/ethnicity, gender, class,
and sexuality into their work. The Project also works to educate
the wider campus community on these issues.
Urban
Studies Minor
The Minor in Urban Studies at WPUNJ introduces students to the
methodologies of urban research and their applications to research
projects and field experience. Students are exposed to urban problems
from a theoretical and applied perspectives. The Urban Studies Minor
is designed to take full advantage of WPUNJs proximity to
the city of Paterson and the greater New York-New Jersey Metropolitan
Region in order to provide students with multi-disciplinary training
in urban studies combined with practical experience.
|