Centenary is offering a variety of courses this summer.
Centenary is offering a variety of courses this summer.
ART 250 Global Art and Design Appreciation – in person – June 2-June 20
An investigation of art and design from a global perspective. Students gain skills necessary to analyze artworks according to the basic elements and principles of design. By exploring canonical artworks and design forms from many of the world’s artistic traditions, students engage critically with global artists that shape the artistic and cultural landscape of the United States today. (Same as COMM 250). HUMANITIES EXPLORATION.
ECON 204 Statistics for Business & Economics – online – June 2-July 11
A study of descriptive statistics, probability, probability distributions, sampling techniques, estimation, hypothesis testing, regression and correlation, and time series analysis. Application of the analytical methods to a research question using the computer will be a vital component of the class.
ECON 211 Principles of Microeconomics – in person – June 2-June 20
Microeconomics is the study of the behavior of various economic agents, paricularly consumers and producers. The course focuses upon the allocation of resources and distribution of income within competitive markets. The course provides an introduction to applied microeconomic fields such as environmental economics, international economics, labor economics, public sector economics, and industrial organization. SOCIAL SCIENCES EXPLORATION
ECON 212 Principles of Macroeconomics – online – June 2-June 20
Macroeconomics is the study of the determination of national income, employment, and prices. The course focuses upon the determinants of aggregate economic activity, inflation, business cycles, the economic role of government and both fiscal and monetaryinstitutions. The course provides an introduction to applied macroeconomic fields including policy, money and banking, international economics, and economic growth. SOCIAL SCIENCES EXPLORATION
PHYS 103/113 Conceptual Physics and Lab – in person – June 2-June 20
PHYS 103 and 113 are co-requisites. A non-mathematical course for non-science majors that examines how physics laws account for the world around us, from everyday phenomena to the Cosmos. The laboratory work involves experiments in mechanics, fluid mechanics, heat, wave motion, light, sound, electric and magnetic fields, and electricity. NATURAL SCIENCES EXPLORATION
PSY 250 Human Growth & Development – in person – June 23-July 11
Corequisite: TREK 151. A study of the aspects of human behavior that change from conception through adulthood and the processes that account for the changes. A review of the major theories set forth to explain different aspects of human development is included. Students may, after the first day of class, drop the Community component of Trek. SOCIAL SCIENCES EXPLORATION
PSY 304 Statistics for Behavioral Sciences – online – June 2-June 20
Prerequisite: MATH 102 or higher. Statistical analysis is a fundamental tool that scientists use to make sense of the world. In this course, students will learn to work with data, use it to make reasoned inferences, and communicate results in a professional style. The course will explore descriptive statistics, statistical inference, correlation and regression, t-tests, analysis of variance, chi-square, and nonparametric techniques. The laboratory will provide practical experience using computer applications to obtain statistics and report research findings.
Date | Event |
Friday, May 30 | Registration |
Monday, June 2 8:00 a.m. |
Class work begins |
Tuesday, June 3 Noon |
Last day for enrolling, adding courses, or changing sections |
Tuesday, June 10 4:00 p.m. |
Last for dropping courses or changing enrollment status |
Monday, June 16 | Juneteenth: campus offices closed |
Friday, June 20 | Class work ends |
Wednesday, June 25 Noon |
Final grades due |
Date | Event |
Friday, June 20 | Registration |
Monday, June 23 8:00 a.m. |
Class work begins |
Tuesday, June 24 Noon |
Last day for enrolling, adding courses, or changing sections |
Wednesday, July 1 4:00 p.m. |
Last for dropping courses or changing enrollment status |
Friday, July 4 | Independence Day: campus offices closed |
Friday, July 11 | Class work ends |
Wednesday, July 16 Noon |
Final grades due |
Date | Event |
Friday, May 30 | Registration |
Monday, June 2 8:00 a.m. |
Class work begins |
Tuesday, June 3 Noon |
Last day for enrolling, adding courses, or changing sections |
Monday, June 16 | Juneteenth: campus offices closed |
Friday, June 20 | Last for dropping courses or changing enrollment status |
Friday, July 4 | Independence Day: campus offices closed |
Friday, July 11 | Class work ends |
Wednesday, July 16 Noon |
Final grades due |
Immersion term tuition is included in the full-time tuition rate for the semester; students may reside on campus during immersion terms at no additional cost if they live in campus housing that semester and are enrolled in a Centenary course during that immersion term.
Tuition: $494.00 per credit hour
James, Hardin, and Sexton Daily Rate (double occupancy) if available:
$16.00 / day
Rotary Daily Rate (double occupancy):
$20.00 / day
James, Hardin, and Sexton Daily Rate (single occupancy), if available:
$24.00 / day
Rotary Daily Rate (single occupancy):
$30.00 / day
Single rooms may be available on an as-requested and space-available basis. The rate for a requested single room will be 150% of the double room rate per semester. In rare cases, the student will pay the total as if they had a roommate (200% of the applicable double room cost for a single).
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