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Courses may be offered in one of the following modalities:

  • Traditional in-person courses (0–29 percent of coursework is delivered online, the majority being offered in person.)
  • Hybrid/blended courses (30–79 percent of coursework is delivered online.)
  • Online courses (100 percent of coursework is delivered online, either synchronously on a designated day and time or asynchronously as a deadline-driven course.)
  • Hyflex (Students will be assigned to attend in-person or live streamed sessions as a reduced-size cohort on a rotating basis; live sessions are also recorded, offering students the option to participate synchronously or view asynchronously as needed.)

If you are enrolled in courses delivered in traditional or hybrid modalities, you will be expected to attend face-to-face instruction as scheduled.


Culture And Society (ANT-105)


Semester: Spring 2026
Number: 0103-105-001
Instructor: Hanna Kim
Days: Tuesday Thursday 1:40 pm - 2:55 pm
Note: Traditional In-Person Class
Location: Garden City
Credits: 3
Course Materials: View Text Books
Description:

Students will gain strategies for understanding and responding critically to the concepts of culture and society through ethnography and multidisciplinary sources. The course looks at cultural categories, social institutions, structures of power, including race, racism, justice, gender, and socio-economic class and how these inform peoples' everyday lives and choices. (Learning Goals:G;Distribution Reqs:Social Sciences)

Learning Goals:   Through course materials that are anthropologically grounded but multidisciplinary in scope, and through assessments that include peer group work, students will:1) acquire greater comfort in thinking and writing critically about the concepts of culture and society;2) go beyond given explanations and assumptions about behaviour, including the categories of race, gender, and class; and cultural variations;3) demonstrate more nuanced interpretations of cultural practices and societal responses to racism, justice, hierarchies of power, and variations in human behaviour.

*The learning goals displayed here are those for one section of this course as offered in a recent semester, and are provided for the purpose of information only. The exact learning goals for each course section in a specific semester will be stated on the syllabus distributed at the start of the semester, and may differ in wording and emphasis from those shown here.

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