2017-2018 Catalog 
    
    Apr 28, 2024  
2017-2018 Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Descriptions


The numbers in parentheses following course titles indicate (1) hours per week of lecture, (2) hours per week of laboratory and (3) semester credit hours. An asterisk (*) following these three figures indicates variable or alternative credit, and the last figure represents the maximum variation in semester credit hours. In general, credit hours for these variable courses may range from one to the number indicated.

The frequency of offering follows the meeting and credit hour information. Courses offered every year are designated by semester(s) only. Courses offered every other year are designated by semester and odd/even year.

Note: Since most courses are not offered every semester, students should be aware that failure to take a required course when it is offered may delay graduation.

Any course may be offered on demand should sufficient interest be demonstrated and should a qualified instructor be available. “Demand” courses with a defined content will be offered as regularly as practical for the host department.

At the end of the course description, the following information will be given when applicable: laboratory information, corequisites (“concurrent enrollment”) and prerequisites, cross listed courses (“same as”), special fees, and pertinent information about the use of the course.

Courses and Numbering

All courses are listed alphabetically by course prefix and numerically within each prefix. The department and college assignments are also noted. ACU uses a three-digit course numbering system. Courses numbered 100 to 299 are lower-level courses (primarily for freshmen and sophomores). Courses numbered from 300 to 499 are upper-level, or advanced, courses (primarily for juniors and seniors). Courses numbered 500 to 799 are graduate courses. All courses numbered 000 to 099 do not count toward graduation or GPA.

Prerequisites and Corequisites

Some courses have prerequisites, which must be met before a student may register for that course. In some cases, a student may have special knowledge, skills or background that will enable him or her to perform well in a given class without meeting its prerequisites. Such a student should seek special permission from the department and/or instructor offering the course. Courses listed as corequisite must be taken together. Students should refer to the most recent catalog for course corequisites, prerequisites, and restrictions.

Course Sequencing

Some courses have recommendations of a previous course(s) for appropriate sequencing. Such recommendations are not prerequisites; the system will allow any student meeting a course’s prerequisites to enroll for a course regardless of whether the student meets the sequencing recommendations. Students are cautioned, however, to follow sequencing recommendations when all of the courses in the sequence are on their degree plans.

Guided Study, Special Topics, and Tutorial Courses

Each department may offer Guided Study (also called Independent Study) courses (100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700); Special Topics courses (140, 240, 340, 440, 540, 640, 740); or Tutorial courses (generally offered to students at Study Abroad locations) as special needs dictate and/or available faculty allow. The first number will indicate the level of the course. Special Topics courses are offered on a one-time basis, to take advantage of particular faculty expertise, or to allow a department to develop a course for permanent inclusion in the inventory of courses. Generally, Special Topics and Tutorial courses may be included in the Semester Schedule when they are offered; Guided Studies will not be included in the Semester Schedule.

The Texas Common Course Numbering System

The Texas Common Course Numbering System (TCCNS) has been designed for the purpose of aiding students in the transfer of general academic courses between colleges and universities throughout Texas. Common courses are freshman and sophomore academic credit courses that have been identified as common by institutions that are members of the common course numbering system. The system ensures that if the student takes the courses the receiving institution designates as common, then the courses will be accepted in transfer.

For further information contact the transfer course coordinator in the Registrar’s Office.

 

Theatre

  
  • THEA 422 - Advanced Ballet


    Lecture Hours: 0
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 1
    Terms Offered: Fall, even years

    Provides advanced training in ballet dance technique for the musical theatre. Emphasis will be placed on alignment, placement, fluidity, execution of steps and style as it applies to professional auditioning and performing. Fulfills a PEAC activity credit. Prerequisite: THEA 223  or permission of instructor. For theatre majors only.
  
  • THEA 423 - Advanced Tap


    Lecture Hours: 0
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 1
    Terms Offered: Spring, odd years

    Provides advanced training in tap dance technique for the musical theatre. Emphasis on rhythm, musicality, syncopation, execution, and style as it applies to professional auditioning and performing. Fulfills a PEAC activity credit. Prerequisite: THEA 221  or permission of instructor. For theatre majors only.
  
  • THEA 424 - Advanced Modern


    Lecture Hours: 0
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 1
    Terms Offered: Spring, odd years

    Provides advanced training in modern dance technique for the musical theatre. Emphasis on placement, fluidity, strength, emotional connection, execution, and style as it applies to professional auditioning and performing. Fulfills a PEAC activity credit. Prerequisite: THEA 224  or permission of instructor. For theatre majors only.
  
  • THEA 425 - Advanced Dance Auditioning


    Lecture Hours: 0
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 1
    Terms Offered: Spring, odd years

    Provides advanced training in dance auditioning technique for the musical theatre. Emphasis on memorization, style and performance as it applies to placement, fluidity, musicality, and execution relational to professional auditioning and performing. Fulfills a PEAC activity credit. Prerequisite: THEA 221 -THEA 224  or permission of instructor. For theatre majors only
  
  • THEA 430 - Advanced Costume Design


    Lecture Hours: 3
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 3
    Terms Offered: Spring, even years, as needed

    Continued study of the role of the costume designer, conceptualizing designs with a focus on style and theatrical genre, rendering media and technique, and the production of resume and portfolio. Prerequisite: THEA 332 . For theatre majors only.
  
  • THEA 454 - Beginning Directing


    Lecture Hours: 3
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 3
    Terms Offered: Fall

    Basic principles governing play structures, choice, and casting are discussed. Requires student-directed scenes with lab. Laboratory graded and credited with course. Prerequisite: THEA 226  and THEA 227 . For theatre majors only.
  
  • THEA 455 - Acting VI: Shakespeare


    Lecture Hours: 3
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 3
    Terms Offered: Spring

    Advanced techniques in acting Shakespeare using soliloquies, monologues and duet scenes. Resources from Royal Shakespeare Company Master Classes. Prerequisite: THEA 226  and THEA 325 . For theatre majors only.
  
  • THEA 456 - Acting VII: Auditioning


    Lecture Hours: 3
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 3
    Terms Offered: Spring, odd years

    To equip the Acting IV: Shakespeare student with necessary information for a professional career. Includes resumes, photos, cold readings, monologues, and information regarding Equity, U/RTA, and film. Prerequisite: THEA 226  and THEA 325 . For theatre majors only.
  
  • THEA 457 - Playwriting


    Lecture Hours: 3
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 3
    Terms Offered: Fall, odd years

    A basic method of developing a play script with critiques and readings by actors. Includes workshop by professional playwright. Same as ENGL 324 .
  
  • THEA 460 - Musical Theatre Directing Workshop


    Lecture Hours: 3
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 3
    Terms Offered: Spring, even years

    Provides advanced training in the direction of musical theatre. With guidance from the instructors, students will direct peers in multiple workshop musical scenes, applying techniques of staging, analysis, and prompting with a musical theatre knowledge base. This course cannot be taken concurrently with THEA 360 . Prerequisite: THEA 454 . For theatre majors only.
  
  • THEA 461 - Children’s Theatre


    Lecture Hours: 3
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 3
    Terms Offered: Fall, even years

    An overview of children’s theatre: understanding the literature, acting techniques, design concepts, and the production presentation.
  
  • THEA 463 - Educational Theatre


    Lecture Hours: 3
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 3
    Terms Offered: Spring, even years

    Prepares students to teach high school theatre. Emphasizes classroom theatre activities and curriculum, mounting a production, and managing a theatre program. Prerequisite: Junior standing and 9 hours of theatre courses.
  
  • THEA 466 - Scene Design


    Lecture Hours: 3
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 3
    Terms Offered: Spring, odd years

    The theory of scene design and its relation to the director, actor, and other elements of production. Prerequisite: THEA 227 .
  
  • THEA 467 - Theatre Lighting


    Lecture Hours: 3
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 3
    Terms Offered: Spring, even years

    A historical survey of lighting and its effect on designing, directing, and acting. Prerequisite: THEA 227 .
  
  • THEA 469 - Stage Makeup


    Lecture Hours: 3
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 3
    Terms Offered: Spring

    Practical application of all processes and types of stage makeup. Prerequisite: THEA 226 . For theatre majors only.
  
  • THEA 470 - Advanced Directing


    Lecture Hours: 3
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 3
    Terms Offered: Spring, odd years

    Principles of directing various styles and periods focusing on the ability of the director to bring a creative viewpoint to bear on the work. Requires student-directed scenes with lab. Laboratory is graded and credited with course. Prerequisite: THEA 454 . For theatre majors only.
  
  • THEA 480 - Arts and Culture: A Christian Aesthetic


    Lecture Hours: 3
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 3
    Terms Offered: Spring

    The arts from a Christian viewpoint as both practitioner and audience/patron, applying biblically based strategies to assess, enjoy, and participate in the forms of art prevalent in the culture while remaining faithful to the call of Christ. Same as BIBM 480 . A capstone course.
  
  • THEA 490 - History of Theatre


    Lecture Hours: 3
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 3
    Terms Offered: Fall, odd years

    Theatre history from ritual theory and Greek origins to modern theory and practice. Includes focus on cultural and political contexts for theatre events and progressive influences of writers, designers, directors, and performers. Prerequisite: THEA 220 . A writing-intensive course. May be used to satisfy University Requirements.

University Courses

  
  • UNIV 011 - Learning Strategies


    Lecture Hours: 3
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 3
    Terms Offered: Fall, Spring

    An intensive, holistic, academic program which provides the cognitive, affective, and applicative skills useful for helping students experience academic success. This course is available for variable credit. Please see your advisor for more information. Prerequisite: Placement by department chair or program director.
  
  • UNIV 012 - Student Success Workshop


    Lecture Hours: 1
    Lab Hours: 5
    Credit Hours: 1
    Terms Offered: Fall, Spring

    An intensive, individualized, academic workshop designed to accelerate the cognitive, affective, and applicative skills experienced in UNIV 011 . Course may be repeated. Prerequisite: UNIV 011 .
  
  • UNIV 111 - Foundations for Success


    Lecture Hours: 3
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 3
    Terms Offered: Fall, Spring, Summer

    A comprehensive course designed to enhance academic proficiency, career planning skills, financial literacy, and life management skills useful for helping students experience academic and personal success.
  
  • UNIV 245 - Leadership Foundations


    Lecture Hours: 3
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 3
    Terms Offered: Spring

    An introduction to the field of leadership, with an emphasis on current leadership concepts and theories, self-assessment, and personal development within a Christian context.
  
  • UNIV 419 - Research Readings


    Lecture Hours: 0
    Lab Hours: 0
    Credit Hours: 1
    Terms Offered: Spring

    Designed to introduce undergraduates in the McNair Scholars Program to general research principles and techniques used in their particular field of study. Students will be required to read a set of selected research readings, select and read various research readings related to their discipline, identify a research topic, and begin to conceptualize a research project with the help of a faculty mentor. Prerequisite: Selected to be a McNair Scholars research intern.
  
  • UNIV 420 - Basic Research Methods


    Lecture Hours: 1
    Lab Hours: 1
    Credit Hours: 1
    Terms Offered: Summer

    Introduces new McNair Scholars to basic research concepts and skills. The focus on preparing McNair Scholars to conduct a research project and to write a research paper, which are required as part of the program’s summer research internship. Prerequisite: Selected to be a McNair Scholars research intern.
  
  • UNIV 421 - Research Writing


    Lecture Hours: 1
    Lab Hours: 1
    Credit Hours: 1
    Terms Offered: Summer

    Introduces undergraduates in the McNair Scholars Program to the process of writing an extended research paper. Students will be given instruction on outlining, organizing, drafting and revising an extended research paper. A portion of each meeting will consist of lecture while the remainder of each meeting will be given to drafting and work shopping. Concurrent enrollment in UNIV 420  required.
 

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