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home:academics:academic resources:values:isssc:curriculum
Institute for the Study of Secularism in Society and Culture
 

CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT

The Institute has established a five-year project at Trinity College to create syllabi, curricula, and bibliographies on secularism and secularization at both undergraduate and graduate levels. Each year, a selected group of faculty fellows at Trinity College and Claremont University Consortium in California develops new courses based on a common theme across a range of academic disciplines. The themes are:

2005-06: The Roots of the Secular Tradition in the West

2006-07: The Secular Tradition and Foundations of the Natural Sciences

2007-08: Secularism and the Enlightenment

2008-09: The Global Impact of Secular Values

2009-10: Evolution in Nature and Society

An annual peer review conference for educators is held at the end of each academic year.


ISSSC SPONSORED COURSES

Courses Developed
Academic Year 2005-06

In July 2005, the newly-formed Institute for the Study of Secularism in Society and Culture (ISSSC) issued a call for full time, continuing faculty members at Trinity College to apply for the position of Program Fellows for the Academic Year 2005-06. If accepted, they would receive course development grants under the ISSSC’s new program, Secular Traditions and the Liberal Arts. The grant would allow them each to develop a new course (or thoroughly revise an appropriate existing course) under the theme of Year One.

Part I:
The Roots of the Secular Tradition in the West

Introduction: The Roots of the Secular Tradition in the West
Resident Fellow: Dr. Michael Ben-Chaim

ISSSC Teaching Conference on Secular Traditions in the West
May 24-25, 2006 - Lenox, MA

An academic meeting of philosophers, political scientists, and historians of science to discuss the courses developed by ISSSC faculty fellows.

Keynote Presentation: The Early Modern Origins of Secularism: Revisiting the Relationship Between Knowledge and Faith
Dr. Paula Findlen, Ubaldo Pierotti Professor in Italian History, Department of History, Stanford University

Course Title: Skepticism and Toleration in Early Modern Philosophy
Faculty Member: Dr. Todd Ryan, Assistant Professor of Philosophy 

Course Title: From Theocracy to Democracy: the Foundations of Modern Liberal Politics
Faculty Member: Dr. Christopher Nadon, Associate Professor of Political Science
Course Title: Science, Nature and Religion in Early Modern Europe
Faculty Member: Dr. Sean Cocco, Assistant Professor of History 
Part II:
The Secular Tradition and Islam

Course Title: Worldly Islam: The Sacred, the Secular
Faculty Member: Dr. Raymond Baker, Professor of International Politics

Course Title: Religious and Secular Thought in Iran
Faculty Member: Nastaran Moosavi, McGill Teaching Fellow in International Studies


Courses Developed
Academic Year 2006-07

Part I, at Trinity College:
The Secular Tradition and Foundations of the Natural Sciences

Course Title: The History of Evolutionary Ideas
Faculty Member: Dr. Daniel Blackburn, Professor and Chair of Biology

Course Title: European Exploration and Science, 1320-1700
Faculty Member: Dr. Sean Cocco, Assistant Professor of History 

Course Title: Science and Religion (First Year Seminar)
Faculty Member:
Dr. Kent Dunlap, Associate Professor of Biology

Course Title: Acid Rain in Europe 1979-1989 (First Year Seminar)
Faculty Member: Dr. David Henderson, Professor of Chemistry and Director of the Environmental Science Program

Part II, at Trinity College:

Core Course Title: Secularism and the Problem of Authority
Faculty Members: Dr. Barry Kosmin, Director, ISSSC and Research Professor, Public Policy & Law Program; Dr. Ariela Keysar, Associate Director, ISSSC and Associate Research Professor, Public Policy & Law Program
Part III, at Claremont University Consortium, California:
The Roots of the Secular Tradition in the West

Course Title: The Sacred and the Profane in the Middle Ages

Faculty Fellow: Dr. John Eldevik

History Department, Pomona College

 

Course Title: Medieval Thought

Faculty Fellows: Dr. Carina Lee Johnson

History Department, Pitzer College and

Dr. Brian Keeley

Philosophy, Pitzer College

 

Course Title: Classical Ethical Theory: Plato

Faculty Fellow: Dr. Suzanne Obdrzalek

Philosophy Department, Claremont McKenna College

 

Course Title: Secularism, Skepticism, and Critiques of Religion

Faculty Fellow: Dr. Phil Zuckerman

Sociology Department, Pitzer College


Courses Developed
Academic Year 2007-08

Trinity College
Secularism and the Enlightenment

Course Title: Enlightenment and Romanticism in Italy
Faculty Members: Dr. John Alcorn, Assistant Professor of Italian Studies  & Dario Del Puppo, Associate Professor
 

Course Title: The Strange Meaning of Things
Faculty Member: Dr. Barbara M. Benedict, Charles A. Dana Professor of English Literature
 

Course Title: Eighteenth-Century European Art & Architecture
Faculty Member: Dr. Alden R. Gordon, Gwendolyn Miles Smith Professor of Art History and Chair of the Fine Arts Department

Course Title: Knowledge and Power in the French Enlightenment
Faculty Member: Dr. Jean-Marc Kehres, Assistant Professor of Modern Languages and Literature

Course Title: Science and Society in the Age of Enlightenment - France 1715 - 1799
Faculty Member: Dr. Kathleen Kete, Associate Professor of History

Course Title: Britain: Political Culture and Empire, 1688-1948
Faculty Member: Dr. Susan D. Pennybacker, Borden W. Painter Jr Associate Professor of European History

Claremont University Consortium, California
Secularism and the Enlightenment

Course Title: The Nature of Nature: Enlightenment Ideas about the Landscape

Faculty Member: Dr. Bruce Coats, Professor of Art History, Scripps College

 

Course Title: Liberty of Conscience and the Creation of Secular Society
Faculty Member: Dr. George Thomas, Assistant Professor of Government, Claremont McKenna College

 

Course Title: German Enlightenment in an International Context

Faculty Member: Dr. Friederike Schwerin, Assistant Professor of German and Russian, Pomona College

 

Course Title: Government 165: Political Philosophy and History
Faculty Member: Dr. James Nichols, Professor of Government, Claremont McKenna College  

 

Course Title: Anxiety in the Age of Reason

Faculty Member: Dr. Andre Wakefield, Assistant Professor of History, Pitzer College


Courses Developed
Academic Year 2008-09

Trinity College
The Global Impact of Secular Values

Course Title: Modern Italy
Faculty Member: John Alcorn, Principal Lecturer in Language & Cultural Studies

Course Title:The World Disenchanted: The Origins and Impact of Secularization
Faculty Member: Jonathan Elukin, Associate Professor of History

Course Title: Modern Secular Nationalism, Ancient Memories: The Case of the Jews 
Faculty Member: Samuel Kassow, Charles H. Northam Professor of  History 

Course Title: The Dao of Secularism: Political Transformation and Secular Values in 20th Century Asia
Faculty Member: Michael Lestz, Associate Professor of History

Claremont University Consortium, California
The Global Impact of Secular Values

Course Title: Government 162: Statesmanship and Leadership
Faculty Member: Mark Blitz, Professor, Department of Government, Claremont McKenna College

Course Title: Life, Death and Meaning
Faculty Member: Amy Kind, Associate Professor, Department of Philosophy, Claremont McKenna College

Course Title: Global Justice, World Poverty, and Human Rights
Faculty Member: Alex Rajczi, Assistant Professor, Department of Philosophy, Claremont McKenna College

Course Title: American Culture Wars
Faculty Member: John Shields, Assistant Professor, Department of Philosophy, Claremont McKenna College

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