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Student Guide to Academic Programs | More on Department
Introduction
University College offers a number of programs and courses outside the areas
traditionally covered by departments. These include programs and courses in Drama,
Canadian Studies, Cognitive Science, Cognitive Science and Artificial Intelligence, Peace
and Conflict Studies, and Sexual Diversity Studies, in addition to 199Y Seminars, and
introductory courses for non-specialists in such areas as mathematics, physics, and
architecture. The overall aims of the College Program are to foster interdisciplinary work
in significant areas of study and to encourage intellectual breadth. Many program courses
are open to students not enroled in the programs themselves.
The Canadian Studies Program (Specialist, Major, Minor)
offers opportunities to study the structure of Canadian culture and society in an
interdisciplinary manner and to explore the ways in which cultural, social, economical and
political developments are linked and how they vary geographically in this diverse
country. Students in the Specialist and Major programs select four courses within one of
several themes listed below and they are encouraged to consider additional courses in
Aboriginal Studies in completing the requirements of the Program. A student who wishes to
create a new theme which best meets her/his interests is encouraged to discuss
it with the Program Director.
The Cognitive Science Program (Specialist, Major)
is an interdisciplinary exploration of the nature of cognition, drawing on the
perspectives of Philosophy, Psychology, and Linguistics.
The Cognitive Science and Artificial Intelligence Program (Specialist)
is an interdisciplinary exploration of the nature of cognition, drawing mainly on the
perspectives of Computer Science and two of Linguistics, Philosophy, and Psychology.
The Drama Program (Specialist, Major, Minor)
is described elsewhere in this Calendar, under Drama.
The Peace and Conflict Studies Program (Specialist and Major)
provides undergraduates with an interdisciplinary education in the causes of human
conflict and strategies for its resolution; topics of study include war, revolution,
rebellion, ethnic strife, international law, and negotiation theory.
The Sexual Diversity Studies Program (Minor)
allows students to focus on questions of sexual identity, difference, and dissidence
across disciplinary lines and cultural frameworks.
UNI and DRM courses are staffed by a combination of specific program staff members and
members of various University departments, and are open to all students of the University.
Handbooks describing University College courses and programs in more detail are available
from the College.
Enquiries:
Program Office, University College, Room 173 (978-8746). Directors of each program are
listed below.
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE PROGRAMS
CANADIAN STUDIES PROGRAM (B.A.)
Consult Professor A. McQuillan, Room F104, University College, 978-6657
Completion of four courses is required for enrolment in the Canadian Studies Specialist or
Major program; no minimum GPA required.
Specialist program (Hon.B.A.):
(12 full courses or their equivalent including at least three 300+series courses and at
least one 400-series course)
First Year:
One full course from the following list: ANT 100Y; ECO 100Y/105Y; ENG 140Y; FRE 140Y; FSL 121Y/161Y/163H/181Y; GGR 107Y/124Y; POL 102Y/103Y; SOC 101Y
First or Second Year:
1. UNI 220Y; HIS 262Y/263Y
2. One full course equivalent from FSL 161Y/163H/181Y/183H/261Y/262Y/264Y/281Y; ABS 210Y/310Y
Higher Years:
1. UNI 320Y, 420Y
2. Any four full course equivalents from one of the themes listed below plus two courses
from any of the themes and/or from any ABS course
Major program (B.A.):
(8 full courses or their equivalent including at least two 300+series courses)
First Year:
One full course from the following list: ANT 100Y; ECO 100Y/105Y; ENG 140Y; FRE 140Y; FSL 121Y/161Y/163H/181Y; GGR 107Y/124Y; POL 102Y/103Y; SOC 101Y
First or Second Year:
UNI 220Y; HIS 262Y/263Y
Higher Years:
1. UNI 320Y
2. Four full course equivalents from one of the themes listed below, one of which must be
a 300+series courses
Minor program (B.A.):
(4 full courses)
1. One full course from the following list: ANT 100Y; ECO 100Y/105Y; ENG 140Y; FRE 140Y; FSL 121Y/161Y/163H/181Y; GGR 107Y/124Y; POL 102Y/103Y; SOC 101Y
2. UNI 220Y; HIS 262Y/263Y
3. UNI 320Y
THE CANADIAN CULTURAL EXPERIENCE
ANT204Y Social and Cultural Anthropology
ANT323H Expressions of Popular Culture
ANT365Y Aboriginal Societies of North America
DRM268H Canadian Theatre History
ECO321Y Canadian Economic History Since 1500
ECO323Y Canadian Economic Development since
Confederation
ENG215H The Canadian Short Story
ENG216Y Twentieth Century Canadian Fiction
ENG252Y Canadian Literature
ENG254Y Contemporary Native North American Literature
ENG350H Early Canadian Literature
ENG354Y Modern Canadian Poetry
ENG356H Topics in Canadian Literature
FAH376H Canadian Architecture: A Survey
FAH377H Toronto Architecture
FAH415H Problems in Canadian Painting c.1900-c.1940
FCS398H Diaries of Women Writers in France and Québec
GGR240Y Historical Geography of the Americas
GGR246H Geography of Canada
HIS312H Immigration to Canada
HIS361Y Twentieth-Century Canada
HIS387H Ontario 1867-1900
HIS409H Culture, Nationality and the State in Canada:
Since 1850
HIS410H Spectacles, Crowds and Parades in Canada
HIS419Y Canadian Popular Culture, 1880 to the Present
HIS462H Canadian Political Tradition: MacDonald to
Chrétien
HIS464Y The Canadian Prairie West
HIS469H Religion, Culture and Society in Canada
HIS472H Canadian Aboriginal/Non-Aboriginal Relations
HIS493H Cultural Encounters in Early Canada
INI202Y The Canadian Experience
INI385H English-Canadian Film
ITA233Y Ethnicity & Mainstream: Italian Canadian
Culture
ITA334H Italian Canadian Literature: Identity and Voice
ITA493H Topics in Italian Canadian Studies
JAL253H Language and Society
JAL254H Sociolinguistics
LIN201H Canadian English
POL311Y Ideas and Ideologies in Canadian Politics
POL407Y Canadian Political Thought
RLG307Y Religion and Society in Canada
SMC320H The Catholic Church in Canada
SLA238H Literature of the Ukrainian-Canadian Experience
SOC360Y The Sociology of Cultural Studies
UNI218H Voices in Canadian Writing
UNI221H Culture and the Media in Canada
UNI311H The Political Economy of Canadian Sport
UNI330Y Intellect and Imagination in English Canada
UNI335H The National Film Board of Canada
UNI430H Senior Seminar: Rights in the Canadian Context
THE FRENCH PRESENCE IN CANADA
ECO321Y Canadian Economic History since 1500
ECO323Y Canadian Economic Development since
Confederation
FAH376H Canadian Architecture: A Survey
FAH415H Problems in Canadian Painting
FCS398H Diaries of Women Writers in France and Québec
FRE210Y Introduction to Québec Literature and Culture
FRE310H Québec Novel I: From the Land to the City
FRE312H Québec Novel II: The Quiet Revolution
FRE314H Québec Novel III: Contemporary Directions
FRE315H Québec Theatre I: Gelinas, Dube, Tremblay
FRE317H Québec Theatre II: Contemporary Directions
FRE410H Advanced Topics in Québec Studies
FRE411H Advanced Topics in Québec Studies
FRE434H Native Authors in Québec
FRE479H French Sociolinguistics
GGR392H Research Methods in Historical Geography
HIS314Y Québec and French Canada
HIS362Y New France
HIS409H Culture, Nationality and the State in Canada:
Since 1850
HIS413H French-English Relations in Canada
HIS493H Cultural Encounters in Early Canada
INI386H Québec Cinema
POL214Y Canadian Government and Politics
POL304Y Ethnicity and Politics in Canada
POL316Y Contemporary Canadian Federalism
POL334Y Québec Politics and Social Change
RLG307Y Religion and Society in Canada
UNI201H Aspects of Québec Society
UNI202H Aspects of Québec Culture
CANADA IN INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
ECO230Y International Economic Institutions and Policy
ECO321Y Canadian Economic History since 1500
ECO323Y Canadian Economic Development since
Confederation
ECO328Y International Economics
ENV200Y Assessing Global Change: Science and the
Environment
GGR240Y Historical Geography of the Americas
GGR314H Global Warming
GGR340H Regionalism in Canada
GGR435H Technology, Toronto and Global Warming
HIS311Y Introduction to Canadian International Relations
HIS405Y Canadian Foreign Relations
JHP420Y Canadian & International Foreign Policy
INI494H Politics of the Environment
POL312Y Canadian Foreign Policy
POL347Y Public Policy and the Environment: North and
South
POL445Y Canada and the Third World
POL474H Politics and Policy Analysis
UNI303H Canada and Mexico
PLURALISM AND ETHNICITY IN CANADA
ANT365Y Aboriginal Societies of North America
ANT448H Identity, Ethnicity and Culture
ENG254Y Contemporary Native North American Literature
ENG356H Topics in Canadian Literature
FIN320H The Finnish Canadian Immigrant Experience
GGR364H Historical Geography of Ethnic Groups in Canada
HIS312H Immigration to Canada
HIS369Y Aboriginal Peoples of the Great Lakes
HIS409Y Culture, Nationality and the State in Canada:
Since 1850
ITA233Y Ethnicity and Mainstream: Italian Canadian
Culture
ITA334H Italian Canadian Literature: Identity and Voice
ITA493H Topics in Italian Canadian Studies
POL304Y Ethnicity and Politics in Canada
POL321H Ethnic Politics in Comparative Perspective
RLG397H Religion and Society in Canada
SLA238H Literature of the Ukrainian-Canadian Experience
SMC413H The Irish in Canada
SOC210Y Ethnicity in Social Organization
SOC330Y Comparative Ethnic Relations
UNI304H Ethnicity and Race in Canada
UNI315Y First Nations Perspective on Canada
UNI317Y Politics of Aboriginal Self Government
THE SOCIAL STRUCTURE OF CANADA
ANT342Y Kinship, Marriage and Family
GGR240Y Historical Geography of the Americas
GGR246H Geography of Canada
GGR323H Issues in Population Geography
GGR327H Social Research Methods
GGR336H Urban Historical Geography of North America
GGR357H Geography of Housing and Housing Policy
GGR364H Historical Geography of Ethnic Groups in Canada
GGR455H Women in the City
GGR459H Urban Form, Structure and Growth
HIS312H Immigration to Canada
HIS313Y Canadian Labour and the Left
HIS350Y The Social History of the Family
HIS361Y Twentieth-Century Canada
HIS363H Dynamics of Gender in Canadian History
HIS410H Spectacles, Crowds and Parades in Canada
HIS460H Directed Research in the History of Medicine in
Canada
HIS462H Canadian Political Tradition: MacDonald to
Chrétien
HIS463H The History of Health in Canada
POL209Y Rethinking Government in Canada
POL304Y Ethnicity and Politics in Canada
POL314Y Public Opinion and Voting
POL474H Politics and Political Analysis
RLG307Y Religion and Society in Canada
SMC320H The Catholic Church in Canada
SOC205Y Urban Sociology
SOC220Y Social Inequality in Canada
SOC369Y The Canadian Community
SOC401Y Advanced Seminar
UNI303H Canada and Mexico
UNI304H Ethnicity and Race in Canada
UNI311H The Political Economy of Canadian Sport
UNI315Y First Nations Perspective on Canada
UNI317Y Politics of Aboriginal Self Government
THE CANADIAN ENVIRONMENT
ANT315H Arctic Archaeology
ANT450H Environment and Culture
ANT453H Subarctic Issues
BOT430H Ecological Plant Geography and Palynology
ECO313H Environmental Economics and Policies
ECO314H Energy and Resource Economics
ENV221Y Approaches to Environmental Issues I
ENV234Y Environmental Biology
ENV236Y Human Interactions with the Environment
ENV321Y Approaches to Environmental Issues II
ENV421H Environmental Research
FOR200H Conservation and Management of World Forests I
GGR233Y Environmental Management for Sustainable
Development
GGR314H Global Warming
GGR331H Resource and Environmental Theory
GGR393H Environmental Impact Assessment
GGR415H Resource and Environmental Planning
GGR418H Resource and Industry
GGR435H Technology, Toronto and Global Warming
GLG216H Dynamic Geology
HIS318Y Canadian Environmental History
HIS463H The History of Health in Canada
INI320Y Canadian Environmental Issues
INI494H Politics of the Environment
INI495H Economics and Environmental Issues
JFG328H Conservation and Management of Canadas
Forests
JGG150Y The Earth Sciences
JIE410H Environmental Research Skills
PHL273H Environmental Ethics
PHL373H Issues in Environmental Ethics
POL347Y Public Policy and the Environment: North and
South
THE REGIONAL STRUCTURE OF CANADA
ANT315H Arctic Archaeology
BIO302H Arctic Ecosystems
ECO236H Public Finance and Public Policy in Canada
ECO319H Regional Economics
ENG215H The Canadian Short Story
ENG216Y Twentieth Century Canadian Fiction
ENG252Y Canadian Literature
GGR246H Geography of Canada
GGR326H Industrial Location: Theory, Applications and
Policy
GGR340H Regionalism in Canada
HIS314Y Québec and French Canada
HIS362Y New France
HIS369Y Aboriginal Peoples of the Great Lakes
HIS387H Ontario 1867-1990
HIS464Y The Canadian Prairie West
HIS468H Atlantic Canada
POL214Y Canadian Government and Politics
POL316Y Contemporary Canadian Federalism
POL333Y Comparative Provincial Politics
POL334Y Québec Politics and Social Change
POL336H Ontario Politics
POL473H Local Government in Canada
SOC220Y Social Inequality in Canada
SOC369Y The Canadian Community
UNI302H The Canadian North
UNI315Y First Nations Perspective on Canada
UNI317Y Politics of Aboriginal Self-Government
COGNITIVE SCIENCE (B.A.)
Consult Program Director, Room 173, University College, 978-8746.
Enrolment in the program is limited; admission requires 1) 63% or better in JUP 250Y; 2) completion of LIN
100Y and two other full courses or their equivalent; and 3) a GPA of 2.0. Students
enroled in this program will be permitted to take the PSY courses listed in this program
without taking PSY 100Y. Students should explore
combining this program with a Major in Linguistics, Philosophy, or Psychology.
Specialist program (Hon.B.A.):
(12 full courses or their equivalent, including at least one 400-series course)
First Year:
CSC 108H; JUP 250Y; LIN 100Y; PHL 240H
Second Year:
LIN 228H; PHL 245H/246H/247H, 351H; PSY 201H/STA 220H/250H; PSY 270H, 210H/280H/290H
Third and Fourth Years:
1. Psychology: PSY 370H; two of
312H/316H/371H/372H/377H/380H/393H
2. Linguistics: JLP 374H; two of JLP 315H/471H/LIN 323H/372H/423H
3. Philosophy: PHL 342H; two of PHL 325H/326H/340H/344H/345H/347H/349H/479H/480H/481H
4. 1.5 additional full course equivalents from among the above listed courses not yet
taken, or from the following list: PSY 379H, 389H, 392H, 396H, 410H, 472H, 473H. (With the
permission of the Program Director, the following may also be counted: LIN 495Y-499H; PHL 490Y, 496H-499H; PSY 303H, 304H, 400Y, 401H-404H, 470H, 471H, 480H, 490H.)
NOTE: Some courses listed in the paragraph above have prerequisites or recommended
preparation not included in this program. JLP courses are Social Science courses; students
who take two JLP half-courses will have satisfied their Social Science distribution
requirement. Students interested in speech recognition should take LIN 323H and 423H; in
cognitive development PSY 210H, 312H, 410H, and JLP 315H; in the brain PHL
340H, PSY 290H, 391H,
393H, and 490H; in
perception PSY 280H, 380H,
and 480H; in language and thought PHL 350H, 450H, and LIN 372H; in psycholinguistics JLP 315H and 471H; in
thinking and reasoning PHL 247H, PSY 372H, 472H, and 473H.
Major program (B.A.):
(7 full courses or their equivalent)
Enrolment in the program is limited; admission requires 1) 63% or better in JUP 250Y; 2) completion of LIN
100Y and two other full courses or their equivalent; and 3) a GPA of 2.0. Students
enroled in this program will be permitted to take the PSY courses listed in this program
without taking PSY 100Y. Students should explore
combining this program with a Major in Computer Science, Linguistics, Philosophy, or
Psychology.
First Year:
JUP 250Y; LIN 100Y; PHL 240H, 245H/246H/247H
Second Year:
PSY 201H/STA 220H/250H; PSY 270H; PSY 270H, 210H/280H/290H
Second and Higher Years:
1. Psychology: PSY 312H/316H/370H/371H/372H/377H/380H/393H/410H
2. Linguistics: JLP 374H; LIN
228H/372H/JLP 315H
3. Philosophy: Two of PHL 325H/326H/340H/342H/344H/345H/347H/349H/351H/377H/479H/480H/481H
COGNITIVE SCIENCE AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE (Hon.B.Sc.)
Consult Program Director, Room 173, University College, 978-8746.
Enrolment in the program is limited; admission requires at least 1) 63% in CSC 148H; 2) 63% in JUP 250Y;
and 3) a GPA of 2.0. Students enroled in this program will be permitted to take the PSY
courses listed in this program without taking PSY 100Y.
Students should explore combining this program with a Major in Computer Science,
Linguistics, Philosophy or Psychology.
Specialist program:
(13 full courses or their equivalent, including at least one 400-series course)
First Year:
CSC 108H, 148H; JUP 250Y; MAT 133Y/135Y/137Y/157Y
Second Year:
CSC 238H, 270H; PHL 340H; PSY 270H
Second and Higher Years:
1. CSC 324H, 384H, 401H/485H/486H/487H; JLP 374H
2. Two of the following course sequences:
a) Psychology Stream: PSY 201H/STA 220H/250H, PSY 210H/280H/290H, 370H, two of
312H/316H/371H/372H/380H/391H/392H/393H
b) Linguistics Stream: LIN 100Y, 228H; two of JLP 315H/LIN 323H/372H/423H
c) Philosophy Stream: PHL 246H/247H/351H, 342H, 479H/480H/481H; two of PHL (325H/326H)/344H(or CSC 438H/MAT 309H)/345H/347H/349H/351H
3. One additional full course equivalent from among the above listed courses not yet
taken, or from the following list: CSC 318H, 340H, 364H, 378H, 428H, 448H, 465H; JLP 471H; PSY 379H, 389H, 392H, 396H, 410H, 472H, 473H. (With
permission of the Program Director, the following may also be counted: CSC 494H, 495H; LIN 495Y-499H; PHL 490Y, 496H-499H; PSY 303H, 304H, 400Y, 401H-404H, 470H, 471H, 480H, 490H.)
NOTE: Some courses listed in the paragraph above have prerequisites or recommended
preparation not included in this program. JLP courses are Social Science courses; students
who take two JLP half-courses will have satisfied their Social Science distribution
requirement. Students interested in speech recognition should take LIN 228H, 323H, and 423H; in cognitive development PSY 312H, 410H and JLP 315H; in the brain PHL
340H, PSY 290H, 391H,
393H, and 490H; in
perception PSY 280H, 380H,
480H and CSC 487H; in
language and thought PHL 350H, 450H; LIN 372H, and CSC 485H; in psycholinguistics JLP 315H and 471H; in
thinking and reasoning PHL 247H, PSY 471H, 472H, 473H, and CSC 486H.
DRAMA See under separate entry DRM
PEACE AND CONFLICT STUDIES (B.A.)
Consult Professor T. Homer-Dixon, Room H01, University College, 978-8148.
Enrolment in the Specialist and Major programs is limited; selection is based on a
personal interview and GPA in the first four university courses taken.The Director
approves each students proposed program of study based on its relevance, coherence
and focus.
Specialist program (Hon.B.A.):
(12 full courses or their equivalent, including at least one 400-series course)
1. HIS 103Y/ECO 100Y/105Y; PSY 100Y/SOC 101Y; POL 208Y
2. UNI 260Y, 360Y, JUP 460Y
3. Three courses from one of Group A, Group B, Group C or Group D (below); at least one
course must be at the 300+ series level
4. Three complementary courses with either a disciplinary, regional, or thematic focus
relevant to Peace and Conflict Studies (on approval of the Director); at least one must be
at the 300+ level
Disciplinary focus:
3 courses from one of ANT, ECO, GGR and Environmental Studies (combined), HIS, HPS, PHL,
POL, PSY, RLG, SOC. (Note: HIS is excluded for students who have taken 3 HIS courses in 3.
above; POL is excluded for students who have taken 3 POL courses in 3. above.)
Regional Studies focus:
3 courses on, for example, Canada, Southern Africa, the Middle East, or Latin America.
Thematic focus:
3 courses on a topic such as negotiation and conflict resolution, diplomatic history,
gender and conflict, morality of war, quantitative analysis, group-identity conflict,
economic development and conflict, or environmental change and conflict.
Group A: HIS 101Y, 103Y, 106Y, 232Y, 241H, 242H, 243H, 244H, 250Y, 251Y, 271Y, 300H, 305H, 306Y, 311Y, 317Y, 330Y, 333Y, 334Y, 343Y, 344Y, 345H, 351Y, 355H, 356H, 372Y, 377Y, 379H, 396Y, 398Y, 401Y, 405Y, 407Y, 409Y, 412H, 421Y, 424Y, 444Y, 445Y, 453H, 458Y, 473Y, 479Y, 482Y, 488Y, 492Y; JHP 419Y, 420Y; JMC 201Y
Group B: JPE 400Y; JHP 420Y; JPJ 464H; POL 108Y, 201Y, 204Y, 242Y, 300H, 301Y, 304Y, 305Y, 310Y, 312Y, 313Y, 321Y, 323Y, 324Y, 326Y, 340Y, 342H, 343Y, 346Y, 405Y, 412H, 413H, 416Y, 417Y, 419Y, 422Y, 435H, 437Y, 445Y, 454Y, 459Y, 464H, 465H, 479H
Group C: ENV 200Y, 221Y, 234Y, 235Y, 236Y, 321Y; GGR 107Y, 124Y, 203H, 220Y, 233Y, 239H, 312H, 314H, 323H, 327H, 331H, 343H, 344H, 348H, 393H, 402H, 409H; INI 422H
Group D: ANT 100Y, 204Y, 329Y, 340H, 341H, 343Y, 349H, 363Y, 367H, 425H, 427H, 440H, 441H, 448H, 450H; JAL 253H, 254H; JAP 356H; SOC 205Y, 210Y, 212Y, 213Y, 215Y, 220Y, 250Y, 301Y, 306Y, 312Y, 320Y, 330Y, 340Y, 355Y, 356Y, 360Y, 365Y, 385Y, 386Y
Major program (B.A.):
(7 full courses or their equivalent)
1. HIS 103Y/ECO 100Y/105Y; PSY 100Y/SOC 101Y; POL 208Y
2. UNI 260Y, 360Y
3. Two complementary courses, at least one of which must be at the 300+ series level,
from:
ECO 230Y, GGR 239H, HIS 241H, 242H, 300H, 343Y, 344Y, 377Y, 401Y, 412H, 445Y, 482Y; HPS 306H; JPJ 464H; PHL 278H; POL 201Y, 304Y, 310Y, 313Y, 321H, 323Y, 326Y, 340Y, 408Y, 417Y, 437Y, 454Y; PSY 220H, 320H, 408H, 409H; RLG 100Y; SOC 210Y, 330Y, 340Y; or alternative courses on the approval of the Program
Director
JOINT INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS PROGRAM/PEACE AND CONFLICT STUDIES PROGRAM
See TRN
SEXUAL DIVERSITY STUDIES (B.A.)
Consult Program Director, Professor David Townsend, Room 307, 39 Queens Park
Crescent East (978-6776).
Completion of four courses is required for enrolment in the Sexual Diversity Studies
program. The Students enroling in the program should confer with the Program Director at
their earliest convenience. The Director will assign each student a faculty advisor.
Minor program (B.A.):
(4 full courses or their equivalent)
1. UNI 255H
2. At least one of UNI 355H/POL 315H
3. Three full course equivalents (or 2.5 courses if both UNI
355H and POL 315H are taken) drawn from the
following: ANT 323H, 343Y,
366Y; ENG 290Y; FAH 435H (ERI); FCS 397H;
GGR 455H; HIS C10Y (SCA); HIS
430Y; JAL 355H; NEW
261Y, 374H; PHE 403H;
PHL 243H, 267H; POL 344Y; PSY 323H; SOC 214Y, 309Y, 333Y, 369Y; UNI 393Y, 394H; VIC 343Y; VIS 202H, 208H, 209H, 302H; WDW 380H
NOTE: At least one full course equivalent of the four courses must be at the 300+ level.
Additional courses may be approved by the Program Director on an individual basis.
Students are responsible for checking co- and prerequisites for courses listed under 3.
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