Biola_Catalog_19780101NA

Department of Intercultural Studies

FACULTY Professor: Cook (chairperson) Associate Professors: Corwin, Kraft, Kwast, Murphy

Objectives: The objectives of the lntercultural Studies Department are to enable every student to demonstrate a knowledge and understanding of the theological , historical, sociological, anthropological, and linguistic issues of the cross-cultural communication of the Gospel; to enable every student to demonstrate a personal responsibility to the mandate given by the Lord Jesus Christ to make disciples of every nation; to enable every student to understand man and culture, to increase his or her understanding of linguistic and cultural diversity, to relate more meaningfully to peoples with a different linguistic and cultural background, and to be encouraged to analyze and understand intercultural problems and develop Christian perspectives toward these problems; to enable every student completing the major to demonstrate competency as a career missionary in the areas of theology, sociology, history, anthropology, and linguistics as they relate to missions; to make available an information center which will answer inquiries concerning missions; to demonstrate that all those in the department are obedient to the Lord, as evidenced by the fruit of the Spirit in their lives, so that they will carry out His program of discipling all peoples. Department Major: This major is an interdisciplinary major and consists of 30 units, of which 24 must be upper-division. !CS 200, 311 , 451 , 452, and 462 are required. Theology 468 is required as a supporting course. The remaining 15 units must be selected from the following: lntercultural studies: Any course. Communications: 233, 254, 310, 333, 334, 335, 352, 475, 478. Geography: 302, 310. History: 310, 311 , 312, 319, 321 , 322, 405, 409, 410, 411, 412, 413, 415, 416, 419. Psychology: 206, 210, 301 , 302, 308, 312, 405, 418. Sociology: 261 , 342, 346, 349, 352, 354, 355, 362, 363, 364, 402.

200 GENERAL CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY (3) Nature of culture; cultural growth and history; the range of cultural phenomena, including material culture, social organization, religion , language, and related topics. 303 ETHNOLOGY (3) Principal culture types and their distribution; discussions of ethnological problems; techniques of analyzing a culture. Prerequisite: 300. 311 GENERAL LINGUISTICS (3) Descriptive and historical study of language; linguistic analysis, language classifications, language and its cultural and social settings. 312 PHONETICS (3) The science of the articulate sounds of human speech; the classification, reproduction, and the proper recording of speech sounds; principles of phonetic change. 314 APPLIED LINGUISTICS (3) Application of linguistics in learning to speak a second language. Focus on the language learner, techniques for language learning, evaluation of materials, organization of materials, evaluation of progress. Practical experience with a non-European language. Prerequisite: 311 or 312. 315, 316 ELEMENTARY SELF-INSTRUCTIONAL LANGUAGE (4,4) Study of a particular non-Western language designed to give oral competence equivalent to the first year of formal study. Languages offered are dependent on audiolingually-oriented course material and native-speaking students' availability.

317, 318 INTERMEDIATE SELF-INSTRUCTIONAL LANGUAGE (4,4) Study of a particular non-Western language designed to give oral competence equivalent to the second year of formal study. Languages offered are dependent on audiolingually-oriented course material and native-speaking

students' availability. Prerequisite: 315, 316. 320 PEOPLES OF THE WORLD (3)

Specific area studies with emphasis on customs, arts, history, religion, social structures. One or more sections offered every year in areas such as: Africa, Asia, the Americas, the South Pacific, Europe. May be repeated with different course content. 411 PHONOLOGY (3) Properties of phonological systems; feature and component analysis; emphasis on methods of reducing non-lndo­ European languages to writing. Prerequisite: 311 and 312. 415, 416 MORPHOLOGY AND SYNTAX (3,3) Several forms of grammar; principles of word and sentence formation. Prerequisite: 311. 421 RELIGION IN ANTHROPOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE (3) Religion (emphasis on non-Western) from an anthropological perspective. Prerequisite: 200 or 320. 422 ETHNOLINGUISTICS (3) Areas of common concern for anthropology and linguistics: folklore , bilingualism, translation , language and logic, indigenous music. Prerequisite: 200 and 311 .

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