Dance Minor. Z5. New Undergraduate Program Proposal (degree, major, minor, licensure, or endorsement)

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Dance Minor Z5. New Undergraduate Program Proposal 2018-2019 (degree, major, minor, licensure, or endorsement) General Information Please complete a separate form for each request. Note that new degree or major programs or program changes of 50% or more require approval by the Ohio Department of Higher Education (ODHE). There are 3 forms that are required: 1) ODHE initial inquiry form (this should be submitted to the Provost's Office after review by the College Dean); 2) ODHE proposal form (this should be submitted after the approval of the Undergraduate Curriculum Committee); and 3) the WSU new program financial impact form. The required forms can be found online at: http://policy.wright.edu/policy/4210- undergraduate-ohio-department-higher-education-odhe-program-approval-forms. Concentrations are tied to a major. New concentrations can be proposed by using the Undergraduate Program Modification form to list the new concentration and requirements within a current major. INSTRUCTIONS Select "Program" from the radio box below, then complete the information requested for type of program, approving department, and program name. Program Type (Select "Program")* Program Shared Core Type of Request** New degree designation (A.S., B.A., B.F.A., etc.) and major New major within an existing degree New minor New licensure program or endorsement New programs and degrees have additional ODHE requirements which are available on the University Policy website: http://policy.wright.edu. Educator Preparation Programs (additional ODHE requirements will be identified by the College of Education and Human Services) Approval Route For the following programs, please select "University Programs" from the list of departments and programs below: Honors, Air Force Studies, and Army Studies. Department or Program (for approval process)* Theatre, Dance and Motion Pictures Title: Major, Degree or Area of Study Credential Examples: English, BA or Reading License Title* Dance Minor Launch the proposal. Approve the proposal using the decision button.

TIPS FOR NEW USERS Turn the help text on by clicking on the following icon. All fields with an asterisk (*) are required fields. If left blank, the request will not be launched and cannot be acted upon. Supporting documents and additional information may be attached using the button located at the top of this form. College* Liberal Arts, College of Catalog Display Select the primary College or Department. Do not select a program. This information will determine where a program displays in the catalog. A program may display in only one location, under either a College or Department. College or Department (for catalog display)* Theatre, Dance and Motion Pictures Published Program Length (in Years)* 4 Collaboration with another department, college, program or institution? Yes No If yes, please list Requested Effective Term* Fall Spring Summer Year* 2018 Where Offered? (check all that apply)* Dayton Campus Lake Campus Off-Campus in Ohio Off-Campus outside Ohio Off-Campus outside U.S. If this program is offered Off- Campus, specify the location(s) Is 50% or more of the program offered Off- Campus?* Yes No If program will be offered offcampus, how will services be available to students? Mode of Delivery* Face-to-face

Fully Online Mostly Online (less than 50% offered face-to-face) Program Description The information entered below will appear in the catalog as submitted. Please include information using the following four headings (in order). Click on "format" in the edit box below and select "Heading 2" for each heading listed. Select the "normal" format for the body of text under each heading. Program Description Admission Requirements Program Learning Outcomes (see examples below) For more information visit: (include the department website) Program Learning Outcomes Examples: History graduates should be able to: write proficiently, understand the methodology that historians use, and analyze primary sources and secondary works in order to arrive at a coherent and well-organized conclusion. Biomedical Engineering graduates should have the ability to: apply knowledge of mathematics, science and engineering design and conduct experiments and to analyze and interpret data design a system, component, or process to meet desired needs within realistic constraints function on multi-disciplinary teams Program Description, Admission Program Description Requriements, Learning A minor in dance is a secondary concentration of study designed for Outcomes and Program/Department/Collecge students who wish to take supplemental dance courses in dance technique, Links* choreography, dance history and dance kinesiology. One technique class of modern, ballet or jazz per semester may be taken. Technique class may be taken with other supplemental classes such as choreography, dance history and kinesiology. Acceptance into the dance minor program is based on a dance audition scheduled with the dance faculty. Admission Requirements Students must pass a dance audition in ballet, modern and jazz Program Learning Outcomes Dance proficiently in ballet, modern and jazz Acquire a basic knowledge of dance history and the influence of landmark dance figures Understand the foundational tools of choreography in the application of an original choreographic work For more information visit: www.wright.edu/tdmp Program Requirements:

Use the following template when creating program requirements. Each of the following headings is called a "core" in the template. The information entered will appear in the catalog as submitted. Wright State Core Requirements Required courses Elective courses Other requirements (if applicable) Total: # Hours (REQUIRED) Undergraduate programs must be 120 credit hours. A minor is made up of at least 12 credit hours. For additional information, please refer to the policies for Academic Standards and Curriculum at http://policy.wright.edu. Program Requirements:* Wright State Core Requirements None Required. Required Courses (14 hours) DAN 1320 Intermediate Jazz I 2 hours DAN 2110 Modern Dance II 3 hours DAN 2510 Dance History I 1 hour DAN 3410 Choreography I 2 hours DAN 3990 Studies In Selected Subjects * DAN - 3990, section 7, Ballet for Minors, 2 credit hours must be taken three times for a total of 6 hours. Elective Courses (6 hours) DAN 1110 Modern Dance I DAN 1120 Modern Dance I DAN 2070 Beginning Tap Dance I DAN 2310 Intermediate Jazz II DAN 2320 Intermediate Jazz II DAN 2520 Dance History II DAN 3070 Intermediate Tap Dance I DAN 3420 Choreography II DAN 3710 Dance Kinesiology DAN 4070 Advanced Tap Dance I Other Requirements Students audition for acceptance. Students must maintain a minimum 2.5 GPA in all dance courses.

Total: 20 Hours Do you want students to be able to select this major or minor in WINGS Express?* Yes No A Graduation Planning Strategy (GPS) is required for all undergraduate degree programs. Department chairs: Use the space below to paste the GPS proposal form url (web link from the GPS proposal form). GPS url Faculty/Program Staffing Name Teressa Wylie McWilliams Discipline Dance Title Professor/Head of Dance Program Describe the credentialing requirements for faculty teaching in the program (degree requirements, special certifications of licenses, experience, etc.) Must be an adjunct or full time professor in the Dance Program of Department of Theatre, Dance and Motion Pictures with a Bachelor of Fine Arts, Master of Fine Arts or equivalent teaching and professional experience in dance. Additional information, if needed College of Liberal Arts Department of Theatre, Dance and Motion Pictures Dance Program Resources and Facilities Describe additional resources None required.

FOR NEW DEGREES OR MAJORS ONLY: Note that new degrees and majors require approval by the Ohio Department of Higher Education (ODHE). An Initial Inquiry form should be submitted to the Provost after college curriculum committee approval and the ODHE New Degree/Major form should be submitted to the Provost after approval by the Undergraduate Curriculum Committee to allow adequate time for review. Please attach both completed forms to this workflow. Forms are available under the Curriculum Development heading on the University Policy website: http://policy.wright.edu. A Graduation Planning Strategy (GPS) must also be submitted with this proposal. The GPS proposal is a separate expedited process and will automatically upload into the appropriate catalog. Program Assessment Describe the policies and procedures in place to assess and evaluate the proposed program. Please include: responsible position/unit/group, description of measurements used, frequency of data collection and sharing, how the results are used to inform students as they progress through the program, and initiatives used to track student success after program completion. Program Assessment Measuring Student Success Describe the policies and procedures in place to measure individual student success in the proposed program. Please include: responsible position/unit/group, description of measurements used, frequency of data collection and sharing, how the results are used to inform the students as they progress through the program, and initiatives used to track student success after program completion Student Success

Are additional faculty needed to support this program?* Yes No If yes, provide a timeline for hiring. Provide the number of existing faculty members available to teach in the proposed degree/major. Full-time Less than Fulltime Provide an estimate of the number of faculty members to be added during the first two years of program operation Full-time Less than Fulltime Administrative Data To be completed after the Board of Trustees Approval Resolution Number Date of Approval To be completed by Financial Aid Eligible for Title IV funding: Yes No To be completed by Budget CIP Code CIP Code Name To be completed by Registrar Approved Effective Term Fall Spring Summer Year Banner Program Name Banner Program Code Banner Major Name Banner Major Code Degree Type Special Program Indicator Special Admission Associate Degree Program (A) Bachelor's Degree Completion Program (B) Preparatory Coursework Undergraduate (U) Program Type for Acalog

Political Science, BA Z2. Program Modification Proposal 2018-2019 (modify, deactivate, or add a new concentration) v.2 General Catalog Information INSTRUCTIONS for proposal originators Select "Program" from the radio box below, then complete the information requested for level, curriculum approval committee, type of program, and applicable change requests. Program Type (Select "Program")* Program Shared Core Level** Undergraduate Graduate Curriculum Approval Committee** Undergraduate Committee Graduate Committee A (COSM, CECS, CONH, BSOM) Graduate Committee B (RSCOB, CEHS, COLA, SOPP) Approval Route Choose one or more departments below. For educator preparation programs include the Teacher Education department. For interdisciplinary programs include all departments required for program approval. For Honors, Air Force Studies, and Army Studies, please select "University Programs" from the list of departments and programs below. Department or Program (for approval process)* School of Public and International Affairs Type of Program** Graduate program in an existing degree Undergraduate major in an existing degree Undergraduate Minor Concentration (new or modified) Certificate Licensure Program or Endorsement Select one or more of the following (determines approval routing):** Request 50% or more of program be offered online Request 50% or more of program be offered off-campus Request to offer program at a different WSU campus Request a name change for an UG degree program, major, minor, concentration, or certificate Request a name change for a GR degree program, major, minor, concentration, or certificate Request a new concentration in an existing major/program Request to deactivate any program (degree, major, minor, certificate, concentration, license, or endorsement) Above options do not apply Import the program data using the import button changes to imported information before launching. above. Do not make any

Launch the proposal, then make changes. IMPORTANT: Be sure to LAUNCH the proposal using the arrow button above BEFORE you make changes (modify an existing program). If you do not launch the program, your changes will NOT be tracked and a new proposal will be required. Approve the proposal using the decision button. Submit program title changes as a modification and submit a separate deactivate request for the program title to be inactivated. If the deactivate request is not submitted both programs (old title and new title) remain active and will appear in the catalog. Program title changes should be approved at least 60 days before the requested effective date to allow ample time for approval by the Ohio Department of Higher Education. TIPS FOR NEW USERS Turn the help text on by clicking on the following icon. All fields with an asterisk (*) are required fields. Supporting documents and additional information may be attached using the button located at the top of this form but supporting documents do not replace the required fields in the proposal form. Please complete a separate form for each request. Note that new degree programs or changes of 50% or more require approval by the Ohio Department of Higher Education (ODHE) and must use the New Program approval proposal form. Concentrations are tied to a major. New concentrations can be proposed by using this Program Modification form to list the new concentration and requirements within a current major or graduate program. Action* Modify (less than 50% change) Deactivate Educator Preparation Programs (additional ODHE requirements will be identified by the College of Education and Human Services) Title: Major/Program, Degree or Area of Study Credential Examples: English, BA or Reading License Title* Political Science, BA College* Liberal Arts, College of Catalog Display Select the primary College or Department. Do not select a program. This information will determine where a program displays in the catalog. A program may display in only one location, under either a College or Department. College or Department (for catalog display)* School of Public and International Affairs Requested Effective Term* Fall Spring Year* 2018

Summer Note: If 50% or more of the program is offered off-campus, mostly on-line, or fully online, ODHE approval and HLC notification is required. Where is the program offered? (check all that apply)* Dayton Campus Lake Campus Off-Campus in Ohio Off-Campus outside Ohio Off-Campus outside of the U.S. Fully online Mostly online (less than 50% offered face-to-face) If 50% or more offered offcampus or online, describe all delivery and location options If a change in location (adding or deleting locations), describe change(s) and if 50% or more of program is offered at each location. Change in location If program will be offered offcampus, how will services be available to students (advising, tutoring, counseling, financial aid, etc.)? Program Description The information entered will appear in the catalog as submitted. Please include information using the following four headings (Heading 2 format, in the order provided below) for consistent presentation in the catalog. Program Description Admission Requirements

Program Learning Outcomes (see examples below) For more information visit: (include the department website) Program Learning Outcomes Examples: History graduates will be able to: write proficiently, understand the methodology that historians use, and analyze primary sources and secondary works in order to arrive at a coherent and well-organized conclusion. Program Description and Learning Outcomes* Admission Requirements: Students can be admitted into the College of Liberal Arts after completing ENG 1100 or ENG 1140 with a grade of C or OR by completing at least two other Wright State Core courses taught by the College with a grade of C or higher. Program Description: Students of political science study governments: how they evolve, why they exist, the forms and social functions they assume, why they change, and who controls them. To understand governments, students of political science also study politics: how people behave in their relationship to government, what they do to influence government, and how government attempts to influence people's behavior and beliefs about what it does. Students of politics also must appreciate how cultural, historical, and economic forces affect the evolution of governments and mass political behavior. The Bachelor of Arts program in political science focuses on three areas of instruction: a. American politics, including legislative and executive institutions, political parties and interest groups, public administration, public opinion and elections, and state and urban government; and also quantitative and qualitative methods of political research. b. International relations and comparative politics, including American foreign policy, European, Latin American, Middle Eastern, Russian, African, and Asian politics; national security policy, terrorism, human rights, and developing political systems; c. Law & courts, and political theory, including public law, judicial politics, constitutional law, criminal justice, civil liberties, and environmental law; and also feminist theory, political philosophy, political ideologies, the history of political thought, and political analysis. The program also allows students to specialize in the area of Law & Government. Students electing this specialty receive extra training in law & courts and American politics, and also take an outside requirement that enhances the specialty. Program Learning Outcomes: Be effective writers Be able to produce analytical work on both domestic and international political issues

Departmental Honors Majors in political science may earn departmental honors by completing the following requirements: a. Achieving a minimum GPA of 3.5 in all political science course work and 3.0 in cumulative, overall course work, b. Attaining senior standing, c. Completing an honors project (20 page minimum) associated with a 4000-level course in political science with a grade of A or B (interested students should contact the chair of the School of Public and International Affairsr for more information). By completing these requirements and the eight-course Honors Program requirement, majors may earn the designation "University Honors Scholar" upon graduation. Interested students should contact the University Honors Program for more information. For additional information: Political Science, BA School of Public and International Affairs College of Liberal Arts Program Requirements: Use the following template when creating program requirements. The information will appear in the catalog as entered. Wright State Core Requirements (Undergraduate programs only) Required courses Elective courses Other requirements (if applicable) Total: # Hours (REQUIRED) Undergraduate programs must be 120 credit hours. A minor is made up of at least 12 credit hours. Undergraduate certificates must be between 12 and 21 credit hours with at least 12 credit hours above the 2000-level. For additional information, please refer to the policies for Academic Standards and Curriculum at http://policy.wright.edu. Masters programs must be a minimum of 30 of credit hours. Doctoral programs should be a minimum of 90 credit hours. Graduate certificate programs must be 9-20 credit hours. For additional information, please refer to the policies in the Graduate Council Manual https://www.wright.edu/graduate-school/graduate-council-manual-graduatecurriculum-procedures. Program Requirements* Program Requirements: I. Wright State Core: 38 Hours Element 1: Communication: 6 Hours

Element 2: Mathematics: 3 Hours Element 3: Global Traditions: 6 Hours Element 4: Arts and Humanities: 3 Hours Element 5: Social Sciences: 6 Hours Required PLS 2000 Power and Politics Element 6: Natural Sciences: 8 Hours Additional Core Courses: 6 Hours II. College Requirements: 18 Hours Foreign Language: 12 Hours Through 2020 level (1010, 1020, 2010, 2020) of one language: Arabic, Spanish, French, German, Greek, Latin, Chinese, American Sign Language or other. Methods of Inquiry PHL 3000 Critical Thinking Research Methods - One course from approved list Credit Hour(s): 3

III. Departmental Requirements: 64 Hours Complete A through D below: A. Core Six credit hours required from the following: PLS 2120 American National Government select one from: PLS 2220 International Politics PLS 2510 Comparative Nonwestern Social Systems B. Area Requirements 18 credit hours required. Choose 6 hours from each of the three areas listed below. Area-I American Government & Politics (6 hours) PLS 3150 Rel. & Politics in America PLS 3210 Metropolitan Politics PLS 3220 State Government PLS 3230 Government of Ohio PLS 3250 African American Politics PLS 3260 Black Women and Politics PLS 3310 Political Parties PLS 3350 The American Presidency PLS 3370 The Legislative Process PLS 3450 Public Administration PLS 3460 Public Personnel Admin. PLS 3470 Am. Pub. Political Analysis PLS 3750 Human Rights in USA PLS 3990 Selected Subjects PLS 4030 Campaign & Elections PLS 4040 Civil Rights Struggles PLS 4200 Politics and The Novel PLS 4250 Metro Studies Seminar PLS 4270 Urban Policy Analysis PLS 4280 National Security Politics PLS 4300 American Gov t. Seminar

PLS 4330 Public Opinion PLS 4340 Political Leadership PLS 4350 Political Corruption PLS 4460 Public Budgeting PLS 4480 Gender Violence Am Pol PLS 4820 Legislative Internship PLS 4822 Congress. District Intern. PLS 4823 Campaign Internship PLS 4824 Local/City Internship PLS 4825 Washington, DC Internship PLS 4900 Independent Reading PLS 4910 Independent Research PLS 4920 Indepen. Field Research* PLS 4930 Contemporary Problems PLS 4940 Special Topics PLS 3100 Quantitative Methods Area-II International and Comparative Politics (6 hours) PLS 3020 Intro. to Comp. Politics PLS 3560 Politics Society France PLS 3700 International Theory PLS 3990 Selected Subjects PLS 4060 Globalization PLS 4490 Gender Violence Int l. Politics PLS 4500 Political Anthropology PLS 4510 Contemp. African Politics PLS 4520 Int l. Human Rights PLS 4530 Soviet Successor States PLS 4540 Politics of the Mid. East PLS 4550 Politics of Iraq PLS 4560 Politics of Europe PLS 4570 Pol. Develop. Nations PLS 4580 Latin American Politics PLS 4590 Contemporary Brazil PLS 4600 Comp. Politics Seminar PLS 4610 Comp. Social Movements PLS 4620 US-India-Pak-Afghan Pol PLS 4630 International Conflict

PLS 4650 Politics of Nationalism PLS 4660 Politics in South Asia PLS 4670 China: Domestic Policy PLS 4700 Topics in Int l. Relations PLS 4710 International Law PLS 4720 International Terrorism PLS 4730 American Foreign Policy PLS 4740 Pol. Women Terrorists PLS 4750 Weapons Mass Destruct PLS 4770 International Org PLS 4850 Chinese Foreign Policy PLS 4860 Model UN Seminar PLS 4870 Politics of Intelligence PLS 4871 Fund. Intelligence Tradecraft PLS 4880 Conflict Resolution PLS 4881 Diplomacy & Negotiation PLS 4900 Independent Reading PLS 4910 Independent Research PLS 4920 Indep Field Research Area-III Law & Courts and Political Theory (6 hours) PLS 3010 Mod. Political Ideologies PLS 3400 Law and Society PLS 3410 Fund. Criminal Investigation PLS 3420 Civil Liberties I: 1st Amend. PLS 3430 Civil Liberties II: Due Process PLS 3440 Police Pro and Operations PLS 3700 International Theory PLS 3990 Selected Topics PLS 4010 Dev & Con Am Civ Lib PLS 4040 Civil Rights Struggles PLS 4070 Seminar Political Theory PLS 4080 Radical Black Thought PLS 4090 Supreme Court Legal Judging PLS 4100 Political Psychology PLS 4150 Law, Lawyers & System PLS 4160 Sex and The Law PLS 4170 Moot Court PLS 4180 Politics & Ethics

PLS 4210 Am. Constitutional Devel PLS 4260 Supreme Court PLS 4310 Cyber Crime PLS 4360 Criminal Law PLS 4370 Criminal Procedure PLS 4380 Environmental Law Policy PLS 4390 Bioethics and Law PLS 4400 Constitutional Law PLS 4410 Natural Resources Law PLS 4420 Criminal Justice System PLS 4440 Topics in Criminal Justice PLS 4450 Adv Criminal Investgn PLS 4840 Pre-Law Internship PLS 4900 Independent Reading PLS 4910 Independent Research PLS 4920 Indepen. Field Research C. Electives Students may chose the Law and Government Option plus 9 hours of additional advanced electives. Students who do not chose the Law and Government option must take 18 hours of advanced electives. In both cases, a minumum of 3 hours must be taken at the 4000 level. Law & Government Option Students can choose to specialize in Law & Government. This requires nine (9) hours from the following courses. Students who do not choose this will fill such hours with electives (Part D below). Take one course from each of the three groupings below (no double counting). American Institutions & Politics (3 hours) PLS 2120 American National Government PLS 4300 American Government Seminar PLS 3350 The American Presidency PLS 3370 The Legislative Process PLS 3310 Political Parties

PLS 4030 Campaigns and Elections PLS 3470 American Public Policy Analysis PLS 3450 Public Administration PLS 4460 Public Budgeting PLS 4825 Washington, DC Internship PLS 4823 Campaign Internship PLS 4824 Local/City Internship PLS 4822 Congressional District Internship PLS 4820 State Legislative Internship Legal System & Perspective (3 hours) PLS 3400 Law and Society PLS 4150 Law, Lawyers and the System PLS 4420 Criminal Justice System PLS 4400 Constitutional Law PLS 4710 International Law PLS 4170 Appellate Politics and Moot Court PLS 4210 American Constitutional Politics PLS 4260 Supreme Court in American Politics PLS 4821 Pre-Law Internship PLS 4840 Pre-Law Internship Legal Rights & Issues (3 hours) PLS 3420 Civil Liberties I: First Amendment PLS 3430 Civil Liberties II:Due Process PLS 4480 Gender Violence & American Politics PLS 4040 Struggles for Civil Rights in America PLS 3750 Human Rights in United States PLS 4410 Natural Resources Law PLS 4380 Environmental Law and Policy PLS 4390 Bioethics and Law PLS 4160 Sex and the Law PLS 4360 Criminal Law PLS 4370 Criminal Procedure PLS 4440 Topics in Criminal Justice PLS 3410 Fundamentals of Criminal Investigation PLS 3440 Police Procedures and Operations D: Complementary Courses: 22 Hours All students must take courses outside of political science that will complement the student's academic and professional goals. Consult your advisor. Total: 120 Hours Graduation Planning Strategy

The Graduation Planning Strategy (GPS) has been created to illustrate one option to complete degree requirements within a particular time frame. Students are encouraged to meet with their academic advisor to adjust this plan based on credit already earned, individual needs or curricular changes that may not be reflected in this year's catalog. Political Science (GPS) Political Science (3 yr) (GPS) If there is a program modification that impacts the Graduation Planning Strategy (GPS), indicate this below and complete a separate GPS proposal form so that both the program and GPS are updated in the catalog concurrently to ensure consistency between program requirements and the GPS. Does this program modification require an update to the Graduation Planning Strategy (GPS)?* Yes No Not applicable - not an undergraduate degree program Department Chair: Please copy and paste the url (web link) from the GPS modification proposal form. https://wright.curriculog.com/proposal:1391/form Additional information, if needed Program Name Change Complete this section if the proposal includes a change in the name/title of the degree, major, licensure, or endorsement. A change in the name/title of the degree and the information below must be approved by the Provost and submitted to the Ohio Department of Education for approval. Rationale for name change:

Describe how the name change will affect students in the current program. Are there any administrative, curricular, faculty or support service changes occurring along with the name change? Yes No If "yes", please describe: Have the appropriate program accreditation agencies been informed of the proposed change (if applicable)? Yes No Not applicable Administrative Data To be completed by Budget CIP Code CIP Code Name To be completed by Registrar Approved Effective Term Fall Spring Summer Year

Banner Program Name Banner Program Code Banner Major Name Banner Major Code Degree Type Bachelor of Arts Program Type Bachelor