New Undergraduate Course Proposal Form

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NEW UNDERGRADUATE COURSE PROPOSAL FORM

(It is understood that proposals come approved by thedepartment's/program's curriculum committee)

Instructions: Course proposals must follow the proposal format presented below. Proposals for permanent courses and for experimental courses, should be emailed to Shannon Jennison, , who will then forward them to the Chair of the Harpur College Curriculum Committee. Experimental courses are approved by the AssociateDean (Celia Klin); permanent courses must be approved by the Curriculum Committee and Harpur College Council prior to their being offered.

No changes may be made to the course number, title or catalog description without prior approval of the Curriculum Committee. A statement of justification for these changes is necessary and must be reviewed by the chair of the Harpur College Curriculum Committee.

1)Date:

2)Type of Proposal:(Permanent or Experimental)

3)Department/Program:

4)Chair/Director:

5)Undergraduate Director:

6) Course Rubric/Number:(see page 3 for Harpur College Guidelines on numbering)

7)Course Credit Value

a) Course Credits:

b) By checking here, you confirm that the course meets the Campus Credit Hour Policy from page 3

8)Course Title:(30 characters & spaces maximum)

1 / 2 / 3 / 4 / 5 / 6 / 7 / 8 / 9 / 10 / 11 / 12 / 13 / 14 / 15 / 16 / 17 / 18 / 19 / 20 / 21 / 22 / 23 / 24 / 25 / 26 / 27 / 28 / 29 / 30

9)Instructor(s):

10)Course Format: In what format will the course initially be offered? (Lecture, Lecture/Lab, Discussion, Online, etc.)

11)Frequency:Indicate whether it will be taught: Regularly (meaning at least once a year), each semester, Spring only, Fall only, or Summer only.

12) Bulletin Description: Provide a complete, precise and concise course description (up to 100 words).

13)Pre-requisites, if any:If course is 300 or 400-level, a rationale must be provided if there are nopre-requisites.

14)Co-requisites, if any:

15) Restrictions, if any:(no freshman, seniors only, etc.)

16) Grading Limitation:(select one) ___Letter Grade & Pass/Fail___Pass/Fail Only

17) Anticipated Enrollment: Indicate the anticipated enrollment for this course and the levels of students who will enroll. Describe how these determinations were made. Indicate if it has been taught previously as either a topics or an experimental course and the enrollment results.

18) Rationale:Why is this course being proposed? What needs will it meet (e.g. supports changes in requirements for the major or for Gen Ed., a service course for other units, adds variety to a unit's offerings, reflects interest of a new faculty member)? Will this course replace another course or will other courses be offered less frequently? Name the impacted courses.

19) Relationship to Existing Courses/Programs/Disciplinary Developments:What is its relation to requirements of the department? What is its relationship to current developments within the discipline? Does it complement, overlap, or compete with existing coursework in other programs?

20) Relationship to Graduate Program:Indicate whether this course will be taught simultaneously as an undergraduate and graduate course; and, if so, what differences will exist between the undergraduate and graduate versions (Note: the Graduate Council must approve all graduate courses).

21) Exceptional budgetary or resource requirements:(funds, staff support, library, computer use, laboratory needs) associated with this course; if none, provide a statement to that effect. Provide a statement of department's means of meeting those exceptional needs.

22) Human Subjects Research:Does the proposed course involve human subjects research? (Types of activities involving human subjects include: interviews, questionnaires, or observations, etc.) If so, students must be advised to obtain permission from the University's Human Subjects Research Review Committee prior to commencing research.

UNDERGRADUATE COURSE PROPOSAL GUIDELINES

TYPES OF COURSES

Permanent Courses - Courses that a department/program has approved and request to make it part of their permanent curriculum. Courses must be reviewed by the Harpur College Curriculum Committee and Harpur College Council before being added to the University Bulletin/Course Catalog.

Experimental Courses - Courses that a department/program request to offer for one semester without being part of their permanent curriculum. To be offered for more than one semester the request must be approved by the Chair of the Harpur College Curriculum Committee.

Topics Courses - Courses are not part of a department/program’s permanent curriculum. The title and/or subject matter should change each time the course is taught. If taught more than four times with the same title and/or subject matterthe course should be put forth for permanent status. Topics courses are numbered x80-x89. Submission of the course proposal form is not necessary for topics courses.

HARPUR COLLEGE NUMBERING SYSTEM

100 - 199Introductory Courses, normally with no prerequisites, open to all students

200 - 299Lower division, intermediate courses with or without prerequisites

300 - 399Upper division, intermediate courses, normally with prerequisites

400 - 499Upper division, advanced courses with specific course prerequisites

GENERAL GUIDELINES

*The x80-x89 range of numbers at each level is reserved for topics courses.

*The x90-x99 range at each level is reserved for:

91Teaching Practica

95Internship

97Independent Study

98 - 99Honors/Thesis

*Cross listings must be consistent by level, i.e. upper level with upper level and lower level with lower level.

CAMPUS CREDIT HOURS POLICY

Summary Table of Course-related Work for a 4-credit Course in Various Current Semester Formats

Note: Courses offered for 1 credit, 2 credits or 3 credits are adjusted proportionately according to the credit-hour guidelines, which require a total of 43-45 hours of course-related work for each academic credit.

Student Workload expectation for 4-credit courses / In Class Hours
(weekly) / Outside of Class Hours (weekly) / Total Hours
Per Week
Fall/Spring semester courses meeting 3 hours per week for lecture/discussion (14 weeks) / 3 / 9.5 / 12.5
Fall/Spring semester courses with additional meeting times (discussion, sections, labs or other) (14 weeks) / Varies / Varies / 12.5
Summer Session (5 weeks) fact-to-face course / 10 / 25 / 35
Summer Session (5 weeks) online courses / n/a / 35 / 35
Winter Session (3 weeks) face-to-face courses / 15 / 43 / 58
Winter Session (3 weeks) online courses / n/a / 58 / 58

*From the document entitled “Syllabus statements on credit hours and course expectations March, 2014

GENERAL EDUCATION DESIGNATIONS

Harpur College experimental or permanent course approval differs from that needed to designate a course as Satisfying a General Education requirement. Gen Ed approvals arehandled by the University Undergraduate Curriculum Committee. Guidelines, submission form and FAQ can be found on the General Education website.