SCIENCE IN SOCIETY PROGRAM
 
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Of Note:

New SiSP Faculty Appointments:
The Science in Society Program is pleased to announce two new faculty appointments:
Dr. Laura Stark of the National Institutes of Health will become Assistant Professor of Science in Society and Sociology, beginning July 1, 2009. Dr. Stark received her Ph.D. in Sociology from Princeton University and a post-doctoral fellowship at Northwestern University before taking her current post as a Stetten Fellow at the Office of NIH History.
Professor Gillian Goslinga of Stanford University will become Assistant Professor of Anthropology, and a member of the SiSP faculty, beginning July 1, 2009. Professor Goslinga received her Ph.D. in History of Consciousness at the University of California at Santa Cruz, and is currently a Humanities Fellow at Stanford University.


Contact Information:
Chair of the Program:
Joseph Rouse
jrouse@wesleyan.edu
(860)685-3655

Administration:
Deborah Grasso
dgrasso@wesleyan.edu
(860)685-2680

350 High Street
Middletown, CT 05459

 
 

MAJOR REQUIREMENTS AND POLICIES (class of 2009 and after)

The major program in Science in Society has three components: science courses, SiSP courses, and an area of concentration. Those students whose area of concentration is one of the sciences must complete a major in that science as part of the requirements for their SiSP major.

    I. Science Courses

All students are required to take a minimum of four 1-credit major track courses in a single science. The sciences which we accept for this purpose are : Astronomy/Physics, Biology, Chemistry, Earth & Environmental Sciences, Molecular Biology & Biochemistry, Neuroscience, Physics, Psychology. The laboratory courses associated with introductory science courses do not count toward the four-course requirement.

N.B. For most students, these science courses must be completed in a single department, to enable them to get beyond the introductory level.  For example, one cannot satisfy this requirement by taking one year of Chemistry and one year of Biology.  There are two kinds of exceptions to this policy.  First, students who do their science in Biology, MB&B, Neuroscience, or Psychology may take courses under more than one departmental designation, so long as all four of the courses that they count toward the SiSP major are cross-listed in one of those departments.  Second, their are some variations permitted for students who do their science work in Astronomy or E&ES.  Students who do their science courses in Astronomy may count Physics 113, 116, along with Astronomy 155 and one upper-level ASTR course toward the requirement.  Students who do their science in E&ES may count a year of Chemistry, E7ES 199, and a 200-level E&ES course OR a year of Biology, E&ES 199, and an upper-level Biology course in Ecology or Conservation Biology.

   II. Science in Society Courses

All students who do not undertake a double major in a science are required to take a minimum of six credits in courses listed at the 200- or 300-level in the Program, of which three must satisfy specific requirements in History of Science, Philosophy of Science, and Sociocultural Studies of Science.  (N.B. students in the classes of 2007 and 2008 may take only 5 courses in SiSP, but must then complete a fourth course in their area of concentration). Students who are completing SiSP major requirements in part by undertaking a double major in a science are required to take a minimum of five credits in courses listed by the Program, and must satisfy the same three specific requirements in History of Science, Philosophy of Science and Sociocultural Studies of Science.  Any courses that are cross-listed between SiSP and the student's science major department DO NOT count toward the 5-course requirement in SiSP, although they can satisfy one of the three specific requirements so long as the student takes 5 other courses in SiSP.

HISTORY OF SCIENCE (students are encouraged but not required to take a history course emphasizing the sciences they have studied for their science requirement).

     SiSP 221-History of Ecology

      SiSP 254-History of Scientific Thought since 1700

     SiSP 259 Discovering the Person

    SiSP  336 Science and the State

   

    

     N.B. 100-level FYI (First Year Initiative) courses in history of science do not currently satisfy this requirement, nor do they count as electives for the major.

PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE

      SiSP 202 - Philosophy of Science

      SiSP 286 - Philosophy of Mind (Open to SiSP students whose science courses are in Psychology)

 SOCIOCULTURAL STUDIES OF SCIENCE

     SiSP 205- Sciences as Social and Cultural Practicess

     SiSP 207 - Social and Cultural Practices of Sciences

    SiSP 313 - Bodies of Science, Bodies of Knowledge

    SiSP 397 - The Politics of Nature: Modernity and Its Others

A second approved course in the History of Science (see above list) will also satisfy this requirement.

     

 

III. Area of Concentration

Option 1: Students may fulfill their area of concentration in a science by completing a major in that science (the first four courses satisfy their science requirement; the remainder count as their area of concentration).

Option 2: Students may fulfill their area of concentration by taking three courses in any of the following areas as specified below:
 

ANTHROPOLOGY: ANTH 101 (Introduction to Cultural Anthropology), ANTH 295  or ANTH 296(Theory 1 and Theory 2), and a third ANTH course approved by their adviser.

HISTORY: Students are encouraged to work with their adviser to devise a coherent concentration in History.  The three courses for the concentration must include at least one Seminar (either a Sophomore Seminar, or an Advanced Seminar), and should normally be taken within a single field (e.g., AALA, United States, Europe, Intellectual, Gender, Religion, etc.). History concentrators must also include a second course in the History of Science among their SiSP couses.

PHILOSOPHY (metaphysics and epistemology):  PHIL 202 (Philosophical Classics II), one intermediate level "Mind and Reality" course, and a third course approved by the adviser.). 100-level courses do not count toward this concentration.

PHILOSOPHY (ethics and political philosophy): Three courses in ethics or political philosophy (numbered 211-230, 266-285 or 331-360).  With permission of your adviser, a course in political theory in the Government Department may be counted toward this concentration.

SOCIOLOGY: SOC 151 or SOC 152 and two additional courses approved by the adviser.  Many students find it helpful to take some courses cross-listed with SiSP for their sociology concentration, but must then take other SiSP courses as electives for the Program.

FEMINIST, GENDER, AND SEXUALITY STUDIES: FGSS 209 and two other courses approved by the adviser.  One FGSS Gateway course may normally be included in the concentration.

Miscellaneous Program Policies

Courses that are cross-listed between SiSP and a student's Area of Concentration department may be counted for either requirement, but not for both simultaneously.

Education-in-the-Field, Individual Tutorials, Group Tutorials, Senior Theses, and other independent study formats are not normally accepted toward the five required courses in SiSP itself. Students are strongly encouraged not to include more than one such course in their Area of Concentration.

Courses may be transferred from other institutions to replace one of the Science in Society requirements, but we review these requests very stringently, and only accept courses clearly equivalent in level and field to courses we would accept at Wesleyan.