Lewis & ClarkCollege of Arts & Sciences

Registrar

Core Substitute Courses

Lewis & Clark Substitute Courses for Transfer Students Who Need Core 106 or Core 107

All transfer students must meet the General Education requirement for Core 106 and 107. The requirement may be satisfied through transfer credit, to be determined by the Office of the Registrar or, depending on the number of credits you transfer, through one of the following options:

Students transferring to Lewis & Clark in the fall with fewer than 16 semester credits (excluding IB and AP credit) must take Core 106 and 107 in their first year.

Students transferring with 16-28 semester credits (excluding IB and AP credit) of which 3 or more credits are from an approved writing-intensive course, must take either Core 106 or 107. If a student has no approved transfer course, both Core 106 and 107 are required.

Students transferring with 29+ credits (excluding IB and AP credit) must satisfy the Core 106/107 requirement by transferring approved writing-intensive courses or by taking two courses from the following list.

In order for a transfer course to substitute for Core, it must be at least 3 semester credits and require at least 20 pages of expository writing with feedback from the instructor about that writing. Often, a syllabus or statement from the instructor is needed for evaluation.

Courses used as Core substitute may not be used to fulfill any other General Education or major or minor requirements.

FOR TRANSFER STUDENTS WITH 29 OR MORE CREDITS

DEPARTMENT: CLASSICAL STUDIES
CLAS 200 Introduction to Classical Studies
CLAS 450 Topics in Classical Studies

DEPARTMENT: ENGLISH
ENG 100 Topics in Literature
ENG 105 The Art of the Novel
ENG 209 Introduction to American Literature
ENG 243 Women Writers
ENG 279 Classical Backgrounds
ENG 280 The Medieval World
ENG 310 The Middle English Period
ENG 319 Postcolonial Literature: Anglophone Africa, India, Caribbean
ENG 326 African-American Literature

DEPARTMENT: FOREIGN LANGUAGES

CHINESE
CHIN 230 Introduction to Chinese Literature in Translation
CHIN 290 Topics in Chinese Literature

FRENCH
FREN 230 French Literature in Translation

GERMAN
GERM 230 German Literature in Translation

SPANISH
SPAN 230 Spanish Literature in Translation

JAPANESE
JAPN 230 Introduction to Japanese Literature in Translation
JAPN 290 Topics in Japanese Literature in Translation

RUSSIAN
RUSS 230 Introduction to Russian Literature in Translation
RUSS 290 Topics in Russian Literature & Culture in Translation

DEPARTMENT: HISTORY
HIST 235 History of the Pacific Northwest
HIST 310 China discovers the West: Silk, Jesuits, Tea, Opium, and Milk
HIST 311 History of Family, Gender and Sexuality in China
HIST 313 Religion, Society, & the State in Japanese History
HIST 316 Popular Culture & Everyday Life in Japanese History
HIST 320 Renaissance Humanism
HIST 324 Saints and Bureaucrats
HIST 330 Race and Ethnicity in American History
HIST 331 American Culture and Society, 1880-1980
HIST 335 History and Culture of American Indians
HIST 336 Wilderness and the American West

DEPARTMENT: INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
IA 229 African Politics and Literature

DEPARTMENT: MUSIC
MUS 361 Music and Language

DEPARTMENT: PHILOSOPHY
PHIL 102 Introduction to Philosophy
PHIL 103 Ethics
PHIL 201 Philosophy of Religion
PHIL 203 Philosophy of Art and Beauty
PHIL 214 Philosophy of Law
PHIL 215 Philosophy and the Environment
PHIL 301 Ancient Western Philosophy
PHIL 302 Early Modern Philosophy
PHIL 303 19th-Century Philosophy
PHIL 307 Recent Continental Philosophy

DEPARTMENT: POLITICAL SCIENCE
POLS 102 Comparative Political Systems
POLS 103 U.S. Government: National Politics
POLS 252 Public Opinion and Survey Research
POLS 310 Pillars of Western Political Thought:
Plato to Machiavelli
POLS 311 Pillars of Western Political Thought:
Hobbes to Foucault

DEPARTMENT: RELIGIOUS STUDIES
RELS 241 Religion & Culture of Hindu India
RELS 242 Religions & Cultures of East Asia
RELS 243 Buddhism: Theory, Culture & Practice
RELS 354 Early Mahayan Buddhism
RELS 355 Sufism: Islamic Mysticism
RELS 373 Reformations of the 16th Century

DEPARTMENT: SOCIOLOGY & ANTHROPOLOGY
SOAN 221 Sociology of Work, Leisure & Consumption
SOAN 222 City & Society
SOAN 225 Race & Ethnicity in Global Perspective
SOAN 226 Law & Society
SOAN 227 Radical Social Movements
SOAN 245 Visual Anthropology
SOAN 251 Myth, Ritual, and Symbol
SOAN 261 Gender & Sexuality in Latin America
SOAN 266 Social Change in Latin America
SOAN 273 Japanese Culture
SOAN 281 India in Sociological Perspective
SOAN 285 Culture & Power in the Middle East

DEPARTMENT: THEATRE
TH 281 Theatre and Society I: Classical & Medieval Drama
TH 282 Theatre and Society II: Renaissance, Neoclassical, and Romantic Drama
TH 283 Theatre and Society III: Modern Continental Dance

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The Office of CAS Registrar is located in Templeton Campus Center on the Undergraduate Campus.

Emailreg@lclark.edu

Voice503-768-7335
Fax503-768-7333

Registrar of the College of Arts and SciencesJudy Finch

Office of CAS Registrar
Lewis & Clark
0615 S.W. Palatine Hill Road, MSC 108
Portland, OR 97219