Second-Year Experience
In your second year at Champlain, you'll dive into science and culture, deeply exploring relationships between the two.
How does perspective affect science? How does science affect culture? Through projects, research, and discussions, you’ll practice examining the contexts and sources of knowledge.
You’ll take one Foundations course and one Perspectives course each semester of year two. In the Foundations courses, you’ll develop the set of skills you’ll use to explore, analyze, and interrogate ideas in the Perspectives courses of your choice.
Fall Semester
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COR 201 | Core Foundations: Making Meaning through Science
Science holds an elevated place in society. The knowledge and meaning that science makes are seen as having a particular and special value. This course explores knowledge and meaning making in order to allow a thoughtful analysis of, and then engagement with, science as a way of knowing, and then engages with the methods and theories of the sciences themselves, to understand the analytical, creative, and generative possibilities of science.
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COR 202 | Interdisciplinary Perspectives on ____
While each section of COR 202 addresses a different problem, issue, or topic, they all focus on interdisciplinary research. You will collect, analyze, and assess information from different disciplines in order to recognize patterns, contextualize arguments and synthesize ideas while collaborating on a project. Emphasis will be placed on helping you translate and apply what you learn about interdisciplinary research to other professional contexts.
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COR 202-01 Interdisciplinary Perspectives: The U.S. Constitution
Ciaran Buckley
We jump straight in with class conversations on current Supreme Court cases. By looking at a seemingly daunting and divisive topics head on, you will see these topics as challenging, but not intimidating. We will practice the process of finding and making arguments from different perspectives. Some current Supreme Court themes we will look at are: beginning of life, free speech, separation of Church and state, God, second amendment rights, AI. In-class discussions/conversations paired with a series of executive summaries will help you in analyzing and finding solutions to complex issues. We will have conversations about developing our ability to create an environment where each perspective is considered to collaborate around making progress toward common goals.
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COR 202-02 Interdisciplinary Perspectives: Human Rights
Ed Cafferty
Humans have lived together in groups for thousands of years. They have had conflicts with other people and groups. They sometimes treat each other as equals but often they don’t. They may dominate others through beliefs, norms, values, violence, and laws. We will explore the many ways people interact with each other and how relationships have changed over time. This course will include student group activities, guest speakers, videos, and class discussions.
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COR 202-03 Interdisciplinary Perspectives: Human Rights
Ed Cafferty
Humans have lived together in groups for thousands of years. They have had conflicts with other people and groups. They sometimes treat each other as equals but often they don’t. They may dominate others through beliefs, norms, values, violence, and laws. We will explore the many ways people interact with each other and how relationships have changed over time. This course will include student group activities, guest speakers, videos, and class discussions.
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COR 202-04 Interdisciplinary Perspectives: Postcolonial & Decolonial Narratives
Veruska Cantelli
What motivated me was curiosity, the only kind of curiosity that is worth acting upon; not the curiosity that seeks to assimilate what is proper for one to know, but that which enables one to get free of oneself. This semester we will unpack the complexity and dynamic force of post/decolonial identity through an interdisciplinary approach. We will follow the painful journey of a Senegalese woman trapped into a racial web of a white French bourgeois household, dive into the clash and the search for independence in Algeria, unpack women’s voices out of India and follow Ngugi Wa Thiong’o’s questioning of the role of the English language as a dominant colonial force. Our guiding force will be non-western lens, we will challenge our assumptions, be inspired, and learn from the giants of postcolonial theory.
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COR 202-05 Interdisciplinary Perspectives: Postcolonial & Decolonial Narratives
Veruska Cantelli
What motivated me was curiosity, the only kind of curiosity that is worth acting upon; not the curiosity that seeks to assimilate what is proper for one to know, but that which enables one to get free of oneself. This semester we will unpack the complexity and dynamic force of post/decolonial identity through an interdisciplinary approach. We will follow the painful journey of a Senegalese woman trapped into a racial web of a white French bourgeois household, dive into the clash and the search for independence in Algeria, unpack women’s voices out of India and follow Ngugi Wa Thiong’o’s questioning of the role of the English language as a dominant colonial force. Our guiding force will be non-western lens, we will challenge our assumptions, be inspired, and learn from the giants of postcolonial theory.
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COR 202-06 Interdisciplinary Perspectives: Postcolonial & Decolonial Narratives
Flavio Rizzo
What motivated me was curiosity, the only kind of curiosity that is worth acting upon; not the curiosity that seeks to assimilate what is proper for one to know, but that which enables one to get free of oneself. This semester we will unpack the complexity and dynamic force of post/decolonial identity through an interdisciplinary approach. We will follow the painful journey of a Senegalese woman trapped into a racial web of a white French bourgeois household, dive into the clash and the search for independence in Algeria, unpack women’s voices out of India and follow Ngugi Wa Thiong’o’s questioning of the role of the English language as a dominant colonial force. Our guiding force will be non-western lens, we will challenge our assumptions, be inspired, and learn from the giants of postcolonial theory.
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COR 202-07 Interdisciplinary Perspectives: Foodways
Kerry Noonan
Foodways (the customs and meanings associated with food) reveal a lot about regional, ethnic, local, gendered, and even family cultures, and reflect both our physical environment and our values. In this course, we will study what we eat, when we eat it, and how we prepare, present, and consume it, and what food means to us. You will collect, analyze, and assess information from different disciplines in order to recognize patterns, contextualize arguments and synthesize ideas while collaborating on a project that helps us better understand how food interacts with culture.
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COR 202-09 Interdisciplinary Perspectives: Postcolonial & Decolonial Narratives
Flavio Rizzo
What motivated me was curiosity, the only kind of curiosity that is worth acting upon; not the curiosity that seeks to assimilate what is proper for one to know, but that which enables one to get free of oneself. This semester we will unpack the complexity and dynamic force of post/decolonial identity through an interdisciplinary approach. We will follow the painful journey of a Senegalese woman trapped into a racial web of a white French bourgeois household, dive into the clash and the search for independence in Algeria, unpack women’s voices out of India and follow Ngugi Wa Thiong’o’s questioning of the role of the English language as a dominant colonial force. Our guiding force will be non-western lens, we will challenge our assumptions, be inspired, and learn from the giants of postcolonial theory.
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COR 202-10 Interdisciplinary Perspectives: Why Evil Exists
Gary Scudder
We routinely throw around the word “evil” – even if we’re simply grousing about our professors – but what does the concept even mean? In this class we will study different religious, philosophical, psychological, and sociological interpretations, and maybe in the process begin to answer the question: why does evil exist? During the class students will read Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment, Capote’s In Cold Blood, and excerpts from thinkers as varied as St. Augustine, Machiavelli, and Hannah Arendt.
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COR 202-11 Interdisciplinary Perspectives: Why Evil Exists
Gary Scudder
We routinely throw around the word “evil” – even if we’re simply grousing about our professors – but what does the concept even mean? In this class we will study different religious, philosophical, psychological, and sociological interpretations, and maybe in the process begin to answer the question: why does evil exist? During the class students will read Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment, Capote’s In Cold Blood, and excerpts from thinkers as varied as St. Augustine, Machiavelli, and Hannah Arendt.
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COR 202-12 Interdisciplinary Perspectives: The Urge to Merge
Kelly Thomas
How can we best understand sexuality and sexual desire? As humans, we are sexual creatures, yet sexual desire is often viewed by society as taboo and carefully regulated. This section examines potential reasons why, and subsequent repercussions. This is not a how-to course on human sexuality; rather, we will inquire into how we are (or are not) formally educated about sexual desire; how our beliefs about sex and sexuality are formed through religious traditions and cultural expectations; how we encounter representations of sex through visual and performing art, and media; and how industries and laws have formed to sell and regulate sexual content.
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COR 202-13 Interdisciplinary Perspectives: The Urge to Merge
Kelly Thomas
How can we best understand sexuality and sexual desire? As humans, we are sexual creatures, yet sexual desire is often viewed by society as taboo and carefully regulated. This section examines potential reasons why, and subsequent repercussions. This is not a how-to course on human sexuality; rather, we will inquire into how we are (or are not) formally educated about sexual desire; how our beliefs about sex and sexuality are formed through religious traditions and cultural expectations; how we encounter representations of sex through visual and performing art, and media; and how industries and laws have formed to sell and regulate sexual content.
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COR 202-51 Interdisciplinary Perspectives: Rural Lives
Amy Howe
How do we understand the power of “rural life” in American and global imaginaries? This course will explore the fascinations, realities, multiplicities, and politics of what the term and experiences of “rural” mean. We will look at a range of primary and secondary literary, economic, and social sources that examine the place, history, and politics of rural representation, development, research, and self-determination. Students will have hands-on opportunities to conduct in-depth research on selected case studies in partnership with rural humanities networks in and outside of Vermont and the North Country region.
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COR 202-52 Interdisciplinary Perspectives: Rural Lives
Amy Howe
How do we understand the power of “rural life” in American and global imaginaries? This course will explore the fascinations, realities, multiplicities, and politics of what the term and experiences of “rural” mean. We will look at a range of primary and secondary literary, economic, and social sources that examine the place, history, and politics of rural representation, development, research, and self-determination. Students will have hands-on opportunities to conduct in-depth research on selected case studies in partnership with rural humanities networks in and outside of Vermont and the North Country region.
Spring Semester
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COR 203 | Core Foundations: Making Meaning through Culture
Culture impacts everything we do, experience, and learn, but what is culture? Where does it come from, how does it form, and why does it have such a wide and deep impact on people’s lives? This course explores culture as a system of meaning and meaning-making in order to allow for a more thoughtful analysis of, and then engagement with, cultural texts and media using different methodological approaches.
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COR 204 | Theoretical Perspectives on _____
In this course, you will go in depth about a theoretical perspective that asks you to interrogate systems of power and power relationships. You will learn about the history of that perspective, including how it too was shaped by multiple contexts and compares with other viewpoints. You will use that perspective to analyze a specific topic, collection of texts, or cultural phenomena.
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COR 204-01: Theoretical Perspectives: Manufacturing Futures – Technology, Power, and China’s Alternative Modernity
Jonathan Banfill
In this course, you will explore how technological innovation shapes global power dynamics
through an in-depth examination of China’s rapid technological transformation since 2020.
You’ll engage with multiple theoretical frameworks—such as theories of platform capitalism,
technological sovereignty, and innovation leapfrogging—to understand how China has
developed alternative pathways to technological modernity. The course title “Manufacturing
Futures” captures both China’s dominance in global production and the ways technological
choices actively construct possible futures. Through theoretical texts (including Dan Wang’s
Breakneck), case studies (Apple in China), Chinese cinema (Jia Zhangke’s films), and
speculative fiction (The Three-Body Problem), you’ll learn to apply different theoretical lenses to
make sense of complex phenomena like China’s electric vehicle revolution, AI development,
and green energy infrastructure. The goal is not to master one theory but to understand how
different frameworks reveal different aspects of China’s technological rise and what this means
for the industries you’ll enter after graduation. -
COR 204-02: Theoretical Perspectives: Reading Rural
Amy Howe
How do we understand the relationship of urban-rural? In this course, we’ll explore and debate
the theory of “urbanormativity” (the resource dependency of the urban on the rural) and
critically engage it with local Vermont case studies including: a library that straddles the
Vermont-Quebec border, the colonial history of Vermont’s white pines, Vermont’s dairy industry
use of migrant labor, and the “Vailification” of outdoor sport in Vermont. -
COR 204-03: Theoretical Perspectives: Immersive Media, Virtual Tour
Weiling Deng
When the panopticon was invented in the late 18th century, it did not just make the surveillance
of prisoners easier. The all-seeing architecture changed the systems of social control and
marked the society’s transition to a disciplinary power. Concurrently, an extremely similar
structure housing 360-degree panoramic landscape paintings was invented, enabling an
immersive optical experience that visualized for the European viewers a world in motion and
one that would be further colonized. This course explores a wide range of techniques and
media of vision, from camera obscura to photography and film, from sketches to digital display,
from panorama to virtual reality and computer-aided surveillance, and investigates how they
construct a “society of spectacle” that in turn shapes our relationship with the world. This
course draws on theories from art history, visual culture, architecture, museum studies,
philosophy of history, gender and ethnic studies, postcolonial studies, and information and
communication studies to examine these techniques of seeing. Through making basic versions
of some of these techniques, you will learn to understand these techniques as tools that
reorganize knowledge and social practices and materialize “modernity” as everyday life, rather
than just an artistic experiment of the avant-garde isolated from larger economic, technological,
and intellectual contexts. Instead of delivering a “true history” of vision, the goal is to reflect on,
theorize, decolonize, and apply in re-creating some of the above-mentioned techniques, how
what we call “present,” “modern,” and “global” are configured materially through the visual. -
COR 204-04: Theoretical Perspectives on Ethics of Action
David Kite
Ethics is the theory of deliberation and choice in human affairs. Students will study traditional
systems of moral philosophy and will use these to analyze relevant issues in personal, social
and political spaces. The goal will be to develop skills of thoughtful and reflective deliberation
about ethical values, choices and actions. -
COR 204-05: Theoretical Perspectives on Ethics of Action
David Kite
Ethics is the theory of deliberation and choice in human affairs. Students will study traditional
systems of moral philosophy and will use these to analyze relevant issues in personal, social
and political spaces. The goal will be to develop skills of thoughtful and reflective deliberation
about ethical values, choices and actions. -
COR 204-06: Theoretical Perspectives: Reading Rural
Amy Howe
How do we understand the relationship of urban-rural? In this course, we’ll explore and debate
the theory of “urbanormativity” (the resource dependency of the urban on the rural) and
critically engage it with local Vermont case studies including: a library that straddles the
Vermont-Quebec border, the colonial history of Vermont’s white pines, Vermont’s dairy industry
use of migrant labor, and the “Vailification” of outdoor sport in Vermont. -
COR 204-07: Theoretical Perspectives: Folklore Theories & Conspiracy Theories
Kerry Noonan
The Illuminati? Q-Anon? 5-G? Area 51? Lizard people? Conspiracy theories seem to be
everywhere, showing up in politics, healthcare, and other important areas of our lives. What
makes these narratives compelling? Why do people come to believe them? What function do
they serve? How are they spread from person to person? We will use the tools and theories
from the academic discipline of folklore to examine the history of such beliefs, look at how they
are spread, analyze their types and structures, explore psychological and cultural reasons for
their acceptance, and delve into the symbolic content and possible meanings of these
narratives that offer to explain the inexplicable. -
COR 204-08: Theoretical Perspectives: Folklore Theories & Conspiracy Theories
Kerry Noonan
The Illuminati? Q-Anon? 5-G? Area 51? Lizard people? Conspiracy theories seem to be
everywhere, showing up in politics, healthcare, and other important areas of our lives. What
makes these narratives compelling? Why do people come to believe them? What function do
they serve? How are they spread from person to person? We will use the tools and theories
from the academic discipline of folklore to examine the history of such beliefs, look at how they
are spread, analyze their types and structures, explore psychological and cultural reasons for
their acceptance, and delve into the symbolic content and possible meanings of these
narratives that offer to explain the inexplicable. -
COR 204-9: Theoretical Perspectives: Folklore Theories & Conspiracy Theories
Kerry Noonan
The Illuminati? Q-Anon? 5-G? Area 51? Lizard people? Conspiracy theories seem to be
everywhere, showing up in politics, healthcare, and other important areas of our lives. What
makes these narratives compelling? Why do people come to believe them? What function do
they serve? How are they spread from person to person? We will use the tools and theories
from the academic discipline of folklore to examine the history of such beliefs, look at how they
are spread, analyze their types and structures, explore psychological and cultural reasons for
their acceptance, and delve into the symbolic content and possible meanings of these
narratives that offer to explain the inexplicable. -
COR 204-10: Theoretical Perspectives: Images of Fascism
Gary Scudder
We live in an age when terms like Socialist and Fascist are thrown around casually, and
clumsily, and yet there may be no time in recent memory when we need to understand their
meaning more clearly. Students in this class will make use of a variety of texts, some literary
(Yevegeny Zamyatin’s We and Jason Stanley’s How Fascism Works) and some cinematic (The
Human Condition, Closely Watched Trains, Triumph of the Will, Terrestrial Verses), to explore
the history and nature of Fascism. -
COR 204-11: Theoretical Perspectives: Images of Fascism
Gary Scudder
We live in an age when terms like Socialist and Fascist are thrown around casually, and
clumsily, and yet there may be no time in recent memory when we need to understand their
meaning more clearly. Students in this class will make use of a variety of texts, some literary
(Yevegeny Zamyatin’s We and Jason Stanley’s How Fascism Works) and some cinematic (The
Human Condition, Closely Watched Trains, Triumph of the Will, Terrestrial Verses), to explore
the history and nature of Fascism. -
COR 204-12: Theoretical Perspectives: Imagining Magic
Steve Wehmeyer
Magic, Sorcery, Witchcraft: These are concepts that animate our literature, films, games, live
entertainment, and vernacular belief and practice. Forbidden by some, desired by others,
dismissed as fraud or embraced as otherworldly reality; the concept of Magic has preoccupied
scholars from a number of academic disciplines. Anthropologists, Archaeologists, Historians,
Psychologists, Biologists, Artists, and Religious Studies scholars have passionately explored
the widespread and multi-cultural concept of Magic. What is it? What do we mean by this
term? Different disciplinary theories and perspectives about Magic have been proposed,
discussed, decried, or defended, as scholars strive to understand these mysterious aspects of
culture. Through a deep dive into those theories, we’ll address and analyze the question of
why human beings – around the world and throughout time (including the present day) have
imagined, embraced, and evolved the idea of an enchanted world. And we’ll explore how this
specific question – together with a solid grounding in theory in general – is relevant to the
personal, creative and future professional lives of Champlain students. Do you believe in
Magic? -
COR 204-13: Theoretical Perspectives: Imagining Magic
Steve Wehmeyer
Magic, Sorcery, Witchcraft: These are concepts that animate our literature, films, games, live
entertainment, and vernacular belief and practice. Forbidden by some, desired by others,
dismissed as fraud or embraced as otherworldly reality; the concept of Magic has preoccupied
scholars from a number of academic disciplines. Anthropologists, Archaeologists, Historians,
Psychologists, Biologists, Artists, and Religious Studies scholars have passionately explored
the widespread and multi-cultural concept of Magic. What is it? What do we mean by this
term? Different disciplinary theories and perspectives about Magic have been proposed,
discussed, decried, or defended, as scholars strive to understand these mysterious aspects of
culture. Through a deep dive into those theories, we’ll address and analyze the question of
why human beings – around the world and throughout time (including the present day) have
imagined, embraced, and evolved the idea of an enchanted world. And we’ll explore how this
specific question – together with a solid grounding in theory in general – is relevant to the
personal, creative and future professional lives of Champlain students. Do you believe in
Magic? -
COR 204-51: Theoretical Perspectives on Children’s Lit & Identity Development
Rachel Moser-Hardy
“To live will be an awfully big adventure,” declares one of our most beloved childhood characters–Peter Pan (J.M. Barrie). The best works of children’s literature speak to both the magical and, at times, deeply terrifying transitional period of “growing up”—and the very best works stay with us long after childhood and into adulthood. These works are the first forms of media that we as humans consume, and as such, they shape the way we form, view, and interact with not only our own identities, but our society as a whole. In this class, you will read a variety of works of children’s literature from picture books to young adult novels and research theories on human identity and moral development, as well as learn about elements of literary craft specifically within children’s literature. Students will engage in literary discussion, analyze psychological, educational, and political themes, as well as creative techniques, within children’s books. You may even get a chance to write your own!
Core Division
Location
163 S Willard St, Burlington, VT 05401
Office Hours
8:00 AM – 4:00 PM