Deerfield's Complete Course Catalog
Use the filters below to sort through all of Deerfield’s course offerings. Please note that Period numbers only apply to spring electives.
ART100
Intro to Studio Art
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
P4
This course is intended to be a first experience in the visual arts. It prepares students
for AP Studio Art by introducing the fundamentals of drawing and painting – line, form,
composition, and color – through a variety of assignments involving the still life,
perspective, and interior spaces. A brief survey into 19th and 20th century art is included.
ART122
Calligraphy
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
P5
This course is an introduction to letterforms & typography using traditional techniques
and materials. Roman, Uncial, Black-Letter and Italic styles are learned by transcribing
historical and contemporary texts. A survey of the development of modern type form is
provided. Calligraphy is a foundation level course appropriate for anyone intending further
study in the visual arts.
ART243
Visual Design
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Projects in this course are inspired by major movements throughout art history and are
designed to teach the essential elements and principles of design. A variety of tools are
employed, including drawing and painting media, digital photography, and Photoshop. Students
develop original solutions to assignments by brainstorming, drawing from observation, and
synthesizing multiple sources. All projects conclude with a verbal and/or written critique.
ART245
Digital Photography
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
P2 P6
This course provides a foundation in the formal elements of photography while exploring
the potential for creative expression and visual narrative. Students begin with exercises
that address composition, depth of field, and contrast, and lead to theme-based projects that
allow for personal interpretation. Emphasis is placed on the history and appreciation of
photography as a major art form.
ART250
Graphics
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Principles and elements of two–dimensional design are taught using both traditional and
digital media. Projects range from exploring abstract visual forms and structure, to
typography, to the preparation of print and digital pieces such as logos, theater posters,
and book covers.
ART328
Information Design
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
P6
Information design is about organizing information for a purpose—whether you want to
visualize statistics, navigate an iPad, map a location, plan an invasion, speed a diagnosis,
track a schedule, sell a widget, or convince a judge. We’ll examine and create 2D and
multidimensional information designs and displays, understanding how to leverage the
strengths and weaknesses of human perception, how to pack information into small spaces, and
how to persuade, inspire, and inform—all at the same time. Students will create designs using
Adobe Illustrator and other software tools.
ART340
Architecture
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Students receive instruction in architectural design, drafting, planning, and materials
and construction methods. Floor plans, elevations, sections, and axonometric view drawings
are prepared as students design a condominium during the first term. Studio work is
supplemented with readings in the history of architecture.
ART345
Advanced Architecture
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
P1 P3
Advanced work for students who have completed Architecture I. A spring term project is
selected with emphasis on model building. Students refine their drawing and design skills
while working with the CAD program SketchUp.
ART360
Videography
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
P3
This is a workshop course, offering hands-on experience in creating original videos. From
writing screenplays and developing camera techniques, to editing with iMovie and
synchronizing sound, this course involves the production of several experimental videos.
Highlights from the history of film/video and a substantial library of previous student work
will be studied for inspiration.
ART361
Advanced Videography
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Completion of Videography
P3
This course builds on skills covered in the introductory videography course, while
providing an opportunity for unique collaboration and ambitious independent work under the
tutelage of the instructor.
ART520
AP Art History
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Exploring history through artworks offers a fresh approach for understanding our global
community and is an effective way to review significant events from a visual perspective.
From prehistory to the present, artworks are examined in the context of their era’s dominant
ideas, political events, economic factors, and social structure. This approach examines a
significant canon of painting, sculpture, and architecture and prepares students for the AP
Art History exam in May. Visual literacy, critical assessment, analytical reading, class
discussions, and written expression will enable students to decode art, learn from it, and
appreciate the extraordinary creativity of people throughout history.
ART540
AP Drawing
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course involves concentrated study in drawing and follows the Advanced Placement
syllabus. scaThe fall begins with a review of fundamental technique and includes design
principles, creative process, historical perspectives and contemporary trends. Each student
is expected to do outside reading and studio work and to prepare an AP portfolio during the
spring term. All students are required to submit the eventual portfolio. Students assume a
photographic lab fee of $60 towards the preparation of their portfolio. Enrollment with
permission of the instructor. May be taken as 6th course: ART545-(p/f)
ART545
AP Drawing (p/f)
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course involves concentrated study in drawing and follows the Advanced Placement
syllabus.The fall begins with a review of fundamental technique and includes design
principles, creative process, historical perspectives and contemporary trends. Each student
is expected to do outside reading and studio work and to prepare an AP portfolio during the
spring term. All students are required to submit the eventual portfolio. Students assume a
photographic lab fee of $60 towards the preparation of their portfolio. Enrollment with
permission of the instructor. May be taken as a 6th course.
ART550
AP Studio Art
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Similar to AP Drawing, this course also includes work with color, painting, and sculpture
. Students will study contemporary trends in Western Art and participate in field trips to
museums. Students assume a photographic lab fee of $60 towards the preparation of their
portfolio. Enrollment with permission of the instructor. May be taken as 6th course:
ART555-(p/f)
ART555
AP Studio Art (p/f)
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Similar to AP Drawing, this course also includes work with color, painting, and sculpture
. Students will study contemporary trends in Western Art and participate in field trips to
museums. Students assume a photographic lab fee of $60 towards the preparation of their
portfolio. Enrollment with permission of the instructor. May be taken as a 6th course.
ART560
AP Studio Art (Photography)
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course expands on the Digital Photography course and includes aspects of the Visual
Design curriculum, with continued emphasis on formal skills and creative problem-solving. The
first half of the course is devoted to the elements and principles of design, while the
second half of the year involves a self-selected thematic concentration, using the medium of
photography. Digital and film cameras will be employed along with 19th, 20th, and 21st
century printing processes, including the wet darkroom. Students assume a photographic lab
fee of $60 towards the preparation of their portfolio. The submission of an A.P. portfolio is
required. May be taken as 6th course: ART565-(p/f).
ART565
AP Studio Art (Photo) (p/f)
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course expands on the Digital Photography course and includes aspects of the Visual
Design curriculum, with continued emphasis on formal skills and creative problem-solving. The
first half of the course is devoted to the elements and principles of design, while the
second half of the year involves a self-selected thematic concentration, using the medium of
photography. Digital and film cameras will be employed along with 19th, 20th, and 21st
century printing processes, including the wet darkroom. Students assume a photographic lab
fee of $60 towards the preparation of their portfolio. The submission of an A.P. portfolio is
required. May be taken as a 6th course.
ART650
Topics: Post AP Studio Art
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is intended for the student who desires to pursue visual art beyond the
Advanced Placement studio art syllabus. The major focus is on studio work: drawing, painting
and sculpting in the style of a number of contemporary artists. Students gain a broader
perspective through slide lectures from visiting artists, field trips and films. From
Brunelleschi’s principles of linear perspective, to the palette of Monet’s haystacks, to
Christo’s wrapped coast, students discuss the importance of self-expression, and moments of
inspiration. “All the really good ideas I ever had came to me while I was milking a cow.”
(Grant Wood). May be taken as 6th course: ART655-(p/f).
ART655
Topics: Post AP Studio (p/f)
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is intended for the student who desires to pursue visual art beyond the
Advanced Placement studio art syllabus. The major focus is on studio work: drawing, painting
and sculpting in the style of a number of contemporary artists. Students gain a broader
perspective through slide lectures from visiting artists, field trips and films. From
Brunelleschi’s principles of linear perspective, to the palette of Monet’s haystacks, to
Christo’s wrapped coast, students discuss the importance of self-expression, and moments of
inspiration. “All the really good ideas I ever had came to me while I was milking a cow.”
(Grant Wood). May be taken as a 6th course.
ART805
Architecture Tutorial
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
ART810
Topics Tutorial (Post AP)
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
AP Drawing/Studio and Topics in Contemporary Art
This advanced course is for students who have exhausted the drawing/painting curriculum
including the AP level and “Topics in Contemporary Art”. Students will pursue a theme and
prepare work for a group show to be installed in the school gallery during late winter term.
ART815
Topics Tutorial (Post AP)(p/f)
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
AP Drawing/Studio and Topics in Contemporary Art
This advanced course is for students who have exhausted the drawing/painting curriculum
including the AP level and “Topics in Contemporary Art”. Students will pursue a theme and
prepare work for a group show to be installed in the school gallery during late winter term.
DAN100
Intro to Dance
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is intended to be a first experience in dance. Elementary level boys and
girls study a variety of dance forms such as contemporary, modern, jazz, ballet and hip-hop.
This course also addresses the creative aspect of making dances through improvisation and
choreography. There is an emphasis on injury prevention for athletes through Pilates and yoga
classes. Students who sign up for this course are encouraged to continue into Dance I winter
and spring terms. May be taken as 6th course: DAN105-(p/f).
DAN105
Intro to Dance (p/f)
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is intended to be a first experience in dance. Elementary level boys and
girls study a variety of dance forms such as contemporary, modern, jazz, ballet and hip-hop.
This course also addresses the creative aspect of making dances through improvisation and
choreography. There is an emphasis on injury prevention for athletes through Pilates and yoga
classes. Students who sign up for this course are encouraged to continue into Dance I winter
and spring terms. May be taken as a 6th course.
DAN140
Dance I
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is intended to be a continuation of the material covered in the introductory
level dance class offered fall term. However, all elementary level students may sign up for
this course either for one (winter only), or two terms (winter & spring). Students enrolled
in this course may have the opportunity to perform in school dance concerts. May be taken as
6th course: DAN145-(p/f).
DAN145
Dance I (p/f)
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is intended to be a continuation of the material covered in the introductory
level dance class offered fall term. However, all elementary level students may sign up for
this course either for one (winter only), or two terms (winter & spring). Students enrolled
in this course may have the opportunity to perform in school dance concerts. May be taken for
credit: DAN140).
DAN200
Dance II
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is intended to be a continuation of the material covered in the introductory
level dance class offered fall term. However, all elementary level students may sign up for
this course either for one (winter only), or two terms (winter & spring). Students enrolled
in this course may have the opportunity to perform in school dance concerts. May be taken as
a 6th course: DAN205-(p/f).
DAN205
Dance II (p/f)
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is intended to be a continuation of the material covered in the introductory
level dance class offered fall term. However, all elementary level students may sign up for
this course either for one (winter only), or two terms (winter & spring). Students enrolled
in this course may have the opportunity to perform in school dance concerts. May be taken as
a 6th course.
DAN300
Dance III
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is geared towards the serious student of dance and is designed to meet
individual needs. Upper level intermediate dancers will train in a variety of techniques
including contemporary, modern, jazz, ballet and hip-hop. They’ll have the opportunity to
choreograph a dance collaboratively for our Student Choreography Showcase in the winter, and
rehearse a dance with a professional choreographer for our Spring Dance Concert. Students can
sign up either the full year, or two terms (winter & spring).May be taken as 6th course:
DAN305-(p/f).
DAN305
Dance III (p/f)
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is geared towards the serious student of dance and is designed to meet
individual needs. Upper level intermediate dancers will train in a variety of techniques
including contemporary, modern, jazz, ballet and hip-hop. They’ll have the opportunity to
choreograph a dance collaboratively for our Student Choreography Showcase in the winter, and
rehearse a dance with a professional choreographer for our Spring Dance Concert. Students can
sign up either the full year, or two terms (winter & spring).May be taken as 6th course).
DAN600
Adv. Dance Ensemble
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is appropriate for dancers who are proficient in the techniques offered
through the program. Advanced dancers explore the craft of group choreography as well as the
art of the solo. Student work is showcased in all of our dance concerts, and there are also
opportunities to work with guest choreographers throughout the year. May be taken as 6th
course: DAN605-(p/f).
DAN605
Adv. Dance Ensemble (p/f)
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is appropriate for dancers who are proficient in the techniques offered
through the program. Advanced dancers explore the craft of group choreography as well as the
art of the solo. Student work is showcased in all of our dance concerts, and there are also
opportunities to work with guest choreographers throughout the year. May be taken as a 6th
course.
MUS120
Fundamentals of Music
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Working with the elements of music – melody, harmony, rhythm and timbre – students develop their understanding of music through studying basic keyboard, composition and a wide range of literature and performance styles. How are the elements of music used to create distinctive styles? How do composers generate and develop their ideas? Music studied will include pop, folk, jazz, film and art music. Course work will include listening, analysis, class presentations and original composition.
MUS130
Composition: Songwriting
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Fundamentals of Music or instructor permission
Using the skills learned in Fundamentals of Music, students will learn how to compose
both melody and lyrics. Training will include analyzing a wide range of music, and studying
declamation, arranging, and orchestration. For their final projects, students will compose
original songs in styles of their choosing, and these songs will be performed and recorded at
the end of the term.
MUS140
Studio/Production
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Mus 120 or instructor permission
P3
This advanced course focuses on contemporary music production using digital and analog
systems, as well as computer-based software. All stages of production will be covered:
concept development, recording, editing, and mixing.
MUS250
Academy Chorus
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Students will receive instruction in singing technique, musicianship, music literacy, and
ear training, while learning a wide variety of repertoire from the Middle Ages to the present
. Students enrolled in the Academy Chorus are eligible to audition for the select a cappella
groups (the all-male Mellow-Ds and the all-female Rhapso-Ds). May be taken as 6th course:
MUS255-(p/f).
MUS255
Academy Chorus (p/f)
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Students will receive instruction in singing technique, musicianship, music literacy, and
ear training, while learning a wide variety of repertoire from the Middle Ages to the present
. Students enrolled in the Academy Chorus are eligible to audition for the select a cappella
groups (the all-male Mellow-Ds and the all-female Rhapso-Ds). May be taken as a 6th course.
MUS270
Bands: Wind/Rock/Jazz
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course provides an opportunity for experienced woodwind, brass, and percussion
players to collaborate in a variety of ensemble settings including concert band, woodwind
chamber groups, brass ensembles, saxophone ensembles, percussion groups, and jazz/rock bands.
Ensemble assignments are made by the course instructor, and additional ensemble coaches are
drawn from the applied teaching staff. Students work on improving their blend, technique,
intonation, musicianship, ensemble playing, and improvisational skills. May be taken as 6th
course: MUS275-(p/f).
MUS275
Bands: Wind/Rock/Jazz (p/f)
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course provides an opportunity for experienced woodwind, brass, and percussion
players to collaborate in a variety of ensemble settings including concert band, woodwind
chamber groups, brass ensembles, saxophone ensembles, percussion groups, and jazz/rock bands.
Ensemble assignments are made by the course instructor, and additional ensemble coaches are
drawn from the applied teaching staff. Students work on improving their blend, technique,
intonation, musicianship, ensemble playing, and improvisational skills. May be taken as a 6th
course.
MUS280
Orchestra
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is open to all string players (violin, viola, violoncello, and contrabass).
Students meet one day per week to rehearse as an orchestra in preparation for a performance
at the end of each term. Recent performances have included works by Corelli, Vivaldi, Handel,
Mozart, Tallis, Grieg, Telemann, and Vaughan Williams. May be taken as 6th course:
MUS285-(p/f).
MUS285
Orchestra (p/f)
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is open to all string players (violin, viola, violoncello, and contrabass).
Students meet one day per week to rehearse as an orchestra in preparation for a performance
at the end of each term. Recent performances have included works by Corelli, Vivaldi, Handel,
Mozart, Tallis, Grieg, Telemann, and Vaughan Williams. May be taken as a 6th course.
MUS290
Chamber Music/Orchestra
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course provides opportunities for instrumental musicians to collaborate, rehearse,
and perform in a variety of ensemble settings. Ensemble assignments are made by the course
instructor, and additional ensemble coaches are drawn from the applied teaching staff.
Students regularly coach each other in a uniquely collaborative seminar format, exploring
questions of performance practice, technique, history, theory, and performance psychology
while studying great works of chamber music literature. While daily emphasis is on smaller
ensembles, all string players come together as an orchestra once a week. This course is open
to string players (violin, viola, violoncello, and contrabass), pianists, and wind players
who demonstrate a sufficient level of proficiency to play repertoire for chamber ensemble.
May be taken as 6th course: MUS295-(p/f).
MUS295
Chamber Music/Orchestra (p/f)
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course provides opportunities for instrumental musicians to collaborate, rehearse,
and perform in a variety of ensemble settings. Ensemble assignments are made by the course
instructor, and additional ensemble coaches are drawn from the applied teaching staff.
Students regularly coach each other in a uniquely collaborative seminar format, exploring
questions of performance practice, technique, history, theory, and performance psychology
while studying great works of chamber music literature. While daily emphasis is on smaller
ensembles, all string players come together as an orchestra once a week. This course is open
to string players (violin, viola, violoncello, and contrabass), pianists, and wind players
who demonstrate a sufficient level of proficiency to play repertoire for chamber ensemble.
May be taken as a 6th course.
MUS500
AP Music Theory
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Music is a language: this course examines and develops skill in using that language.
Following a brief introduction to the rudiments of notation (clefs, pitch, and rhythm), most
of the year is spent exploring structure and organization in music (tonality, meter, form,
and the four elements), and mastering idioms that convey meaning. Class and homework time is
divided between written work, ear training, and composition. Written work includes
counterpoint and figured bass realization. Aural skills are developed through regular melodic
and 4-part harmonic dictation, and through sight-singing. Composition offers opportunities
for students to apply their theoretical knowledge, to practice creating and developing
musical ideas, and to experiment with expressing themselves in this abstract language.
Students who do well in this course will be prepared to take the Music Theory AP examination
in May.
THE240
Acting I/II
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course explores many aspects of actor training including ensemble building,
improvisation techniques, voice, movement, textual analysis and interpretive skills. Class
assignments include performing monologues and scenes from classical to contemporary plays,
and various creative projects. NO PREVIOUS ACTING EXPERIENCE IS NECESSARY. May also be taken
as 6th course: THE245 – Pass/Fail
THE245
Acting I/II (p/f)
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course explores many aspects of actor training including ensemble building,
improvisation techniques, voice, movement, textual analysis and interpretive skills. Class
assignments include performing monologues and scenes from classical to contemporary plays,
and various creative projects. NO PREVIOUS ACTING EXPERIENCE IS NECESSARY. May be taken as a
6th course.
THE300
Tutorial in Acting & Directing
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Completion of THE240 or THE245 or permission of
instructor
After completing Acting I and II, committed and experienced acting students are
encouraged to progress to a more advanced study of acting. Students are encouraged to
contribute to the development of a creative ensemble as well as develop their
self-sufficiency as actors. In addition to learning advanced acting techniques, a major
performance project is presented at the end of the term. May be taken as 6th course:
THE305-(p/f).
THE305
Tutorial in Act & Dir (p/f)
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Completion of THE240 or THE245 or permission of
instructor
After completing Acting I and II, committed and experienced acting students are
encouraged to progress to a more advanced study of acting. Students are encouraged to
contribute to the development of a creative ensemble as well as develop their
self-sufficiency as actors. In addition to learning advanced acting techniques, a major
performance project is presented at the end of the term. May be taken as 6th course.
THE400
Directing for the Theater
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course examines the elements of play direction including: script selection, textual
deconstruction, research, character analysis, casting, how to block, and prepare a prompt
book, design (set, costume, lighting and sound), rehearsal techniques, marketing and other
related aspects of play production. The direction of a long scene or one act play is the
primary focus. May be taken as 6th course: THE405-(p/f).
THE405
Directing for Theater (p/f)
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course examines the elements of play direction including: script selection, textual
deconstruction, research, character analysis, casting, how to block, and prepare a prompt
book, design (set, costume, lighting and sound), rehearsal techniques, marketing and other
related aspects of play production. The direction of a long scene or one act play is the
primary focus. May be taken as a 6th course.
ENG100
Classic & Contemporary Lit
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
The freshman course seeks to engender creativity in thinking, reading, and writing.
Students read a diverse collection of short stories, The Odyssey, a contemporary novel, a
Shakespeare play, and a selection of poetry to foster their close reading skills and literary
sensibilities. Students encounter a range of writing assignments to develop formal and
informal writing skills and to improve vocabulary and grammar. All freshmen deliver a
literary reading and participate in a poetry contest.
ENG111
English as a 2nd Language
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
In this course new students work to improve their ability to write English sentences,
paragraphs, and compositions, and to comprehend and discuss literary works. Course work
includes grammar and vocabulary exercises, composition writing and correcting, and close
study of American short stories, novels, and poetry. The course meets one year of the
school’s graduation requirement in English if taken in place of mainstream English. It can
also be taken along with another English course. Admission to the course is by placement test
.
ENG200
Defining Literary Traditions
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Sophomore English emphasizes critical reading, focused discussions, and a variety of
writing assignments connected to the study of literature derived from the British tradition.
Close reading assignments and class discussions encourage students to analyze and to
appreciate the elements of literature. Teachers choose core texts from works by Chaucer,
Shakespeare, the Romantic poets, a 19th-century novelist, a contemporary author, and a modern
playwright. Sophomores also select, memorize, and deliver a declamation from a literary work.
ENG201
The Writer’s Craft (p/f)
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Before encountering the demands of extended essays and narratives, students meet one
period a week to review and reinforce essential composition skills, including questioning
evidence, forming and structuring arguments, sustaining unity, varying syntactical patterns,
understanding punctuation, and revising drafts. In a workshop setting, the students receive
individual attention and also learn to judge their work more critically. They take this
exercise-intensive course in addition to British Literature. (Freshman teachers identify
candidates.)
ENG211
Standardized Test Prep (p/f)
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Students will review and reinforce essential math, grammar, vocabulary, and critical
reading skills through online lessons, exercises, and practice tests. Students can choose to
complete the SAT Math, SAT Verbal, or ACT syllabus. Whichever they choose, students will be
required to attend two class meetings a week, during which they will work individually on
their computers with guidance from the instructor. Skills honed in the Verbal course will
prove useful in both history and English curricula, as well as on the SAT and ACT
standardized tests. Students may take the Standardized Test Prep course multiple terms if
they would like to complete more than one syllabus.
ENG311
American Studies
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This is an interdisciplinary course combining American Literature and honors-level United
States History. The course fulfills both the junior English and History requirements, and
prepares students for the Advanced Placement exam in United States History. In a team-taught
double period, students examine the social, economic, political, and cultural heritage of the
United States through a combination of primary documents, interpretive secondary sources and
representative works of American literature and art. Close, critical analysis, responsible
oral discourse, and expository writing are emphasized. American Studies is team-taught and
meets for a double period.
ENG312
American Dreams
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
The American Dream is a familiar phrase, but what does it mean? Whose dream is it? Is
there just one dream for all Americans? How has it evolved over time? Do considerations of
gender, race, ethnicity, or class affect the pursuit of this dream? To gain an understanding
of how the pursuit of the distinctive American Dream helped to shape the culture and
literature of the United States, students examine texts from different genres and time
periods. Texts may include Rebecca Harding Davis’s Life in the Iron Mills, Nella Larsen’s
Passing, Horatio Alger’s Ragged Dick, and short stories by Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Anzia
Yezierska.
ENG313
American Styles
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This interdisciplinary course will examine the evolution of American writing styles
alongside parallel developments in the visual arts (paying particular attention to the
mediums of painting, photography, and film). In addition to core texts by Twain, Emerson,
Thoreau, Whitman, Dickinson, and Fitzgerald, we will study Ernest Hemingway’s The Sun Also
Rises, Eugene O’Neill’s Long Day’s Journey into Night, Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye, and
David Auburn’s Proof as well as modernist and contemporary American poetry by William Carlos
Williams, Wallace Stevens, Marianne Moore, Elizabeth Bishop, A.R. Ammons, John Ashbery, and
Jorie Graham, among others. This course will place a significant emphasis on student writing:
students will be encouraged to hone their critical and creative writing styles through a
variety of exercises.
ENG314
American Power
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Who speaks? Who listens? Authors, politicians, activists and artists in other mediums
have long used the Word as more than a rhetorical device; they have combined the aesthetic
experience of reading, listening and speaking with the power to create new realities, to
bring new truths into existence, to rewrite old truths and histories. We will look at
language: what is the difference between a rock and a stone? What is the impact on the reader
and the world if we use many commas, or none at all? Most of all, we will explore what we
find, see, read, notice. In this class, with readings by the likes of Morrison, Thoreau,
Didion, Whitman, Ginsberg, Rich, Miller, Dickinson, Fitzgerald, and contemporary younger
authors, we will explore who is and has been given the power to create, who controls the word
, not only as author, but as character, narrator, subject. And we will write responses in
multiple genres out of those explorations and questions.
ENG319
American Illusions
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
People have always been susceptible to illusion. Americans, perhaps because their country
was founded on a dream, may be more susceptible to illusion than others. And our school’s
location on Old Main Street, alongside Historic Deerfield, may give us the sensation that we
live among ghosts. In this course we’ll explore classic literary examples of illusions, and
disillusionment—and the persistence of hope—and look to see how much reality we can really
stand. We’ll also work with the resources of Historic Deerfield to achieve a greater
awareness of The Street where we live. Following our summer reading of The Adventures of
Huckleberry Finn, we’ll explore village secrets with Emily Dickinson, Hawthorne’s The Scarlet
Letter, and Miller’s The Crucible. In the winter, we’ll see into the truth of things with
Emerson, Thoreau, and Whitman, then witness the Joads’ journey in Steinbeck’s The Grapes of
Wrath. And in the spring, we’ll delve into the mysteries of The Great Gatsby, Miller’s All My
Sons, and Morrison’s Song of Solomon. Students will keep journals through the year and write
critical essays on the texts, as well as personal essays (including the junior declamation),
assorted creative pieces, and analyses of film excerpts (including The Wizard of Oz).
ENG326
American Frontiers
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
The course introduces American literature as a lens through which to examine the American
experience and character. With particular attention to the portrayal of nature in American
literature, the American fascination with distinctive places, landscapes, and wilderness or
frontier is the unifying theme of this course. The quest to know what is out there and then
to claim it is balanced against the tradition of treating nature as sanctuary. In readings
students will explore Fenimore Cooper’s Adirondacks, Hawthorne’s and Thoreau’s Massachusetts
vistas, Washington Irving’s Hudson Valley, Francis Parkman’s Oregon Trail, John Muir’s
Yosemite, Willa Cather’s high plains, Upton Sinclair’s Chicago, Nathaniel West’s Los Angeles,
and John Updike’s suburbia. Readings coincide with the particular historical period that
students will be studying in U.S. History. Similarly, writing assignments are designed to
require students’ integration of literature and history.
ENG335
American Voices
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
In addition to the core texts, Gatsby, Huck Finn, Emerson, Thoreau, Dickinson, we will
also use a wide range of American short stories and novels to sample the many voices and
issues that have populated American literature. Students will encounter writers ranging from
Edith Wharton and Nathaniel Hawthorne in the 19th century to Ernest Hemingway, John Updike
and Toni Morrison in the 20th. The variety of story styles and ideas helps students to
understand better how literature has changed over time and to hone their analytical skills by
discussing how the stories work. The purpose of the course is to provide a breadth of
exposure as well as a chance to sample modern literature.
ENG349
American Currents
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Founded on cooperation between thirteen individual colonies, America has at its core a
tenuous balance between empowering the individual and sacrificing for the community.
America’s literature reflects this tension, its heroes and villains, settings and journeys,
heartbreaks and triumphs evolving to represent and define society’s shifting currents. This
American tug-of-war is now being played out in the 21st century amid an emerging global
community where resources are scarce and the playing field is rapidly leveling. Running
alongside the AP/Cambridge: Global H2O seminar, this course will examine the arc of America’s
struggle to reconcile its veneration of self-reliance and its dependence on and advancement
of communities. Students will explore how American literature embodies the philosophies
underpinning the AP/Cambridge: Global H2O seminar topics: resource management and
distribution, environmental law, and water quality. In addition to the core English III
writers — Fitzgerald, Dickinson, Thoreau, and Emerson — this course will include writers
from throughout American history who wrangle with this paradox: Thomas Jefferson, Willa
Cather, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Edward Abbey, Barbara Kingsolver, Ernest Hemingway, W. S. Merwin
, John Steinbeck, and August Wilson. This course must be taken concurrently with AP
Cambridge: Global H20. (HIS349 or SCI349)
ENG403
Walking Shadows: Shakespeare
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
The soul-searching Hamlet turns to actors, whose “purpose of playing…was and is, to
hold, as ‘twere, the mirror up to nature.” Today, we still look to those “walking shadows”
who “strut and fret their hour upon the stage” to find some sense of our own natures in the
theater’s unforgiving mirror. Using Shakespeare’s comedies Twelfth Night and The Merchant of
Venice, his late romances Cymbeline and The Tempest, and his tragedy Othello, students
examine and reflect on the plays’ defining moments from theatrical and literary perspectives.
They attempt to view and explore the plays as actors, critics, and audience members through
seminar discussions, essays, staging exercises, and improvisations.
ENG413
Future Shock: Contemp. Lit.
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
The ground-breaking “dystopian” novels of the 20th Century, such as Orwell’s 1984,
Huxley’s Brave New World and Kubrick’s A Clockwork Orange, have produced an extraordinary and
growing body of literature that imagines future worlds shaped by current trends, for better
and worse. What kind of societies will cyberspace, genetic engineering, emerging technologies
, climate change, terrorism, population growth and resource wars produce? What will be the
fate of the institutions and ideals that presently define us? What will happen to our
fundamental notions of liberty, the individual, and human relationships? Will human beings
flourish or fail? This course will examine these questions through several of the finest
recent literary dystopias and will approach the reading in a primarily seminar-style,
discussion format. Writing assignments will be predominantly creative responses to the
reading, with an occasional foray into relevant essays, short stories and films. Possible
texts include Cloud Atlas, by David Mitchell; Oryx and Crake, by Margaret Atwood; The Road,
by Cormac McCarthy; The Dazzle of Day, by Molly Gloss; Fiskadoro, by Denis Johnson; Riddley
Walker, by Russell Hoban.
ENG422
Fifty/Fifty: 50s Lit. & Cult.
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
The decade of the 1950s was full of contrasts: Ike presided in the White House but James
Dean ruled the Hollywood screen; some people lived sedately in the suburbia of Beaver Cleaver
while others struggled for an equal place to sit at a lunch counter. Parents brought
stability to the evening meal, but Elvis played the pied piper to teenage-America and rebels
battled mass conformity. Beyond these conflicting images, the fact of 50 years of two world
wars and a world-wide depression had many hungry for change. Technology advertised a solution
to every problem, but fears of the atom bomb, the Cold War, and the threat of communism cast
a long shadow over the decade. While pop culture let the good times roll, writers (and
artists, musicians, and film directors) showed us another side. Reading James Baldwin, John
Cheever, Allen Ginsberg, Patricia Highsmith, Langston Hughes, Jack Kerouac, Arthur Miller,
Sylvia Plath, J. D. Salinger, John Updike, and Richard Yates gives us a fifty/fifty chance of
getting at the heart of the Fifties. This two-term course comes with the option of a spring
term elective devoted to “The Stage and Screen of the 1950s.”
ENG432
Creative Nonfiction
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Using William Zinsser’s On Writing Well and The New Yorker as keystone texts, students in
this writing intensive course will practice the art of writing non-fiction prose in a variety
of forms. In addition to contributing regularly to a course blog and writing numerous short
and medium length pieces (reflections, humor, editorials, profiles, memoir, etc.), students
will read and dissect excerpts and full texts from authors including Malcolm Gladwell,
Michael Lewis, John McPhee, Joan Didion, Jon Krakauer, Elizabeth Kolbert, and David
Halberstam. Over the course of the fall and winter terms students will plan, research, write,
and edit one longer “capstone” piece of writing that captures their interest with an eye
toward sending it to an appropriate publication for consideration, before turning their
attention to the Meditation after the Long Winter Weekend.
ENG445
Jazz Age and Lost Generation
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Paris, Harlem, Greenwich Village: Why were these places such powerful magnets for a
generation of writers, artists, and musicians? Students will discover how a diverse range of
Americans at home and abroad responded to the cultural climate of the 1920s, a decade
characterized by enormous artistic upheaval in the midst of a balloon of economic prosperity.
Special attention will be paid to the space Paris, Harlem, and Greenwich Village occupied in
the cultural imagination of the 1920s. Students will not only study literature but also how
jazz has shaped modernism in American poetry and fiction. Among the writers students will
encounter will be James Joyce, Sherwood Anderson, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway,
Langston Hughes, William Faulkner, Claude McKay, Gertrude Stein, and Jean Toomer. Writing
assignments will include personal and analytical essays, as well as creative pieces inspired
by modernist models.
ENG473
Creative Writing Workshop
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This advanced workshop is for accomplished writers who want to develop their craft by
experimenting in a variety of genres: poetry, short fiction, creative nonfiction, personal
vignettes, and meditations. In class, students discuss the work of published authors,
practice different techniques, critique their peers’ work, and develop rewriting skills.
Texts include The Vintage Book of Contemporary American Poetry, Finbar’s Hotel, What If?, and
The Things They Carried.
ENG477
Reading Insanity: Am I Crazy?
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course seeks to explore the concept of sanity and those to whom the label “crazy”
has often been attached. Through close-readings of texts that vary across genre and
historical lines, we will confront a series of complex and often overlapping questions: What
are the telltale signs of insanity, and who defines the criteria for determining it? What
sorts of power relations are implicit in such decisions? Is it possible to be “crazy” at one
moment, but wholly sane in the next? What happens when one willfully inhabits the label? Are
there any scenarios within which insanity might actually be a desirable condition? In
articulating responses to these and other questions, students will develop improved reading,
writing, and critical thinking skills. Texts will include fiction, poetry, prose, film, and
readings in psychological theory.
ENG479
The Empire Writes Back
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
In this course our concern will be the literature of postcolonialism (all that’s written
after the colonizing force has gone home). In his poem “Conqueror,” W.S. Merwin frames many
of our questions, albeit without that mark of punctuation: “when they start to use your
language/ do they say what you say/ who are they in your words/ …do you know who is praying/
for you not to be there.” In addition to taking up the questions we hear Merwin asking—What
does it feel like to be the conquered? the one in power? How do you know the answers to those
two questions? What happens when the conquerors finally go away? Can they ever leave?—we’ll
also frame our own questions and engage critical theorists to give us a new language to
contain new ideas. Our path through the crowded landscape of writers concerned with
postcolonialist questions will be necessarily circuitous (geographically, temporally)—and
varied when it comes to genre: we’ll read essays, novels, poems, plays, and we’ll take in a
few films that amplify the postcolonial issues we’re exploring. In the Fall term we’ll focus
on literature of post-Independence India, writers from home and abroad (which is which?). In
the Winter term we’ll cast a wider net to include writers from other former British colonies:
the Caribbean, Australia, New Zealand, Nigeria. We’ll turn also to Americans’ literary
presence in a postcolonial world. Our writing will span the spectrum: journal work, personal
narrative, critical essay, poetry.
ENG485
Matters of Perspective
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Starting with Akira Kurosawa’s Rashomon, the classic Japanese film told in multiple
viewpoints, students will begin to consider the manner in which writers and artists
manipulate personal, visual, and cultural perspectives. The explorations will continue with
reconsiderations of Hamlet in Tom Stoppard’s Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead; the
personal revelations in Don’t Lets Go to the Dogs Tonight, Alexandra Fuller’s memoir of
colonial life in Rhodesia; the social and political dislocations that unleash frightening
consequences in Kamila Shamsie’s Burnt Shadows; the colliding values of science and survival
in Amitav Ghosh’s The Hungry Tide, and the blend of fiction and fact in Richard Flanagan’s
Wanting, a tale that will correspond well with the views of aboriginal life captured in two
films set in Australia, Phillip Noyce’s Rabbit-Proof Fence and Nicolas Roeg’s Walkabout.
Along with the opportunity to share ideas freely in discussions, students will write poems
and narratives, critical arguments, and a personal meditation.
ENG490
Coming Apart: Am Lit of 60′s
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is an examination of America’s crises of culture and conscience during a
turbulent decade. The course will develop four themes. The first is the rise of modern
American feminism with essays by Betty Friedan and Germaine Greer, and the poetry of Adrienne
Rich. A second is two paths two racial justice with Dr. King’s speeches juxtaposed with the
writings of Malcolm X and the founders of the Black Panther Party. A third theme is the
searing effect of the Vietnam war for those who fought and those who resisted. Writings will
include Michael Herr’s dispatches for ESQUIRE magazine and Norman Mailer’s ARMIES OF THE
NIGHT. The fourth theme of Culture and Counter-culture will illustrate the contest for
American identity in a decade of experimentation and defiance, and will feature Richard
Brautigan’s TROUT FISHING IN AMERICA, Kurt Vonnegut’s SLAUGHTERHOUSE FIVE, and Jerzy
Kosinski’s BEING THERE along with the journalism and essays of William F. Buckley, Gore Vidal
, Joan Didion, Hunter S. Thompson, Marshall McLuhan and Tom Wolfe. Students will write first
person responses to their reading in the fall term and develop a research topic for a
critical essay in the winter term.
ENG492
AP Cambridge:Capstone Research
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Required for previous year’s Capstone students
This interdisciplinary pass/fail course will meet twice a week with the sole purpose of
supporting students in their research endeavors. Once short period would be used for a weekly
seminar where students could share their work and discuss topics surrounding methodology and
writing. The other period, a long block, would meet in the library allowing students to work
on their research with support available. There will be some flexibility for weeks off during
high stress times in the senior year.
ENG510
Honors Literature: Deerfield
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Post Grads require permission of instructor
Honors Literature will contemplate the question of free will vs. fate/determinism. To
what extent are an individual’s actions freely chosen, and to what extent are they
pre-determined (and by what forces)? Are people actually capable of change, and to what
degree? We’ll also consider other essential questions (if we’re able to choose), depending on
the set of individuals in each class. Students will be expected to read all texts closely,
write extensively (critical interpretations, journals, creative pieces), and to engage fully.
This course focuses on certain classic texts,beginning in the fall with Oedipus Rex and
Antigone, Hamlet and another Shakespeare play, along with selections from the Bible and fairy
tales. In the winter we’ll move on to poetry (Sidney and Spenser, Donne and Milton,
Wordsworth and Coleridge, Byron and Shelley, Keats, Tennyson and Browning, Hopkins and Yeats,
Stevens and Williams, Frost and Eliot), as well as Moby Dick, Heart of Darkness, and
meditations. In the spring we’ll read Wharton, Joyce, and Faulkner. Through the year we’ll
explore wander Historic Deerfield, as well as visit Arrowhead (where Melville wrote Moby
Dick) and The Mount (which Edith Wharton designed), deepening our literary understanding and
widening our regional perspective.
ENG530
Honors Literature: Oxford
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Post Grads require permission of the instructor
Honors Literature will contemplate the question of free will vs. fate/determinism. To
what extent are an individual’s actions freely chosen, and to what extent are they
pre-determined (and by what forces)? Are people actually capable of change, and to what
degree? We’ll also consider other essential questions (if we’re able to choose), depending on
the set of individuals in class. Students will be expected to read all texts closely, write
extensively (critical interpretations, journals, creative pieces), and to engage fully. This
course focuses on certain classic texts,beginning in the fall with Oedipus Rex and Antigone,
Hamlet and another Shakespeare play, along with selections from the Bible and fairy tales. In
the winter we’ll move on to poetry (Sidney and Spenser, Donne and Milton, Wordsworth and
Coleridge, Byron and Shelley, Keats, Tennyson and Browning, Hopkins and Yeats, Stevens and
Williams, Frost and Eliot), as well as Dickens, Heart of Darkness, Waugh, and meditations.
Over spring break we’ll travel to Oxford (and London) to deepen our literary understanding
with further readings and lectures at the university, experiencing the real English
backgrounds of our texts through extended walks and even a play. And then in the spring we’ll
read Joyce, Beckett, and Faulkner.
HEA200
Health Issues
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course examines topics related to human sexuality, alcohol and other drugs, stress
management and general adolescent development. Through classroom presentations and
discussions, students will study a variety of issues, which are especially pertinent to their
own personal awareness and development.
HIS120
Topics in Western Civilization
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course examines major themes and episodes in the development of Near-Eastern,
Mediterranean, and European societies from antiquity to the French Revolution. Using a
diverse selection of historical and literary texts to highlight the tensions, ideas, and key
events that have shaped our world, the course also provides students with a foundation of
core skills, including source analysis, research methods, historical interpretation, and
analytical writing. Topics include the wars, politics, and ideas of Ancient Greece and Rome,
the Renaissance, the Scientific Revolution and the Enlightenment, and the influence of
religion, in particular Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, on societies and cultures.
HIS122
Africa and Latin America
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course uses literature, along with a rich variety of historical sources including
documents and films, to study cultural and political developments in Africa and Latin America
. The course explores how the forces of conquest, colonization and commerce have shaped the
lives of individuals and communities on these continents. We also focus on the process of
upheaval and change associated with decolonization, independence and revolution in these
regions. Along with being interdisciplinary, texts rely heavily upon indigenous voices and
focus on a range of countries including Nigeria, Kenya, the Congo, South Africa, Mexico, El
Salvador, Brazil and Cuba. The course is designed to build each student’s foundation in key
historical skills including active reading, argumentative writing and inquiry-based research.
HIS126
Asia in World History
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course serves both as an introduction for students who have never studied Asian
history and as a means, for those with foundational background, to further explore the
societies, politics and belief systems of India, China and the Middle East. While students
focus primarily on one of the three regional civilizations each term, they also trace the
complex web of commercial and cultural exchange paths that crossed Asia and stretched to
Europe, Africa, and Oceania. Along the way, they inquire into the relationship between these
early pathways and modern global ones. Secondary source texts provide scaffolding for the
course, but we also read from primary spiritual texts like the Bhagavad Gita, the Confucian
Analects and the Qur’an, as well as from early travelogues, histories and manuals on ruling
and warfare. Throughout the year, students develop and hone skills in active reading and
viewing (of film and still images), discussion and debate, historical research, and the
presentation of oral, multi-media and written arguments.
HIS127
Big History
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Where did everything come from? How did we get where we are now? Where do humans fit in?
Where are things heading? These are questions that origin stories from different cultures
have addressed for thousands of years. This course explores the modern scientific origin
story of how the universe and life within it has grown more complex over the last 13.7
billion years. This tale, itself thousands of years in the making, has been woven together by
a wide spectrum of scientists and historians. Together, students will engage powerful ideas
and common themes across the entire time scale of history, from the Big Bang and creation of
star systems to the emergence of the Earth’s first microorganisms and the recent rise of
human societies. The course juggles huge objects such as galaxies with tiny ones such as
atoms, while it examines both events that took a billionth of a second and stories that span
billions of years. Because Big History relies upon content, concepts and texts drawn from
many disciplines, students will need to carefully weigh how scholars develop and justify
their claims about the past, and how, over time, new claims serve to refute or refine earlier
ones. Students will also have the opportunity to create their own narratives, explanations
and arguments in response to Big History’s essential questions.
HIS300
United States History
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This survey course charts the emergence of modern America through a study of its past.
More than a purely political and chronological review, the course also examines social,
economic and cultural aspects of our heritage. In addition to the basal textbook, the course
uses many primary documents, interpretive secondary sources, guest lectures, and multimedia
technology. Careful attention is given to the development of historical skills, from research
and writing to the conceptualization of individual historical interpretations. This course is
required of all juniors not enrolled in American Studies or Honors United States History.
HIS311
His: American Studies
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This is an interdisciplinary course combining honors-level U.S. history and American
literature. The course fulfills both the junior English and history requirements, and
prepares students for the Advanced Placement exam in American history. Students examine the
social, economic, political, and cultural heritage of the United States through a combination
of primary documents, interpretive secondary sources, and representative works of American
literature and art. Close, critical analysis, responsible oral discourse and expository
writing are emphasized. American Studies is team-taught and meets for a double period.
HIS321
Honors United States History
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This honors course goes beyond the U.S. History survey to approximate introductory
college course work in the field. The primary difference, however, is in degree and not kind
as students read a wider range of historical materials, especially primary sources from the
eras under consideration. Interpretive investigations and projects include both oral and
written assignments, and required term papers. Students in this course are expected to take
the AP examination in May.
HIS349
AP Cambridge: Global H2O
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
One year of chemistry
Clean water is essential for the living world and the global economy, but the earth’s
supply of uncontaminated water is in danger of disappearing. This course will examine sources
of fresh water, global competition for this resource, the mitigation of pollution, and the
legal issues associated with the struggle to acquire and use water. Issues surrounding the
availability and use of clean water will be explored at local, national, and global levels by
means of investigative case studies. Through research and inquiry, students will evaluate the
“triple bottom line” by analyzing the economic, social, and environmental impacts of each
case. Employing an interdisciplinary approach designed to foster inquiry, global awareness,
and independent thinking, this seminar will feature guided discussion, student presentations,
guest speakers, chemistry lab work, and field trips to local sites. Fall and winter term case
studies will prepare students for team projects and individual presentations in the spring.
This course must be taken concurrently with American Currents – ENG349. To receive the AP
credential, students must continue with research and a capstone project during senior year.
HIS402
American Empire
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
At the dawn of the 21st century, the United States is a superpower without rival, an
immensely powerful, wealthy country whose influence stretches to every corner of the world.
This course charts the path that America has followed to gain this lofty global position,
from the early 19th century to the present day—a multi-faceted story that is political and
social, military and cultural, environmental and technological, national and international.
This history of triumphant struggles and bitter setbacks is about ideas too, so students also
study the champions and opponents of America’s imperial ascent. Because the idea of an
American empire is itself controversial, this course offers a comparison to some of history’s
other great empires in order to see what is distinctive about America’s imperial project.
This course also considers the internal and external challenges facing the United States in
the 21st century, a time when much anxiety exists about the future of the American empire.
HIS412
Modern Times:20th C. World His
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Dynamic, violent, and unpredictable, the past fifty years have been tumultuous—a time of
wonder and tragedy, of great breakthroughs and disastrous breakdowns. This course examines
important ideas of the past one hundred years, but concentrates mainly upon the major
developments, discoveries, trends, and tensions of the post-1945 period. The course may
address issues ranging from total war and its impact on thought and culture, the Cold War and
the collapse of communism, decolonization and nationalism in developing countries, genocide
and human rights, technological change, emerging environmental challenges, the impact of the
September 11 attacks, and the financial crash of 2008.
HIS443
India and China: 2.5B & Change
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
The world is changing at an astonishing pace, and India and China, with their high
economic growth rates and combined populations of more than 2.5 billion, contribute
significantly to that change. This interdisciplinary, topics-based course draws upon the
socio-political, economic, environmental and demographic histories of India and China not
only to better understand the impact of change on the two nations, but also to clarify the
degree to which our fates in the global landscape are bound to theirs. Topics include
controversial international policies (free trade, decisions regarding war and peace),
resource management (water, oil, coal) and history’s largest human migrations. Texts range
from scholarly journal publications to the morning’s Wall Street Journal. Students learn and
teach through discussion, debate, small group problem-solving exercises and position papers.
They complete the course with an analytical research project on a relevant topic of their
choice.
HIS546
Hnrs Euro His-20th Cent Europe
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
A small continent, Europe has for centuries had an outsized impact on world affairs.
Communism and fascism, Munich and Kosovo, total war and genocide, war-crimes tribunals and
human-rights charters, neo-realism and neoliberalism, Beatlemania and punk rock, ’1968′ and
’1989′, ethnic cleansing and the Eurovision Song Contest, Georgie Best and Zizou — these are
just a few of Europe’s contributions to the history of our age. This course examines the
human experience of such episodes of political, social, and cultural upheaval and innovation
in the twentieth century, focusing on the values that drove people to act, shaped and
transformed institutions, guided state policy, and underpinned communities, families and
individuals. Special attention will be given to the modernism of the Belle Epoque, the Great
War, the Spanish Civil War, the Second World War and the Holocaust, Cold-War culture, 1968
and the revolt of the postwar generation, detente and the Second Cold War, the dissolution of
the EastBloc, and the Yugoslav wars of the 1990s. We end with an examination of the
challenges and opportunities facing Europeans in an age of globalization. Film, literature
and memoir are used extensively to understand, interpret and evaluate the human experience of
Europe’s twentieth century. The course stresses critical thinking and discussion skills, and
activities include debates, roundtables, and simulations. Students will acquire a thorough
and up-to-date grounding in research skills that will serve them well in college and beyond.
(Note that this course covers roughly one-third of the syllabus for the AP exam in European
History; interested students may choose to undertake additional, guided reading and attend
occasional meetings in preparation for that exam.)
HIS550
Honors Economics
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
In the first half of the year students are introduced to microeconomic theory through the
study of such concepts as supply and demand, the law of diminishing returns, marginal utility
and the theory of the firm and industry. The second half of the year focuses on macroeconomic
analysis and its historic development from Keynes to Friedman. Such concepts as national
income analysis and monetary and fiscal policy are covered in depth. We also focus on public
policy and current political/economic issues through the use of case studies and supplemental
readings.
ARA100
Arabic I
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is an introduction to the Arabic language and Arabic-speaking cultures. With
an emphasis on developing communicative skills and solid grammatical structures, students
will work with a variety of media to master the alphabet, basic reading and writing skills,
and develop listening and speaking skills in the Modern Standard Arabic and the Levantine
dialect. Students learn the basic linguistic structures of the Semitic Language family and an
appreciation of Arabic calligraphy art.Students in this class will have the use of iPads
through which they submit a variety of homework assignments. Learning mediums include iPad
apps, interactive websites, videos, recordings, as well as the tried and true pen and paper.
Much of the content is introduced through homework and then honed and molded in the following
class through activities and speaking experience. Class is conducted mostly in Arabic with
some English when needed.
ARA110
Arabic I Accelerated
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Students in Accelerated Arabic are expected to advance through material at a more
rigorous pace following the same format outlined in Arabic 100.
ARA200
Arabic II
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Arabic I or the equivalent
This course builds upon skills developed in the first year of Arabic and follows a
similar format of course delivery, homework variations and a blended instruction format. The
emphasis on developing communicative skills and solid grammatical structures continues as
students work to master their communicative skills in the Modern Standard Arabic and the
Levantine dialect.Students in this class will have the use of iPads through which they submit
a variety of homework assignments. Learning mediums include apps, interactive websites,
videos, recordings, as well as the tried and true pen and paper. This class is conducted in
Arabic.
ARA220
Arabic II – Accelerated
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Arabic I Accelerated or the equivalent
*
ARA300
Arabic III
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Arabic II or the equivalent
This course builds upon skills developed in Arabic 200, and it follows a similar format
of course delivery, homework variations and a blended mode of instruction. Intermediate level
communicative skills and detailed grammatical structures continue as students work to master
skills in the Modern Standard Arabic and the Levantine dialect. Students in this class will
have the use of iPads through which they submit a variety of homework assignments. Learning
mediums include apps, interactive websites, videos, recordings, as well as the tried and true
pen and paper. This class is conducted in Arabic.
ARA330
Arabic III – Accelerated
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Arabic II Accelerated or the equivalent
*
Students in Accelerated Arabic III are expected to advance through material at a more
rigorous pace following the same format outlined in Arabic 300.
ARA400
Arabic IV
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Arabic III or the equivalent
At this level of Arabic, students continue developing language skills through authentic
texts and literature in Modern Standard Arabic. Grammar is integrated through classroom
discussions and activities. In Arabic IV, students continue expanding vocabulary, improving
listening comprehension and developing advanced communication skills in both the Levantine
and Egyptian dialects of Arabic. Students in this class will have the use of iPads through
which they submit a variety of homework assignments. Learning mediums include apps,
interactive websites, videos, recordings, as well as the tried and true pen and paper. This
class is conducted in Arabic.
ARA440
Arabic IV – Accelerated
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Arabic III Accelerated or the equivalent
*
Students in Accelerated Arabic IV are expected to advance through material at a more
rigorous pace following the same format outlined in Arabic 400.
ARA500
Arabic V
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Arabic IV or the equivalent
At this level of Arabic, students continue developing language skills through authentic
texts and literature in Modern Standard Arabic. Grammar is integrated through classroom
discussions and activities. In Arabic IV, students continue expanding vocabulary, improving
listening comprehension and developing advanced communication skills in both the Levantine
and Egyptian dialects of Arabic. Students in this class will have the use of iPads through
which they submit a variety of homework assignments. Learning mediums include apps,
interactive websites, videos, recordings, as well as the tried and true pen and paper. This
class is conducted in Arabic.
ARA550
Arabic V – Accelerated
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Arabic IV Accelerated or the equivalent
*
This class focuses on the individual student’s stated goals and objectives as it
continues to develop language skills through authentic texts and literature in Modern
Standard Arabic. Grammar is integrated through classroom discussions and activities. In
Accelerated Arabic IV, students continue to expand vocabulary and develop advanced
communication skills in the dialects of choice. Students in this class will have the use of
iPads through which they submit a variety of homework assignments. Learning mediums include
apps, interactive websites, videos, recordings, as well as the tried and true pen and paper.
This class is conducted in Arabic.
CHI100
Chinese I
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is an introduction to Chinese through listening, speaking, reading, and
writing. Students learn Pinyin Romanization and simplified characters. The course stresses
aural-oral proficiency and mastery of basic grammar structures. Class work is supplemented by
a multi-media laboratory, tapes, and videos on Chinese culture, films, and other materials.
CHI200
Chinese II
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Chinese I or the equivalent
This course continues to work on listening, speaking, reading, and writing skills. Class
is conducted in Chinese. Oral proficiency is developed through the use of communicative
activities, including class discussion, role-playing, presentations and group projects,
videos and movies. Students strive for accuracy while focusing on the ability to communicate
in varied contexts and with proper grammar.
CHI300
Chinese III
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Chinese II or the equivalent
study of fundamental grammatical structures. The course emphasizes self-expression
through classroom discussions, compositions, communication activities, and reading a variety
of short stories. Class is conducted in Chinese and supplemented by videos, movies, plays and
other cultural materials.
CHI400
Chinese IV
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Chinese III or the equivalent
This course continues to develop proficiency in Chinese, emphasizing the language skills
of speaking, composition and reading. Students undertake a complete review of grammatical
structures and read a variety of works in Chinese culture, history and social issues. Class
is conducted in Chinese.
CHI500
Chinese V
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Chinese IV or the equivalent
This is a course for students ready to pursue Chinese at an advanced level with a high
degree of proficiency in oral and written Chinese. Students explore a variety of text and
works in literature, history, culture, art and music. Presentations, essays, and journal
entries are included. Independent study and research are also encouraged in this course.
Class is conducted in Chinese.
CHI600
Chinese Tutorial
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Chinese V or the equivalent
This advanced course is a modern Chinese literature and writing seminar. Students explore
a variety of readings and practice a wide range of writing styles in order to analyze and
develop effective skills for literary analysis and appreciation. Narrative fiction, films,
poetry and critical essays are included. Students are expected to take an active part in
class discussion and love to read and write.
CLA800
Classics Tutorial
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is a reading of Hesiod’s Theogony, Lucretius’ De Rerum Natura, Plato’s
Apology of Socrates, and Tacitus’ Agricola. We will read the Theogony, the Apology, and the
Agricola in their entirety, and substantial selections from the De Rerum Natura. All primary
readings will be done in either Greek or Latin, depending on the author, with a selection of
secondary readings chosen to supplement our understanding of the authors and their work. The
different explanatory models of the world, mythological, scientific, philosophical, and
biographical, and the place of humans in it, will provide the overarching theme for our
course of study.
FRE100
French I
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is an introduction to French through exposure to listening, speaking, reading
, and writing. The course uses an aural oral approach, which stresses oral proficiency as
well as mastery of basic grammar structure. Various resources including a multi-media
laboratory, tapes, and films supplement work in the classroom. Class is conducted in French.
FRE200
French II
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
French I or the equivalent
This course is focused on a continuation of the skills learned in French I. Students use
a grammatically and thematically structured textbook that is supplemented by software
programs and reading resources. The emphasis is on oral and written expression and students
are introduced to the joy of reading in French. Class is conducted in French.
FRE220
French II Honors
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This is an accelerated intermediate level course for students with a high degree of aural
oral proficiency. In addition to an in-depth study of grammar, students develop conversation
skills and read a variety of short literary works from France and the Francophone world.
Various sources, including a multi-media laboratory, CD, and films supplement work in the
classroom. Class is conducted in French.
FRE300
French III
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
French II or the equivalent
This course uses an intermediate level textbook that is grammatically and thematically
structured and includes a variety of readings. Work in the classroom is supplemented by
software programs and online resources. In the spring, students read such work as Le petit
prince. Emphasis is on oral and written expression. Class is conducted in French.
FRE330
French III Honors
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This is an accelerated third year course that emphasizes discussion and composition. A
thorough review of grammar is conducted. Students study the 19th century and read a variety
of texts by 19th-century authors. Class is conducted in French.
FRE400
French IV
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
French III or the equivalent
This course is for students who would like to pursue the study of French at a more
advanced level. Students review the fundamentals of grammar and continue to develop oral
proficiency. Students read a variety of works by writers from France and the Francophone
world. Class is conducted in French.
FRE440
French IV Honors
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
French III Honors or the equivalent
This is an accelerated course that emphasizes oral proficiency, composition, and
techniques of literary analysis. Advanced grammatical structures are reviewed. Students read
a variety of 19th- and 20th-century classics from France and the Francophone world. Students
are introduced to the structure of the Advanced Placement French Language Examination. Class
is conducted in French.
FRE500
French V
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
French IV or the equivalent
This is a literature seminar that continues to emphasize grammar and composition in order
to polish students’ writing skills. Students read works by a variety of authors from France
and the Francophone world. Oral presentations, debates and discussions are also used to
continue developing oral competency. Class is conducted in French.
FRE550
French V Honors
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
French IV Honors or the equivalent
This is an accelerated survey course that covers French literature, political and
cultural history. Students read works from the earliest French texts to post-colonialism.
Films are used to complement other materials. Students are asked to write essays as well as
creative pieces on a regular basis. Class is conducted in French.
FRE660
French VI Honors
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This is a topic course for advanced speakers of French who have finished French V-Honors
at Deerfield. It is a course especially designed for those students who wish to continue
their French studies. Readings will continue beyond the French V-Honors curriculum and
explore contemporary issues of France and the European Union. Open to students with
permission of the instructor. This course may not be offered every year.
FRE700
French Tutorial
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This is a topic course for advanced speakers of French who have finished French VI-Honors
at Deerfield, or its equivent. It is a course especially designed for those students who wish
to continue their French studies. Readings will continue beyond the French VI-Honors
curriculum and explore French colonization and the questions emerging in its aftermath, both
in the colonized world and in France itself. This course may not be offered every year.
GRE100
Greek I
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This introduction to ancient Greek is offered to experienced language students who wish
to try something old and different. The goal is to learn to read ancient Greek as quickly as
possible. The pace, content, and texts are matched to the interests and experience of the
students in the class. Offered when three or more students request it, this course is open to
seniors, juniors, and, with permission of the instructor, sophomores.
GRE200
Greek II
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is a continuation of Greek I, offering a review of and advance in the
fundamentals of Greek grammar and syntax for qualified students. In the fall and winter terms
, students gradually engage more consistently with extended readings of authentic Ancient
Greek from the Greek literary canon. As a culmination of the course in the spring, students
will enroll in the Classics spring elective in which students engage in literary genres in
translation that are integral to the Classical tradition.
LAT100
Latin I
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This introductory Latin course guides students toward acquiring a fundamental knowledge
of the elements of the Latin language and aspects of Roman life. Great emphasis is placed on
reading Latin as the activity that organizes the study of basic forms, vocabulary and
grammatical structures.
LAT200
Latin II
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Latin I or equivalent
In this intermediate level course, a review and continuation of the study of forms and
syntax along traditional lines are combined with practice in reading as a prelude to the
study of real Roman literature. Samplings of Roman comedy, poetry or other types of writings
usually supplement the reading of historical works such as Caesar’s Commentaries.
LAT300
Latin III
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Latin II or equivalent
Cicero’s Orations are an important part of this course. The study of Cicero’s words and
his rhetorical style follows a systematic review of the fundamentals of Latin. Selections
from other Roman writers, the poet Ovid among them, lead to a deeper understanding and
broader perspective of Roman culture. Students who intend to take the College Board SAT II
test in Latin should enroll in this course.
LAT400
Latin IV
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Latin III or equivalent, and upperclassman by
permission
This literature course provides an in depth study of the Roman national epic poem of the
age of Augustus. Through a close reading of extensive portions of the Latin text of the
Aeneid students expand their skill at reading Latin and enlarge their knowledge about the
life and history of the ancient Romans. The course covers the syllabus for AP Latin: Vergil
exam and familiarizes students with the nature of that test so that they may, if they wish,
sit for the exam in May.
LAT500
Latin V
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Latin IV or the equivalent
This advanced course is a survey of the shorter poems of Catullus, and the Odes of Horace
. Seminar tactics papers, class discussion and reports are employed to approach the poems as
literature and to place them in historical context.
LAT700
Advanced Tutorial
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Advanced Tutorial may be offered to students who, in consultation with the department and
with its endorsement, wish to pursue an individualized course in classical studies.
SPA100
Spanish I
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is an introduction to Spanish, and it presents basic grammar and vocabulary.
Students develop their skills using text, video, and audio materials. Class is conducted in
Spanish. Open to all students; juniors and seniors need permission of the Academic Dean.
SPA200
Spanish II
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Spanish I or the equivalent
This extension of the student’s work in beginning Spanish includes an in depth study of
Spanish grammar and vocabulary. Class is conducted in Spanish.
SPA300
Spanish III
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Spanish II or the equivalent
This course continues to develop the four basic skills: speaking, listening, reading and
writing. Students study short literary works, write compositions, review basic grammar and
investigate a variety of cultural topics. The emphasis is on developing conversational
proficiency while reinforcing proper grammatical usage. Class is conducted in Spanish.
SPA330
Spanish III Honors
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
minimum 90% in Spanish II
This course is for students able to pursue Spanish at a more comprehensive level and
faster pace than those of Spanish III. In comparison to the Spanish III course, greater
emphasis is placed on oral work in class, the grammar review is more sophisticated, and
literary skills are more aggressively developed. Class is conducted in Spanish. With
permission of the instructor, the more successful students may move from this course to the
advanced courses, skipping Spanish IV.
SPA400
Spanish IV
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Spanish III or the equivalent
This course continues to develop proficiency in Spanish through study and practice in
conversation, composition and reading. Through the study of Latin American and Spanish
literature and history, students improve critical reading, writing skills, cultural awareness
and grammatical precision. Students are introduced to SAT Spanish Subject Test exercises and
test format in order to familiarize them with the test. Class is conducted in Spanish.
SPA420
Spanish IV – Community Service
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Spanish III or Spanish III-H
This course follows the readings and curriculum in the regular Spanish IV course but adds
a community service component. Students will teach Spanish to third and fourth graders from
Deerfield Elementary every other Wednesday during the seventy-minute period. Open to students
who have finished Spanish III or III-H at Deerfield and who wish to serve the community while
continuing with their Spanish studies. Interested students should simply sign up as a first
choice. Only 12 will be selected and those not selected will be automatically placed in
Spanish IV. This course is a full academic year commitment. Speaking with Dr. Invernizzi
about your interest before signing up typically increases the student´s chance of being
selected. You will leave this course ready to teach Spanish or English (both as a second
language) to children anywhere in the world. You will possess the tools and experience to
make your class fun, exciting and productive. Excellent if you plan on summer jobs that
require these skills.
SPA500
Spanish V
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Spanish IV, or Spanish III-H
This course continues the development of Spanish with particular emphasis on language
skills. Students are introduced to the format and material of the Spanish AP Language
Examination, but they are neither required nor expected to take it. Students consider
advanced topics in grammar, conversation and composition; read extensively in Spanish
Peninsular literature; and are expected to manage more sophisticated structures and idiomatic
expressions. Class is conducted in Spanish.
SPA600
Honors Latin Amer. Literature
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course is divided into three distinct terms. In the fall we explore Latin American
literature from its beginnings starting with pre-Columbian texts such as the Popol Vuh. Odd
and even years will read different texts yet they will all come from the Conquest and the
Colonial era. Winter term takes us to attempt longer and more contemporary texts. Some works
read may be One Hundred Years of Solitude or Leafstorm by García Márquez. In the spring,
though we typically begin with some short stories by such greats as Borges, Cortázar and
María Luisa Bombal, we also delve into the world of film. This is an honors-level, year-long
course and seniors may not drop in the spring.
MAT101
Algebra I
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This is a course in first year algebra with emphasis on such topics as the properties of
the real number system, solving first degree sentences in one variable, the fundamental
operations involving polynomial and rational expressions, systems of linear equations in two
variables, fractions, factoring, ratio, proportion, variation, exponents, roots, quadratic
equations, and problem solving. All of the material of a typical first year of algebra will
be completed as well as a variety of enrichment topics.
MAT102
Algebra I
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This is designed for a student who has already studied some or much of the material that
is covered in a typical first year algebra program, but who would benefit from additional
work with the topics of Algebra I. The fall term is devoted to a review of the basic skills
and ideas of Real Numbers, followed by single-variable equations and inequalities which then
leads to work with linear relations and their applications in the late fall and winter.
Students end the winter with the study of quadratic relations and their applications, and
then spend the spring term on introductions to exponential relations, probability and
statistics, and the idea of functions.
MAT201
Geometry
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Math 101/102 or the equivalent
This course is designed for students who would benefit from significant reinforcement of
topics from Algebra I as they pertain to geometric problems. The emphasis in this course is
on recognizing the geometric relationships in shapes and solids. New concepts are introduced
using inductive reasoning and exploration. Students who complete this course will be prepared
for a 300-level course.
MAT202
Geometry
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
MAT102/112 or the equivalent
This course integrates material from both plane and solid geometry. However, the
development of the material requires extensive use of the skills and concepts already studied
in algebra. The major emphasis is the study of the properties of two and three dimensional
geometric figures from both a deductive and inductive reasoning approach. Additional topics
include material from analytic geometry, exercises in logic, the graphing of functions and
relations and elementary trigonometry. Students who complete this course will be prepared for
a 300-level course.
MAT203
Honors Geometry
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Outstanding ability in MAT101/102 or the
equivalent
This is an enriched version of Math 202 and is designed for the well-qualified math
student. The course covers the same geometric topics as Math 202 but in greater depth.
Students investigate additional topics at the discretion of the instructor. Successful
completion of this course normally advances a student to Math 303.
MAT301
Algebra II
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
MAT101/102 and MAT202/203
This course meets the standards of a solid course in second year algebra. However, it is
designed for students whose background indicates a need for a review of material from
previous courses. As such it moves at a somewhat slower pace than Math 302. Students who
complete this course are prepared for a 400-level mathematics course. Students may take a
200-level and a 300-level course concurrently.
MAT302
Algebra II
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
MAT101/102 and MAT202/203
This course is intended for students who have achieved success in Math 102 and Math 202
or the equivalent. The material is developed with an emphasis on the functional approach and
most topics include a range of applied problems. The main focus of the course is the
analytical development of the linear, quadratic, polynomial, exponential and logarithmic
functions. Other topics developed include an analysis of both the real and complex number
systems, systems of equations in two and three variables, and an introduction to
trigonometric functions. Students may take a 200-level and a 300-level course concurrently.
Students who complete this course are prepared for a 400-level mathematics course.
MAT303
Honors Algebra II
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
MAT101/102 and MAT202/203
This is an enriched version of Math 302 and is designed for the well-qualified student.
The course develops the same material as Math 302 but in greater depth. Students in this
class are frequently asked to solve non-routine problems and to apply familiar concepts in
new problem situations. Students may take a 200-level and a 300-level course concurrently.
Successful completion of this course normally advances a student to Math 403.
MAT401
Functions, Statistics & Trig.
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
MAT301/302 or the equivalent
This is intended as a follow-up to Algebra II or an equivalent course. It is designed to
complete the study of the elementary functions (linear, quadratic, exponential, logarithmic,
and trigonometric). Additionally, the course will develop some material from finite
mathematics including an introduction to probability and statistics. While the topics cover a
wide range of mathematics the course does not include the rigor of a precalculus course, and
the pace allows for a review of some concepts from Algebra II. Throughout the entire course
modeling of real phenomena is emphasized. A Deerfield Academy laptop is required.
MAT402
Precalculus
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
MAT302 or the equivalent
This is a follow up to Math 302 and as such continues the development of functions and
relations. The course includes a thorough study of polynomial, rational, exponential,
logarithmic and trigonometric functions, an analytical development of conic sections, polar
equations and graphs, matrices, and an introduction to data analysis. Calculator based
graphing technology is incorporated into the course, and the instructional approach is
greatly influenced by the fact that all students have immediate access to this technology.
MAT403
Honors Precalculus
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
MAT303 or the equivalent
This is designed as a continuation of Math 303. The topics covered in this accelerated
course include all those listed under Math 402 but the pace is such that the material will be
completed by the end of the winter term. Successful completion of this course normally
advances a student to Math 603 (AP Calculus BC).
MAT502
Discrete Math. & Precalculus
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
MAT401 or the equivalent
This course follows Math 401. It is also intended for students who have completed 402 and
who do not wish to study calculus at this time. This course provides a continued emphasis on
the development of functions and relations, including a thorough study of polynomial,
rational, exponential, logarithmic, and power functions. Further, data analysis and
difference equations are used to model real world phenomena. Calculator and computer based
graphing technology are incorporated into the course.
MAT601
Calculus
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Math 502 and/or Math 402 or the equivalent
This course offers an introduction to the derivative and the integral. The pace of this
course allows for a review of precalculus topics when necessary.
MAT602
AP Calculus AB
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
MAT402 or the equivalent
This course follows the Advanced Placement AB syllabus, which incorporates an
introduction to the derivative and the integral and their applications. Students in this
course are required to take the AP exam in May.
MAT603
AP Calculus BC
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
MAT403 or the equivalent
This course follows the Advanced Placement BC syllabus, which incorporates an
introduction to the derivative and the integral with their applications and work in infinite
series. This four-term course, which begins in the spring term of the sophomore or junior
year, is for students who are outstanding in mathematics. Open to students who have completed
Math 403 or the equivalent, with permission of the department. Exceptional mathematics
students entering Deerfield in the fall term with demonstrated excellence in precalculus may
consult the mathematics chair as to placement in the fall. Students in this course are
required to take the AP exam in May.
MAT612
AP Statistics
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Math 302 or 303 with permission, or Math 401 or
402
This course follows the Advanced Placement Statistics syllabus, which introduces students
to the major concepts and tools for collecting, analyzing, and drawing conclusions from data.
Students are exposed to four broad conceptual themes: exploring data by observing patterns
and departures from patterns, planning a study by deciding what and how to measure,
anticipating patterns by producing models using probability and simulation, and studying
statistical inference by confirming models. May be taken concurrently with a 400-level or
higher course. Students in this course are required to take the AP exam in May.
MAT702
Adv.Calc.& Differen.Equation
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
MAT602/603 or the equivalent
This course is for outstanding mathematics students. The content includes work on
multivariable calculus, vector calculus, optimization problems, the calculus of fields, and
ordinary differential equations, both linear and non-linear. Mathematica, the symbolic
mathematics software, is used extensively in the course for displaying 3-D graphs, performing
advanced numerical analysis, and analyzing non-linear differential equations and systems of
such equations. A licensed copy of the software is provided to all students.
MAT802
Adv. Mathematics Tutorial
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
MAT702 or the equivalent
On an individual basis, further study in mathematics may be pursued. Topics vary from
year to year, depending on the interests of the faculty and the students, but may include
proof writing, number theory, probability, statistics, linear algebra, abstract algebra,
advanced differential equations, special functions and complex function theory. Graphics
calculators may be required.
MAT902
Independent Study in Math
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
MAT802
Open to students who have completed Math 802 at Deerfield, with permission of the
department. Topics not covered in 802 will be pursued as agreed upon by the interest of the
student and instructor.
PHI120
Ethics
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
What is “the good life?” How do you define “right” and “wrong”? What do you do when
confronted with an important decision that pits “right vs. right”? Students explore and
sharpen their own moral reasoning as they investigate the strengths and weaknesses of major
ethical theories. The class grapples with the ideas of such philosophers as Plato, Aristotle,
Mill, Kant, Bentham, and Hobbes. Class discussions focus on the applications of theories to
ethical issues and personal stories. Assessment includes analytical writing and independent
research projects.
PHI200
Eastern Philosophy
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
“The more you know, the less you understand.” Lao Tzu. Together we will explore the
incredibly rich landscape of Eastern philosophy. While deceptively simple, our texts
invariably lead to meaningful self-discovery and insights about the world. The students will
be asked to consider the significance and relevance of these perspectives. Can they help us
navigate our own lives? Have they subtly influenced western thought when we were not looking?
Along with the classic texts of Western interpretation, we will consider works such as Zen in
the Art of Archery, Tao Te Ching, What the Buddha Taught, and The Analects of Confucius.
PHI440
Political Philosophy
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Should there be a government? If so, what should be its responsibilities? What should be
the extent of its authority? This course explores classic and contemporary debates in
political philosophy. The students undertake a rigorous and critical examination of classic
texts on issues such as leadership, justice, civil disobedience, human rights, and social
contract theory. Texts by influential political theorists (including Sophocles, Plato, Locke,
Marx, Nietzsche, Rawls) supplement a discussion of present day issues. Lively class
discussions and independent research projects help students develop their ability to merge
politics and philosophy.
REL120
The Bible
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
The course examines themes in the Hebrew and Christian scriptures. A close reading of
selected sections of The Bible provides the basis for examination of the historical and
ethical significance of this literature.
REL440
Religions of the World
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
The course begins with an examination and analysis of religious questions in the broadest
sense. What is religion? What does religion attempt to explain? How can one be a “successful”
adherent to this tradition? Students then survey major world religions: Hinduism, Jainism,
Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Class discussion and independent reading focus on
the great books of these religions in an attempt to discover both the common and the unique
elements.
ANA375
Anatomy and Physiology
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Introductory biology
This course is a study of the structure and function of major systems of the human body.
Lectures, laboratory work (including dissection), research papers, special projects and
presentations offer students an exciting look at the relationship between anatomy and
physiology.
AST340
Astronomy
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course examines the major questions of contemporary astronomy, as viewed through the
lens of physics. What is our place in space? Where in the Universe is “home?” Where did we
and our planet come from? When did everything begin? How might it end? In the meantime, what
keeps it all going? The astronomer’s laboratory is the entire Universe, yet only a tiny
fraction of that laboratory has been explored directly. To understand the rest, we rely on
the laws of nature—physics in particular—to interpret the messages carried across the cosmos
by starlight. This conceptually-based course features regular use of the Tanoto Planetarium,
observing sessions with the Academy’s telescopes, remote imaging via the Internet using
telescope/camera systems in New Mexico and Australia, lab activities, and computer
simulations. Note – this is the same course as Physics I: Physics Reveals the Universe PHY340
.
BIO240
Biology I
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
One year of chemistry
This is an introductory biology course. Through guided inquiry activities and thorough
self-designed investigations students will explore central understandings in the discipline
of biology. The topics of evolution, ecology, genetics, and anatomy will serve as vehicles
for students in the application of the scientific process.
BIO340
Biology IA
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
One year of chemistry
This single period class is intended for students with a high proficiency in chemistry.
Biology IA is a comprehensive introductory survey of biology. The themes of molecular biology
, cell biology, genetics, anatomy, ecology and evolution provide the conceptual framework of
the course. Students are encouraged to take the SAT II subject test upon completion.
BIO540
AP Biology
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
One year of chemistry
Advanced Placement Biology is a demanding college-level course designed for students with
high aptitude and strong interest in science. The underlying principles of evolution, cell
biology, genetics and systems interactions are developed in depth in accordance with the
course syllabus issued by the College Board for Fall 2012. Emphasis is placed on
inquiry-based laboratory activities and student-centered projects that complement the
lectures and discussions. Students are expected to take the AP Biology examination upon
completion of the course.
BIO660
Biomedical Research: Trauma
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
AP Biology & permission of instructor
This course is designed to involve students in all aspects of biomedical research,
including literature searches, experimental protocol design, experiment execution, data
collection, data analysis, and project presentation. Students work in small teams based on
common student interests, sharing workload and developing their own specialties within the
group. Topics to-date have included cardiology, forensic pathology, orthopaedic biomechanics,
and general functional anatomy. Specific projects have investigated the human dive reflex,
arthropod exoskeleton functional anatomy, finite element modeling of bruising, and police
arrest decisions based on trauma severity, in cases of intimate partner violence.
BIO670
Biochemical Research
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Chemistry & Biology w/ at least one @ AP level or
permission
Biochemistry Research will introduce the student to the interface between chemistry and
biology. We will study natural and synthetic molecules that are inspired by or interact with
biological systems. This includes but is not limited to enzymes, pharmaceuticals and
biosensors. Students will experience all aspects of research, from the selection of an
interesting problem, to literature searches, collaboration, experimental protocol design,
experiment execution, data collection, data analysis, manuscript preparation, and project
presentation. Students will work in small teams based on common student interests, sharing
workload and developing their own sub-specialties within the team. Potential projects
include: the engineering of a glucose or pH sensor, the exploration of amino acid catalyzed
reactions, and genetic engineering of bacteria.
CHE240
Chemistry I
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Physics I/IA or department permission
This course enables students to develop an understanding of the fundamental properties of
matter that provides the foundation for the development of quantitative models of chemical
systems. Laboratory work, guided inquiry learning, group discussion and lecture are
integrated into most aspects of the year’s work. Students who do very well in this course may
elect to take the SAT II Chemistry test at the end of the year.
CHE340
Chemistry I Accelerated
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Physics or concurrent Algebra II or H Geometry
The course is intended for students with high aptitude for science and math. Chemistry I
Accelerated emphasizes inquiry learning through the development of problem solving and
laboratory skills. Students are encouraged to take the SAT II Chemistry test upon the
completion of this course. The exceptional student who is considering ChemIA might
alternatively consider enrolling in AP Chemistry.
CHE540
AP Chemistry
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Concurrent or completed Honors Algebra II
This is a chemistry course for students with strong interest in science and exceptional
quantitative skills. Meeting daily over double periods, the course meticulously covers the AP
lecture syllabus and laboratory syllabus. Students are expected to take the AP exam upon
completion of this course.
CHE611
Analytical Chemistry Research
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Chemistry 1A or AP Chemistry
This course will explore the real-world applications of chemistry, from the analysis of
residues collected from a crime scene to the determination of calorie content in food.
Students will learn rigorous research procedures through hands-on simulations, and will then
take their understanding on into student-selected independent research topics carried out in
small groups. This course will provide both a background in scientific research and a
foundation for the instrumental techniques found in college-level chemistry laboratories.
COM105
Computer Science
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course introduces students to the logic and structure of programming languages
(including Java and HTML). Students also learn the general architecture of computer systems.
Governed by the philosophy that people best learn to program by programming, students work
through a series of programs through which they discover careful syntax, develop control, and
assimilate data structures.
COM500
AP Computer Science
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Concurrent Honors Precalculus or instructor
permission
This is a course for students who have a serious interest in studying computer science.
In this course students learn an object-oriented approach to programming, with the emphasis
being on problem solving, algorithm development, and data structures. The course is demanding
and requires significant work out of class. Students are expected to take the AP Computer
Science A exam upon completion of this course.
GEO340
Geology
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
The geologic processes which continually produce and modify our planet’s surface provide
the focus of this course. Relationships between these processes, geologic cycles and the
underlying concepts of plate tectonics are stressed. In addition, an examination of the
unique geology of the Deerfield area provides excellent illustrations of many of the topics
covered in the classroom. There is a strong orientation toward fieldwork and laboratory work,
and students may be required to hike over rough terrain on occasion.
PHY140
Physics I
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This is an introductory physics course. Through guided inquiry, group discussion, and
hands on investigations students will come to a functional understanding of the principles of
physics. We study phenomena including mechanics, electricity and magnetism, optics and others
. Students create their own experiments, test their ideas, engineer and build their own
structures and communicate their ideas to others. This course focuses on the concepts,
principles, and ways of thinking that will underlie students’ further study of science.
PHY240
Physics I Accelerated
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Must have completed Algebra I
This is an introductory physics course with an emphasis on data collection and analysis.
Through guided inquiry, group discussions, and hands on investigations students will come to
a functional understanding of the principles of physics. Students will investigate phenomena
from the major themes of mechanics, electricity and magnetism, optics and others. Students
will create their own experiments and be pushed to uncover, explain and extend patterns and
principles in nature. This will be done through extensive use of computer-based data
acquisition and analysis.
PHY340
Physics & Astronomy
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
This course examines the major questions of contemporary astronomy, as viewed through the
lens of physics. What is our place in space? Where in the Universe is “home?” Where did we
and our planet come from? When did everything begin? How might it end? In the meantime, what
keeps it all going? The astronomer’s laboratory is the entire Universe, yet only a tiny
fraction of that laboratory has been explored directly. To understand the rest, we rely on
the laws of nature—physics in particular—to interpret the messages carried across the cosmos
by starlight. This conceptually-based course features regular use of the Tanoto Planetarium,
observing sessions with the Academy’s telescopes, remote imaging via the Internet using
telescope/camera systems in New Mexico and Australia, lab activities, and computer
simulations. Note: this is the same course as Astronomy AST240.
PHY440
AP Physics B
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Must have completed Algebra II
This course is intended for students with a strong aptitude for science and a keen
interest in the physical world. The introductory physics syllabus is covered in depth and at
a rapid pace. Major topics include mechanics, the study of motion and forces, energy and
momentum; electricity and magnetism; geometric optics, waves and light. An advanced-level
textbook is used, and emphasis is placed on the development of problem-solving skills.
Students will be prepared to take the SAT II Physics Test upon completion of the course.
Students are expected to take the AP Physics B exam.
PHY540
AP Physics C
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Past or current Calculus BC and first year
physics
This is a second year course for students who have a serious interest in studying physics
beyond the introductory level. The AP syllabus is followed as the major themes of physics are
studied in detail through lecture, laboratory and demonstration. This course regularly uses
double periods, and the out of class work can be extensive and demanding. Students are
expected to take the AP Physics examination.
PHY640
Physics II: EV Engineering
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
AP Physics Exam or teacher permission
Students design and build an electric vehicle and then enter the vehicle in a culminating
year-end Electrathon competition. Beyond operational vehicle design and construction
considerations, students aim to build energy efficient vehicles. Theoretically and through
practical implementation, students study topics including, thermodynamics,
oxidation/reduction/electrochemistry, internal battery resistance, DC motors, fuses, switches
, motor controllers, variable resistors, aerodynamics and rolling resistance. In the course,
experiments are conducted that lead to informed conclusions regarding choices of materials,
energy storage systems and mechanics. Student construction of vehicles and their parts are
accomplished by work with tools in a shop/laboratory.
PHY675
Physics II: Exp Design/Robots
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
Completion of precalculus
This course is rooted in the idea that people learn best when actively engaged in
projects that are sustained, personally meaningful, and enjoyable. Through both research and
engineering design students learn the fundamentals of experimental design, data collection
and analysis. Students will work in teams to solve problems of common interest. Topics in the
past have included ballistics optimization, robotics, renewable energy assessment, and
computational simulations of complex systems.
SCI349
AP Cambridge: Global H2O
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
One year of chemistry
Clean water is essential for the living world and the global economy, but the earth’s
supply of uncontaminated water is in danger of disappearing. This course will examine sources
of fresh water, global competition for this resource, the mitigation of pollution, and the
legal issues associated with the struggle to acquire and use water. Issues surrounding the
availability and use of clean water will be explored at local, national, and global levels by
means of investigative case studies. Through research and inquiry, students will evaluate the
“triple bottom line” by analyzing the economic, social, and environmental impacts of each
case. Employing an interdisciplinary approach designed to foster inquiry, global awareness,
and independent thinking, this seminar will feature guided discussion, student presentations,
guest speakers, chemistry lab work, and field trips to local sites. Fall and winter term case
studies will prepare students for team projects and individual presentations in the spring.
This course must be taken concurrently with American Currents – ENG349. To receive the AP
credential, students must continue with research and a capstone project during senior year.
SCI540
AP Environmental Science
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
One year of chemistry or permission of the
department
Advanced Placement Environmental Science is a challenging double-period course designed
for students with a strong interest in environmental issues. The central theme of global
sustainability is developed through lectures and debates and specific topics are explored by
means of case studies, laboratory activities and field trips to local sites. The material is
multi-disciplinary in nature and students are encouraged to draw upon a wide range of
academic resources, including readings in sociology, ethics, economics, law and ecology.
Students are expected to take the AP Environmental Science examination.
SCI675
Environmental Science Projects
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
AP Environmental Science
This hands-on course encourages students to apply their knowledge of environmental
science to the real world through research, projects, and case studies. Students will design
experiments to analyze the world around them, seeking to find solutions to real environmental
problems. Experiments may look at both ecological and human systems, such as monitoring
animal diversity in the forest, analyzing campus greenhouse gas emissions, or monitoring
local air and water quality. Collaboration with students, staff, faculty, and the off-campus
community is expected, and this course requires that students be motivated to explore
independently with little direct teacher instruction.
SCI677
Synthetic Biology Research
9
10
11
12
FWS
FW
F
WS
W
S
Elective
NCAA
AP
CHE & BIO
Introduces the student to the interface between chemistry and biology. We will study
natural and synthetic molecules relevant to biological systems and will develop a valuable
set of laboratory skills while learning to grow and genetically alter bacteria. With these
techniques in place, students will experience all aspects of research, from the selection of
an interesting problem, to literature searches, collaboration, experimental protocol design,
experiment execution, data collection, data analysis, and project presentation. Past projects
include: growing bacteria capable of smelling like various fruits and engineering bacteria to
be purple or green instead of colorless. Potential projects include: engineering bacteria to
act as environmental sensors and genotyping of bacterial communities relevant to microbial
fuel cells (MFCs).