Search Results
Religious Studies
Undergraduate
Description: This track is designed to give students a comprehensive training in the discipline of Religious Studies. It is intended for students who would plan to pursue career options in Religious Studies, including graduate programs in the study of religion and/or in a theological or seminary setting.
Economics
Undergraduate
All economics majors must earn a grade of at least C- in Mathematics 408Q or grades of at least C- in Mathematics 408K and 408L . The following combinations of courses alternatively satisfy the math requirement, with a grade of at least a C- in each course: Mathematics 408C and 408D , Mathematics 408N and 408S , Mathematics 408K and 408S , Mathematics 408C and 408L , Mathematics 408C and 408S , or Mathematics 408R and 408L ,or Mathematics 408R and 408S , or Mathematics 408N and 408L . Mathematics 403K and 403L (and transfer equivalents) may not be substituted for required mathematics courses. Mathematics 408Q and Mathematics 408R must be taken in residence at The University of Texas at Austin. A student may not earn both the Bachelor of Arts with a major in Economics and the Bachelor of Science in Economics.
Bachelor of Science in Economics
Undergraduate
http://catalog.utexas.edu/undergraduate/liberal-arts/degrees-and-programs/bs-economics/
...to the Bachelor of Arts, designed to include...304L , 420S , 320L , 329 , 341K or 441K , and...
Core Curriculum
General Information
http://catalog.utexas.edu/general-information/academic-policies-and-procedures/core-curriculum/
...339R , 341K , 341L , 342J , 345J , 346K , 346L , 347J , 347K , 347L , 347M , 347N , 348N > Arts and...
ART 341K ART 341K. Painting III. 3 Hours.
Restricted to studio art and art education majors. Continuation of Studio Art 321K. Six laboratory hours a week for one semester. May be taken twice for credit. May be repeated for credit. Offered on the letter-grade basis only. Prerequisite: Studio Art 321K with a grade of at least C.
ARH 341K ARH 341K. Modern Art of Mexico. 3 Hours.
Same as Latin American Studies 327 (Topic 2). Mexican visual culture from the late nineteenth century through 1968. Emphasis on the emergence of modernist avant-gardes and popular entertainment, and their ambivalent relationship to state, church, and market. Also explores how self-consciously negotiating the tension between native and international influences, artists, critics, and curators contributes to notions of Lo Mexicano, or "Mexicanness." Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Art History 341K and Latin American Studies 327 (Topic 2) may not both be counted.