Take a course during Summer Term and make progress on your degree. Check out SoHE’s class schedule below or search all of UW–Madison’s 2021 summer course offerings. Enrollment begins April 5 and scholarships are available. Get all the info at summer.wisc.edu
Not sure what class to take this summer? Take this BuckyFeed quiz to match your favorite Netflix binges to a SoHE summer course offering.
Civil Society & Community Studies
CSCS 130: Community Newswriting:
Newswriting of interest to individuals, families, and communities.
CSCS 430: Fundraising & Development:
Explores the philosophy of fundraising and development, its bearing on the nonprofit sector, as well as the practical strategies employed by nonprofits in their fundraising efforts to secure time, talent and treasure for sustaining their work. Nonprofit sector organizations (NPO) seek to thrive in their efforts to have a positive impact in bringing social change – to individuals, families, and communities and, indeed, the world. To sustain these noble efforts, these dynamic organizations must attract and garner the time, talent and treasure necessary to develop and grow. Fundraising programs are a significant part of a NPO’s work in bringing resources to support their fund development/institutional advancement. Development is a mindset – a way to frame the NPO’s thinking and behaviors in providing a comprehensive approach to broad mission support.
CSCS 500: Global Health & Communities:
Explores global health and well-being from a community perspective and through the holistic lens of human ecology. Respectful community-engagement, evidence-based practice, and making the local to global connection are key themes. Almost everything we do has an impact on our own health and that of our communities and the world. Prepares students for community-oriented global health engagement. Consider the nature of community and different types of communities, both locally and globally. Reflect on experiences in communities where you have lived or called home. Review the concept of health and well-being, and evidence-based practice. Learn basic principles of asset-based participatory community research and study, compare and contrast case examples from around the world.
CSCS 601: Internship:
Enables students with supervised internships to earn academic credit while engaged in a professional experience in community and nonprofit leadership related fields. Course intended for juniors and seniors in Community and Nonprofit Leadership.
Consumer Science
CNSR SCI 173: Consuming Happiness:
As the saying goes, money can’t buy happiness — but in modern America, we certainly try. This course will provide an overview of the study of happiness and well-being, examine how consumers engage in consumption in pursuit of happiness, as well as explore the emergence of the experience economy, and the intersection of money and well-being. Students will read academic and popular pieces on positive psychology, prosocial spending and explore the psychology of persuasion in the promises associated with this industry. In addition to integrating visual media, students will have the opportunity to experience first-hand whether the advice works in their own lives.
CNSR SCI 201: Consumer Insights:
Get basic training in quantitative data analysis, with an emphasis on descriptive and inferential statistics with consumer research applications. Become better equipped to apply inferential statistics to consumer research applications by achieving a basic understanding of quantitative data analysis.
CNSR SCI 275: Consumer Finance:
An introduction to concepts and methods used in personal and family financial planning. Methods for planning and allocating resources to attain specific financial objectives are discussed. Topics include investments in real and financial assets, consumer credit issues, and insurance, pension, tax, and estate planning.
CNSR SCI 321: Financial Life Skills for Life After Graduation:
This is an applied personal finance course that provides students nearing graduation (juniors and seniors) the knowledge and tools needed to successfully manage personal finances after college. Topics include financial values and behaviors, credit and student loans, housing, transportation, financial services, retirement planning, investing, and spending and saving plans.
CNSR SCI 564: Retail Financial Analysis:
Provides tools for planning and analyzing retail financial performance. Includes elements of retail financial statements, pricing, purchasing terms and conditions, merchandise planning, inventory control, and economic factors that impact retail businesses.
CNSR SCI 567: Product Development Strategies:
Merchandise product development planning through market trend analysis, assortment planning & sourcing production. Enroll Info: None
CNSR SCI 601: Consumer Science Internship:
Enables students with supervised internships to earn academic credit while engaged in a professional experience in consumer science related fields. Course intended for juniors and seniors in Consumer Science.
CNSR SCI 603: Retailing Internship:
Enables students with supervised internships to earn academic credit while engaged in a professional experience in retailing related fields. Course intended for juniors and seniors in Retailing and Consumer Behavior.
Design Studies
DS 120: Design Fundamentals I:
This course provides an introduction to basic concepts of visual thinking and composition. Through lecture and studio sessions, you will have the opportunity to learn and apply various theories and principles in the Design field to your own creative process. Additionally, students will learn to evaluate design encountered within their environment. The major course concepts include: the creative process, visual awareness, two‐dimensional composition using design principles and elements, and the contextual influences of design that illustrate the ways history, culture, technology, elements, and materials impact Western design.
DS 579: Virtual Reality:
Introduces students to the field of virtual reality and focuses on creating immersive, interactive virtual experiences. Survey topics include historical perspectives on virtual reality technology, computer graphics and 3D modeling, human perception and psychology, human computer interaction and user interface design. This course is designed for students with backgrounds in Computer Science, Engineering, Art, Architecture and Design. Students will work in interdisciplinary teams on projects, culminating in a final event that will be showcased to the public. While not an official uisite, the class will be technologically motivated; therefore students should be comfortable learning new software. The class will utilize publicly available game design software which provides tools and services for the creation of interactive content. While not necessary, students may find it helpful to have taken classes in programming and computer graphics (such COMP SCI 559: Computer Graphics) or in 3D modeling (such as ART 429: 3D Digital Studio I or DS 242: Visual Communication II).
DS 601: Internship:
Enables students with supervised internships to earn academic credit while engaged in a professional experience in design studies related fields. Course intended for juniors and seniors in Design Studies.
DS 620: Visual Thinking for Problem Solving:
Visual thinking’s theoretical foundations are paired with visual thinking skills, tools, and applications. The format explores the way these can be combined while thinking critically and engaging with problem solving methodologies such as design thinking. Theoretical foundations include the elements and principles of design, the processes of visual narrative, and perceptual theories. Skills and applications include manual sketching, 3D visualization and modeling, data visualization, image manipulation, graphic design, video presentation, multimedia, design for 3D printing and fabrication, diagramming, digital rendering, and graphic design.
DS 626: Interior Design V:
Provides students the opportunity to collaborate with design professionals on potential projects ranging from health care, education, hospitality, and retail. Students will follow the design process from programming to construction documents. All aspects of designing an interiors project in detail will be addressed, including space planning, interior architectural articulation, furniture selection, finish selection, detailing of custom elements, and more.
DS 641: Advanced Design Thinking:
An empathetic, human-centered perspective that uses Design Thinking and draws from historical precedence and current research from a variety of fields to help solve complex and persistent problems such as student mental health awareness and lack of clean drinking water. Utilizes advanced design thinking techniques to enhance creative analysis and problem solving to address real-word problems with real-world constraints and the limitations of technology. Projects range from ways to improve everyday situations to community issues.
Human Development and Family Studies
HDFS 174: Cultural Diversity of Families:
An introduction to racially and culturally diverse families with application to personal life. Focuses on structural factors impacting all families, such as demographic, economic, and historic trends, which illuminate the similarities and distinctions among and within racial and ethnic groups.
HDFS 362: Development of Young Child:
This course provides a basic foundation for understanding development from conception through middle childhood. Content includes theoretical foundations, research findings, and practical applications.
HDFS 363: Develp: Adolescence-Old Age:
This course provides a basic foundation for understanding development from adolescence through old age. Content includes theoretical foundations, research findings, and practical applications.
HDFS 464: Play-Devlpmt & Role-Lifespan:
The role and function of play (and playfulness) in promoting development across the lifespan.
HDFS 601: Internship:
Enables students with supervised internships to earn academic credit while engaged in a professional experience in human development and family studies related fields. Course intended for juniors and seniors in Human Development and Family Studies.
INTER-DIS (SoHE)
Inter-HE 201: Ecology of Human Happiness:
This course explores the art and science of purposeful living by integrating academic knowledge with issues real and relevant to students’ lives including: identity and belonging; happiness, purpose and meaning; self-awareness and self-presentation; romantic, peer and family relationships; material culture, consumer behavior and financial well-being; and connections to community, culture, and society. From the microbes that inhabit our guts to political revolutions sparked by a tweet, human lives are embedded in an ecology of complex, interdependent systems. Using the lens of Human Ecology, you will address “big questions” like: How am I connected to others and to larger systems? What brings happiness and works for the “greater good” in human lives? An overarching goal of the course is to help you understand yourself as embedded in the web of ever-evolving interconnected networks, an “EcoYou.” Human Ecology is a systems approach to studying and understanding relationships between humans and their everyday environments; it is a civic and socially conscious orientation that is committed to understanding and improving the quality of human lives. Human Ecology is inherently interdisciplinary drawing on research, theories and methods from diverse fields such as sociology, psychology, anthropology, economics, public health, biology, and art and design.
Inter-HE 202: SoHE Career & Leadership Development:
Provides an introduction to leadership development, career development and career readiness competencies for students in the School of Human Ecology.