IVC Class Formats Banner
  • Online (Asynchronous)
    • In an online class, all course activity occurs online; there are no required real-time or on campus meetings. All content is delivered in Canvas. Coursework does have due dates as set by the instructor, but can be completed, once the content becomes available, at any time before the due date.

    ondemand_videoVideo Overview

    Example:
    Building
    ONLINE
    Real-Time Online (Synchronous)
    • In a real-time online class, course meetings occur virtually on Zoom. The course meetings occur at scheduled days and times. Instructors will use Canvas to disseminate grades and potentially other class content, such as documents, discussions, and announcements. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term, with Zoom meetings, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site and in Canvas.

    ondemand_videoVideo Overview

    Example:
    Building
    RT-ONL
    HyFlex (Synchronous)
    • In a HyFlex class, all course meetings are held face-to-face at IVC or a designated physical site, and may also be attended virtually, via Zoom (or the district-approved video conferencing platform). The course meetings occur at scheduled days and times. Instructors may still use Canvas or other software products to enhance the class outside of the face-to-face meetings, such as by posting documents, discussions, and announcements. High-stake assessments, such as mid-term or final will be the same exam for online or face-to-face students. Training/approvals: Canvas Basics, Zoom, Classroom Technology Tools.

    ondemand_videoVideo Overview

    Example:
    Building Room
    HYFLEX
    2700 2727
    Hybrid (Face-to-Face + Online)
    • In a hybrid class, course activity occurs both online and face-toface on campus; both the online and face-to-face portion are required. The face-to-face meetings occur on scheduled days and times. All online content is delivered in Canvas and/or zoom. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term, with face-to-face meetings, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site and in Canvas.

    ondemand_videoVideo Overview

    Example:
    Building Room
    3100 3115
    RT-ONL
    Example 2:
    Building Room
    ONLINE
    3100 3109
    Face-to-Face (On Ground)
    • In a face-to-face class, course activity occurs at IVC or a designated physical site. The course meetings occur on scheduled days and times. Instructors may still use Canvas or other software products to enhance the class outside of the face-to-face meetings, such as by posting documents, discussions, and announcements.

    ondemand_videoVideo Overview

    Example:
    Building Room
    3100 3115
  • Changes may be occurring daily for schedule data and files are subject to change.
  • Spring 2023
    4 sections
    • American Indian Studies
      1 section
      • AIS 108 - Indians of the Southwest
        1 section
        AIS 108 Course Description:
        This is an introductory course to the early archaeological and ethnological investigation of the American Southwest and Northern Mexico, the geography, environmental adaptation, settlement pattern, architecture, and arts and crafts of the prehistoric Mogollon, Hohokam, and Puebloan cultures, as well as a summary of the prehistory of the Sinagua, Salado, and Patayan cultures; theories of early migration into the Americas and into the Greater Southwest and the prehistoric influence of Mexico; discourse of the cultural diversity of customs, traditions, art, languages, and religious beliefs, as well as social structure of modern day Pueblos, Athapascan and Rancheria peoples of the American Southwest and northern Mexico. (Same as ANTH 108) (CSU/UC)
        • CRN 21025 (AIS 108 - Indians of the Southwest)
          • In an online class, all course activity occurs online; there are no required real-time or on-campus meetings. All content is delivered in Canvas. Coursework does have due dates as set by the instructor, but can be completed, once the content becomes available, at any time before the due date. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term with specific content availability and due dates of coursework, including potential online proctored summative/high-stake assessments, such as a mid-term or final, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site.

          Details for Course 21025
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 21025 3.00 Graham, Michelle 80 33 47 View Syllabus / Download Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture TBA ONLINE Feb 13, 2023 Jun 09, 2023
    • Anthropology
      3 sections
      • ANTH 100 - Physical Anthropology
        1 section
        ANTH 100 Course Description:
        Physical anthropology is the study of humans as biological beings subject to the forces of both evolution and culture. Physical anthropology studies humans in a biological context and explains our relationship to other primates and the rest of the natural world. Throughout the course we will examine anatomical, behavioral, and genetic similarities and differences among the living primates, and by illustrating the scientific method, learn the basic mechanism of the evolutionary processes and trace a pathway of human evolution in relation to environmental adaptation as reconstructed from the fossil record. (C-ID: ANTH 110) (CSU/UC)
        • CRN 20264 (ANTH 100 - Physical Anthropology)
          • In an online class, all course activity occurs online; there are no required real-time or on-campus meetings. All content is delivered in Canvas. Coursework does have due dates as set by the instructor, but can be completed, once the content becomes available, at any time before the due date. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term with specific content availability and due dates of coursework, including potential online proctored summative/high-stake assessments, such as a mid-term or final, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site.

          Details for Course 20264
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 20264 3.00 Graham, Michelle 40 33 7 View Syllabus / Download Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture TBA ONLINE Feb 13, 2023 Jun 09, 2023
      • ANTH 102 - Cultural Anthropology
        1 section
        ANTH 102 Course Description:
        This course explores how anthropologists study and compare human culture. Cultural anthropologists seek to understand the broad arc of human experience focusing on a set of central issues: how people around the world make their living (subsistence patterns); how they organize themselves socially, politically and economically; how they communicate; how they relate to each other through family and kinship ties; what they believe about the world (belief systems); how they express themselves creatively (expressive culture); how they make distinctions among themselves such as through applying gender, racial and ethnic identity labels; how they have shaped and been shaped by social inequalities such as colonialism; and how they navigate culture change and processes of globalization that affect us all. Ethnographic case studies highlight these similarities and differences, and introduce students to how anthropologists do their work, employ professional anthropological research ethics and apply their perspectives and skills to understand humans around the globe. (C-ID: ANTH 120) (CSU/UC)
        • CRN 20267 (ANTH 102 - Cultural Anthropology)
          • In an online class, all course activity occurs online; there are no required real-time or on-campus meetings. All content is delivered in Canvas. Coursework does have due dates as set by the instructor, but can be completed, once the content becomes available, at any time before the due date. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term with specific content availability and due dates of coursework, including potential online proctored summative/high-stake assessments, such as a mid-term or final, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site.

          Details for Course 20267
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 20267 3.00 Graham, Michelle 40 36 4 View Syllabus / Download Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture TBA ONLINE Feb 13, 2023 Jun 09, 2023
      • ANTH 108 - Indians of the Southwest
        1 section
        ANTH 108 Course Description:
        This is an introductory course to the early archaeological and ethnological investigation of the American Southwest and Northern Mexico, the geography, environmental adaptation, settlement pattern, architecture, and arts and crafts of the prehistoric Mogollon, Hohokam, and Puebloan cultures, as well as a summary of the prehistory of the Sinagua, Salado, and Patayan cultures; theories of early migration into the Americas and into the Greater Southwest and the prehistoric influence of Mexico; discourse of the cultural diversity of customs, traditions, art, languages, and religious beliefs, as well as social structure of modern day Pueblos, Athapascan and Rancheria peoples of the American Southwest and northern Mexico. (Same as AIS 108) (CSU/UC)
        • CRN 21024 (ANTH 108 - Indians of the Southwest)
          • In an online class, all course activity occurs online; there are no required real-time or on-campus meetings. All content is delivered in Canvas. Coursework does have due dates as set by the instructor, but can be completed, once the content becomes available, at any time before the due date. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term with specific content availability and due dates of coursework, including potential online proctored summative/high-stake assessments, such as a mid-term or final, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site.

          Details for Course 21024
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 21024 3.00 Graham, Michelle 80 16 64 View Syllabus / Download Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture TBA ONLINE Feb 13, 2023 Jun 09, 2023
  • Winter 2023
    2 sections
    • American Indian Studies
      1 section
      • AIS 108 - Indians of the Southwest
        1 section
        AIS 108 Course Description:
        This is an introductory course to the early archaeological and ethnological investigation of the American Southwest and Northern Mexico, the geography, environmental adaptation, settlement pattern, architecture, and arts and crafts of the prehistoric Mogollon, Hohokam, and Puebloan cultures, as well as a summary of the prehistory of the Sinagua, Salado, and Patayan cultures; theories of early migration into the Americas and into the Greater Southwest and the prehistoric influence of Mexico; discourse of the cultural diversity of customs, traditions, art, languages, and religious beliefs, as well as social structure of modern day Pueblos, Athapascan and Rancheria peoples of the American Southwest and northern Mexico. (Same as ANTH 108) (CSU, UC)
        • CRN 15216 (AIS 108 - Indians of the Southwest)
          • In an online class, all course activity occurs online; there are no required real-time or on-campus meetings. All content is delivered in Canvas. Coursework does have due dates as set by the instructor, but can be completed, once the content becomes available, at any time before the due date. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term with specific content availability and due dates of coursework, including potential online proctored summative/high-stake assessments, such as a mid-term or final, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site.

          Details for Course 15216
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 15216 3.00 Graham, Michelle 80 41 39 View Syllabus / Download Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture TBA ONLINE Jan 03, 2023 Feb 03, 2023
    • Anthropology
      1 section
      • ANTH 108 - Indians of the Southwest
        1 section
        ANTH 108 Course Description:
        This is an introductory course to the early archaeological and ethnological investigation of the American Southwest and Northern Mexico, the geography, environmental adaptation, settlement pattern, architecture, and arts and crafts of the prehistoric Mogollon, Hohokam, and Puebloan cultures, as well as a summary of the prehistory of the Sinagua, Salado, and Patayan cultures; theories of early migration into the Americas and into the Greater Southwest and the prehistoric influence of Mexico; discourse of the cultural diversity of customs, traditions, art, languages, and religious beliefs, as well as social structure of modern day Pueblos, Athapascan and Rancheria peoples of the American Southwest and northern Mexico. (Same as ANTH 108) (CSU, UC)
        • CRN 15215 (ANTH 108 - Indians of the Southwest)
          • In an online class, all course activity occurs online; there are no required real-time or on-campus meetings. All content is delivered in Canvas. Coursework does have due dates as set by the instructor, but can be completed, once the content becomes available, at any time before the due date. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term with specific content availability and due dates of coursework, including potential online proctored summative/high-stake assessments, such as a mid-term or final, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site.

          Details for Course 15215
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 15215 3.00 Graham, Michelle 80 25 55 View Syllabus / Download Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture TBA ONLINE Jan 03, 2023 Feb 03, 2023
  • Fall 2022
    4 sections
    • American Indian Studies
      1 section
      • AIS 106 - Indians of North America
        1 section
        AIS 106 Course Description:
        An introductory course studying native cultures of the United States, northern Mexico, and Canada. This course covers the history of research based on archaeological and ethno-historical data, such as prehistory and early migration into the Americas. Linguistic, cultural, and religious diversity of the various Native American nations; the diverse geography and environment from the Arctic to the deserts of the American Southwest; the Great Basin; the Columbia Plateau region, and the Great Plains. Coastal areas of the Atlantic and Pacific regions, the impact of European colonialism on Native American cultures and contemporary issues will be discussed. (Same as ANTH 106) (CSU, UC)
        • CRN 10931 (AIS 106 - Indians of North America)
          • In an online class, all course activity occurs online; there are no required real-time or on-campus meetings. All content is delivered in Canvas. Coursework does have due dates as set by the instructor, but can be completed, once the content becomes available, at any time before the due date. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term with specific content availability and due dates of coursework, including potential online proctored summative/high-stake assessments, such as a mid-term or final, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site.

          Details for Course 10931
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 10931 3.00 Graham, Michelle 80 39 41 View Syllabus / Download Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture TBA ONLINE Aug 15, 2022 Dec 10, 2022
    • Anthropology
      3 sections
      • ANTH 100 - Physical Anthropology
        1 section
        ANTH 100 Course Description:
        Physical anthropology is the study of humans as biological beings subject to the forces of both evolution and culture. Physical anthropology studies humans in a biological context and explains our relationship to other primates and the rest of the natural world. Throughout the course we will examine anatomical, behavioral, and genetic similarities and differences among the living primates, and by illustrating the scientific method, learn the basic mechanism of the evolutionary processes and trace a pathway of human evolution in relation to environmental adaptation as reconstructed from the fossil record. (C-ID: ANTH 110) (CSU/UC)
        • CRN 10256 (ANTH 100 - Physical Anthropology)
          • In an online class, all course activity occurs online; there are no required real-time or on-campus meetings. All content is delivered in Canvas. Coursework does have due dates as set by the instructor, but can be completed, once the content becomes available, at any time before the due date. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term with specific content availability and due dates of coursework, including potential online proctored summative/high-stake assessments, such as a mid-term or final, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site.

          Details for Course 10256
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 10256 3.00 Graham, Michelle 40 37 3 View Syllabus / Download Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture TBA ONLINE Aug 15, 2022 Dec 10, 2022
      • ANTH 102 - Cultural Anthropology
        1 section
        ANTH 102 Course Description:
        This course explores how anthropologists study and compare human culture. Cultural anthropologists seek to understand the broad arc of human experience focusing on a set of central issues: how people around the world make their living (subsistence patterns); how they organize themselves socially, politically and economically; how they communicate; how they relate to each other through family and kinship ties; what they believe about the world (belief systems); how they express themselves creatively (expressive culture); how they make distinctions among themselves such as through applying gender, racial and ethnic identity labels; how they have shaped and been shaped by social inequalities such as colonialism; and how they navigate culture change and processes of globalization that affect us all. Ethnographic case studies highlight these similarities and differences, and introduce students to how anthropologists do their work, employ professional anthropological research ethics and apply their perspectives and skills to understand humans around the globe. (C-ID: ANTH 120) (CSU/UC)
        • CRN 10260 (ANTH 102 - Cultural Anthropology)
          • In an online class, all course activity occurs online; there are no required real-time or on-campus meetings. All content is delivered in Canvas. Coursework does have due dates as set by the instructor, but can be completed, once the content becomes available, at any time before the due date. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term with specific content availability and due dates of coursework, including potential online proctored summative/high-stake assessments, such as a mid-term or final, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site.

          Details for Course 10260
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 10260 3.00 Graham, Michelle 40 32 8 View Syllabus / Download Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture TBA ONLINE Aug 15, 2022 Dec 10, 2022
      • ANTH 106 - Indians of North America
        1 section
        ANTH 106 Course Description:
        An introductory course studying native cultures of the United States, northern Mexico, and Canada. This course covers the history of research based on archaeological and ethno-historical data, such as prehistory and early migration into the Americas. Linguistic, cultural, and religious diversity of the various Native American nations; the diverse geography and environment from the Arctic to the deserts of the American Southwest; the Great Basin; the Columbia Plateau region, and the Great Plains. Coastal areas of the Atlantic and Pacific regions, the impact of European colonialism on Native American cultures and contemporary issues will be discussed. (Same as ANTH 106) (CSU, UC)
        • CRN 10930 (ANTH 106 - Indians of North America)
          • In an online class, all course activity occurs online; there are no required real-time or on-campus meetings. All content is delivered in Canvas. Coursework does have due dates as set by the instructor, but can be completed, once the content becomes available, at any time before the due date. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term with specific content availability and due dates of coursework, including potential online proctored summative/high-stake assessments, such as a mid-term or final, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site.

          Details for Course 10930
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 10930 3.00 Graham, Michelle 80 31 49 View Syllabus / Download Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture TBA ONLINE Aug 15, 2022 Dec 10, 2022
  • Summer 2022
    1 section
    • Anthropology
      1 section
      • ANTH 100 - Physical Anthropology
        1 section
        ANTH 100 Course Description:
        Physical anthropology is the study of humans as biological beings subject to the forces of both evolution and culture. Physical anthropology studies humans in a biological context and explains our relationship to other primates and the rest of the natural world. Throughout the course we will examine anatomical, behavioral, and genetic similarities and differences among the living primates, and by illustrating the scientific method, learn the basic mechanism of the evolutionary processes and trace a pathway of human evolution in relation to environmental adaptation as reconstructed from the fossil record. (C-ID ANTH 110) (CSU, UC)
        • CRN 30115 (ANTH 100 - Physical Anthropology)
          • In an online class, all course activity occurs online; there are no required real-time or on-campus meetings. All content is delivered in Canvas. Coursework does have due dates as set by the instructor, but can be completed, once the content becomes available, at any time before the due date. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term with specific content availability and due dates of coursework, including potential online proctored summative/high-stake assessments, such as a mid-term or final, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site.

          Details for Course 30115
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 30115 3.00 Graham, Michelle 80 58 22 View Syllabus / Download Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture TBA ONLINE Jun 20, 2022 Jul 28, 2022
  • Spring 2022
    5 sections
    • Anthropology
      5 sections
      • ANTH 100 - Physical Anthropology
        3 sections
        ANTH 100 Course Description:
        Physical anthropology is the study of humans as biological beings subject to the forces of both evolution and culture. Physical anthropology studies humans in a biological context and explains our relationship to other primates and the rest of the natural world. Throughout the course we will examine anatomical, behavioral, and genetic similarities and differences among the living primates, and by illustrating the scientific method, learn the basic mechanism of the evolutionary processes and trace a pathway of human evolution in relation to environmental adaptation as reconstructed from the fossil record. (C-ID ANTH 110) (CSU, UC)
        • CRN 20264 (ANTH 100 - Physical Anthropology)
          • In a face-to-face class, course activity occurs at IVC or a designated physical site. The course meetings occur on scheduled days and times. Instructors may still use Canvas or other software products to enhance the class outside of the face-to-face meetings, such as by posting documents, discussions, and announcements.

          Details for Course 20264
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 20264 3.00 Graham, Michelle 40 17 23 View Syllabus / Download Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture/Discussion 11:20 AM - 02:30 PM 2700 2721 Feb 14, 2022 Jun 10, 2022
        • CRN 20265 (ANTH 100 - Physical Anthropology)
          • In an online class, all course activity occurs online; there are no required real-time or on-campus meetings. All content is delivered in Canvas. Coursework does have due dates as set by the instructor, but can be completed, once the content becomes available, at any time before the due date. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term with specific content availability and due dates of coursework, including potential online proctored summative/high-stake assessments, such as a mid-term or final, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site.

          Details for Course 20265
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 20265 3.00 Graham, Michelle 40 30 10 View Syllabus / Download Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture TBA ONLINE Feb 14, 2022 Jun 10, 2022
        • CRN 20266 (ANTH 100 - Physical Anthropology)
          • In an online class, all course activity occurs online; there are no required real-time or on-campus meetings. All content is delivered in Canvas. Coursework does have due dates as set by the instructor, but can be completed, once the content becomes available, at any time before the due date. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term with specific content availability and due dates of coursework, including potential online proctored summative/high-stake assessments, such as a mid-term or final, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site.

          Details for Course 20266
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 20266 3.00 Graham, Michelle 40 34 6 View Syllabus / Download Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture TBA ONLINE Feb 14, 2022 Jun 10, 2022
      • ANTH 102 - Cultural Anthropology
        2 sections
        ANTH 102 Course Description:
        This course explores how anthropologists study and compare human culture. Cultural anthropologists seek to understand the broad arc of human experience focusing on a set of central issues: how people around the world make their living (subsistence patterns); how they organize themselves socially, politically and economically; how they communicate; how they relate to each other through family and kinship ties; what they believe about the world (belief systems); how they express themselves creatively (expressive culture); how they make distinctions among themselves such as through applying gender, racial and ethnic identity labels; how they have shaped and been shaped by social inequalities such as colonialism; and how they navigate culture change and processes of globalization that affect us all. Ethnographic case studies highlight these similarities and differences, and introduce students to how anthropologists do their work, employ professional anthropological research ethics and apply their perspectives and skills to understand humans around the globe. (C-ID ANTH 120) (CSU, UC)
        • CRN 20267 (ANTH 102 - Cultural Anthropology)
          • In an online class, all course activity occurs online; there are no required real-time or on-campus meetings. All content is delivered in Canvas. Coursework does have due dates as set by the instructor, but can be completed, once the content becomes available, at any time before the due date. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term with specific content availability and due dates of coursework, including potential online proctored summative/high-stake assessments, such as a mid-term or final, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site.

          Details for Course 20267
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 20267 3.00 Graham, Michelle 40 28 12 View Syllabus / Download Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture TBA ONLINE Feb 14, 2022 Jun 10, 2022
        • CRN 20268 (ANTH 102 - Cultural Anthropology)
          • In an online class, all course activity occurs online; there are no required real-time or on-campus meetings. All content is delivered in Canvas. Coursework does have due dates as set by the instructor, but can be completed, once the content becomes available, at any time before the due date. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term with specific content availability and due dates of coursework, including potential online proctored summative/high-stake assessments, such as a mid-term or final, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site.

          Details for Course 20268
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 20268 3.00 Graham, Michelle 40 33 7 View Syllabus / Download Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture TBA ONLINE Feb 14, 2022 Jun 10, 2022
  • Winter 2022
    2 sections
    • Anthropology
      2 sections
      • ANTH 100 - Physical Anthropology
        1 section
        ANTH 100 Course Description:
        Physical anthropology is the study of humans as biological beings subject to the forces of both evolution and culture. Physical anthropology studies humans in a biological context and explains our relationship to other primates and the rest of the natural world. Throughout the course we will examine anatomical, behavioral, and genetic similarities and differences among the living primates, and by illustrating the scientific method, learn the basic mechanism of the evolutionary processes and trace a pathway of human evolution in relation to environmental adaptation as reconstructed from the fossil record. (C-ID ANTH 110) (CSU, UC)
        • CRN 15178 (ANTH 100 - Physical Anthropology)
          • In an online class, all course activity occurs online; there are no required real-time or on-campus meetings. All content is delivered in Canvas. Coursework does have due dates as set by the instructor, but can be completed, once the content becomes available, at any time before the due date. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term with specific content availability and due dates of coursework, including potential online proctored summative/high-stake assessments, such as a mid-term or final, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site.

          Details for Course 15178
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 15178 3.00 Graham, Michelle 40 35 5 View Syllabus / Download Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture TBA ONLINE Jan 03, 2022 Feb 03, 2022
      • ANTH 102 - Cultural Anthropology
        1 section
        ANTH 102 Course Description:
        This course explores how anthropologists study and compare human culture. Cultural anthropologists seek to understand the broad arc of human experience focusing on a set of central issues: how people around the world make their living (subsistence patterns); how they organize themselves socially, politically and economically; how they communicate; how they relate to each other through family and kinship ties; what they believe about the world (belief systems); how they express themselves creatively (expressive culture); how they make distinctions among themselves such as through applying gender, racial and ethnic identity labels; how they have shaped and been shaped by social inequalities such as colonialism; and how they navigate culture change and processes of globalization that affect us all. Ethnographic case studies highlight these similarities and differences, and introduce students to how anthropologists do their work, employ professional anthropological research ethics and apply their perspectives and skills to understand humans around the globe. (C-ID ANTH 120) (CSU, UC)
        • CRN 15179 (ANTH 102 - Cultural Anthropology)
          • In an online class, all course activity occurs online; there are no required real-time or on-campus meetings. All content is delivered in Canvas. Coursework does have due dates as set by the instructor, but can be completed, once the content becomes available, at any time before the due date. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term with specific content availability and due dates of coursework, including potential online proctored summative/high-stake assessments, such as a mid-term or final, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site.

          Details for Course 15179
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 15179 3.00 Graham, Michelle 40 34 6 View Syllabus / Download Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture TBA ONLINE Jan 03, 2022 Feb 03, 2022
  • Fall 2021
    3 sections
    • American Indian Studies
      1 section
      • AIS 106 - Indians of North America
        1 section
        AIS 106 Course Description:
        An introductory course studying native cultures of the United States, northern Mexico, and Canada. This course covers the history of research based on archaeological and ethno-historical data, such as prehistory and early migration into the Americas. Linguistic, cultural, and religious diversity of the various Native American nations; the diverse geography and environment from the Arctic to the deserts of the American Southwest; the Great Basin; the Columbia Plateau region, and the Great Plains. Coastal areas of the Atlantic and Pacific regions, the impact of European colonialism on Native American cultures and contemporary issues will be discussed. (Same as ANTH 106) (CSU, UC)
        • CRN 10984 (AIS 106 - Indians of North America)
          • In an online class, all course activity occurs online; there are no required real-time or on-campus meetings. All content is delivered in Canvas. Coursework does have due dates as set by the instructor, but can be completed, once the content becomes available, at any time before the due date. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term with specific content availability and due dates of coursework, including potential online proctored summative/high-stake assessments, such as a mid-term or final, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site.

          Details for Course 10984
          Late Start Class
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 10984 3.00 Graham, Michelle 40 15 25 View Syllabus / Download Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture TBA ONLINE Oct 11, 2021 Dec 11, 2021
    • Anthropology
      2 sections
      • ANTH 100 - Physical Anthropology
        1 section
        ANTH 100 Course Description:
        Physical anthropology is the study of humans as biological beings subject to the forces of both evolution and culture. Physical anthropology studies humans in a biological context and explains our relationship to other primates and the rest of the natural world. Throughout the course we will examine anatomical, behavioral, and genetic similarities and differences among the living primates, and by illustrating the scientific method, learn the basic mechanism of the evolutionary processes and trace a pathway of human evolution in relation to environmental adaptation as reconstructed from the fossil record. (C-ID ANTH 110) (CSU, UC)
        • CRN 10259 (ANTH 100 - Physical Anthropology)
          • In a face-to-face class, course activity occurs at IVC or a designated physical site. The course meetings occur on scheduled days and times. Instructors may still use Canvas or other software products to enhance the class outside of the face-to-face meetings, such as by posting documents, discussions, and announcements.

          Details for Course 10259
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 10259 3.00 Graham, Michelle 40 24 16 View Syllabus / Download Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture/Discussion 11:20 AM - 02:30 PM 2700 2735 Aug 16, 2021 Dec 11, 2021
      • ANTH 106 - Indians of North America
        1 section
        ANTH 106 Course Description:
        An introductory course studying native cultures of the United States, northern Mexico, and Canada. This course covers the history of research based on archaeological and ethno-historical data, such as prehistory and early migration into the Americas. Linguistic, cultural, and religious diversity of the various Native American nations; the diverse geography and environment from the Arctic to the deserts of the American Southwest; the Great Basin; the Columbia Plateau region, and the Great Plains. Coastal areas of the Atlantic and Pacific regions, the impact of European colonialism on Native American cultures and contemporary issues will be discussed. (Same as ANTH 106) (CSU, UC)
        • CRN 10983 (ANTH 106 - Indians of North America)
          • In an online class, all course activity occurs online; there are no required real-time or on-campus meetings. All content is delivered in Canvas. Coursework does have due dates as set by the instructor, but can be completed, once the content becomes available, at any time before the due date. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term with specific content availability and due dates of coursework, including potential online proctored summative/high-stake assessments, such as a mid-term or final, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site.

          Details for Course 10983
          Late Start Class
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 10983 3.00 Graham, Michelle 40 21 19 No Syllabus Available Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture TBA ONLINE Oct 11, 2021 Dec 11, 2021
  • Summer 2021
    1 section
    • Anthropology
      1 section
      • ANTH 102 - Cultural Anthropology
        1 section
        ANTH 102 Course Description:
        This course explores how anthropologists study and compare human culture. Cultural anthropologists seek to understand the broad arc of human experience focusing on a set of central issues: how people around the world make their living (subsistence patterns); how they organize themselves socially, politically and economically; how they communicate; how they relate to each other through family and kinship ties; what they believe about the world (belief systems); how they express themselves creatively (expressive culture); how they make distinctions among themselves such as through applying gender, racial and ethnic identity labels; how they have shaped and been shaped by social inequalities such as colonialism; and how they navigate culture change and processes of globalization that affect us all. Ethnographic case studies highlight these similarities and differences, and introduce students to how anthropologists do their work, employ professional anthropological research ethics and apply their perspectives and skills to understand humans around the globe. (C-ID ANTH 120) (CSU, UC)
        • CRN 30260 (ANTH 102 - Cultural Anthropology)
          • In an online class, all course activity occurs online; there are no required real-time or on-campus meetings. All content is delivered in Canvas. Coursework does have due dates as set by the instructor, but can be completed, once the content becomes available, at any time before the due date. At the start of the semester, a detailed schedule for the term with specific content availability and due dates of coursework, including potential online proctored summative/high-stake assessments, such as a mid-term or final, will be posted on IVC's Schedule Site.

          Details for Course 30260
          Late Start Class
          Status CRN Units Instructor Cap Act Rem Syllabi Textbooks
          OPEN 30260 3.00 Graham, Michelle 40 30 10 View Syllabus / Download Textbooks
          Meeting Type Meeting Dates Times Building Room Start Date End Date
          Meeting Type:Lecture TBA ONLINE Jun 28, 2021 Jul 29, 2021