Nov 10, 2024  
2016-2017 Undergraduate Academic Catalog 
    
2016-2017 Undergraduate Academic Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Add to Portfolio (opens a new window)

SS 476 - Death and Dying

3 lecture hours 0 lab hours 3 credits
Course Description
Death and dying are universal human events. This course considers how individuals and societies develop ways of coping with death on a personal and on a societal level. Additional areas of focus include health care decisions, grief, suicide, homicide, and terrorism. (prereq: none)
Course Learning Outcomes
Upon successful completion of this course, the student will be able to:
  • Identify his/her attitudes regarding death and dying
  • Develop an awareness regarding anticipatory loss and grief
  • Review society’s decisions regarding terminal care and health care resource allocation

Prerequisites by Topic
  • None 

Course Topics
  • Introduction (1 class)
  • Attitudes toward death (1 class)
  • Pattern of death and dying: then and now Displacement of death from the home (1 class)
  • Expressions of attitudes toward death: Language, humor, mass media, music, literature, visual arts (1 class)
  • Pioneers in death studies: The rise of death education, the response to AIDS (1 class)
  • Perspectives on death: cross cultural and historical Death in early and traditonal cultures, death and dying in western culture; four cultural case studies: Native American, African American, Mexican American and Japanese American traditions (2 classes)
  • Break class into groups for projects (1 class)
  • Terminal illness-pain and suffering Reactions of the terminally ill, family reactions, Grief: the reaction to loss, Hospice (1 class)
  • Knowing when to stop: A cross-cultural perspective to the funeral ritual, What is a living will? Power of Attorney (2 classes)
  • Guest speaker-Oncologists’ perspective (1 class)
  • Guest speaker-Nurse Clinician (1 class)
  • Test (1 class)
  • It is important to talk about the end of life (1 class)
  • Guest speaker-The perspective of a medical ethicist (2 classes)
  • Guest speaker-The perspective of the clergy (1 class)
  • Guests-Families who have lost children (1 class)
  • Guest-The problem of trauma-induced stress (1 class)
  • Guest-The perspective of a funeral director and mortician (1 class)
  • Student Projects (6 classes)

Coordinator
Jan Fertig



Add to Portfolio (opens a new window)