Courses
Explore the exciting array of courses offered as part of your degree at Redeemer.
This course is designed to introduce the student to the relatively young field of bioethics. Topics include procreative technologies including in vitro fertilization, the creation and manipulation of human embryos for research, genetic testing and interventions, and end-of-life issues including euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide. Some of these issues will be addressed in light of various ethical theories that have been influential among both Christian and non-Christian bioethicists.
Prerequisites: Year 3 or 4 standing
Related programs: Philosophy
Brand Management BUS‑352
Discover the strategic role of branding and brand management in marketing practice. Identify and measure brand equity, build a new brand, manage an established brand, market a brand, and manage a portfolio of brands.
Prerequisites:
Introduction to Marketing
BUS‑255
Discover how organizations create value and connect with customers through relationships and technology. Examine market segmentation, select a target market, position a company in relation to the competition, analyze new product development and brand management strategies, and develop an effective marketing mix (e.g., product, place, promotion, pricing).
Introduction to Marketing (BUS‑255);
Marketing Communications
BUS‑350
Create powerful and effective marketing campaigns that integrate a variety of media. Hone your skills by developing an integrated marketing communications plan for a client using appropriate advertising, personal selling, direct marketing, sales promotion, and public relations tools.
Marketing Communications (BUS‑350)
Related programs: Marketing; Management; Business
An introduction to drama in English from the medieval, Renaissance, Restoration, Victorian, Modern and contemporary periods. Students will read, watch, discuss, review, and analyze six plays over the course of the term in order to develop a fuller understanding of drama in general and of English dramatic literature in particular.
Prerequisites:
Ways of Reading: Poetry and Drama
ENG‑104
How do poems and plays express human experience? Looking at poetry and drama from a range of historical periods, in this course we will continue to cultivate the ability to read with imaginative, intellectual, and spiritual discernment.
Ways of Reading: Poetry and Drama (ENG‑104)
Literature from the first half of the twentieth century, including works by Hardy, Conrad, Yeats, Joyce, T.S. Eliot, Woolf, and Forster.
Prerequisites: ENG-257 or permission of the instructor.
Related programs: English Writing; English Literature
This course will investigate how British novels, short fiction and poetry are both marked by and speak into the challenging context of rapid change in British society since WW II. The course will include fiction by Golding, Greene, Carter, Byatt, Ishiguro, Barnes, M. Amis, and Z. Smith, and poetry by Auden, Larkin, Hughes, Heaney, G. Hill, and Boland.
Prerequisites: ENG-257 or permission of the instructor
Related programs: English Writing; English Literature
Business Ethics BUS‑430
Learn how others make ethical business decisions, and develop a framework for making your own ethical business decisions in a complex global marketplace.
Prerequisites: Year 4 standing; BUS-430 is the Capstone Course in the Business Department and is required for all majors in the 4th year.
Related programs: Accounting; Marketing; Management; Business
Business Law BUS‑335
Learn how the Canadian legal and justice system provides a framework governing contracts, negligence and other torts, property rights and obligations, employment rights and obligations, debtor-creditor relationships, forms of business, and dispute resolution.
Related programs: Accounting; Marketing; Management; Business
Calculus I MAT‑121
An introduction to calculus, including the basic concepts of differentiation and integration. Applications, series expansions, and polar coordinates are discussed in relation to calculus. This course meets 4 hours a week.
Prerequisites: or Grade 12 U Calculus
Related programs: Mathematics
Calculus II MAT‑122
A continuation of MAT-121. This course meets 4 hours a week.
Prerequisites:
Calculus I
MAT‑121
An introduction to calculus, including the basic concepts of differentiation and integration. Applications, series expansions, and polar coordinates are discussed in relation to calculus. This course meets 4 hours a week.
Calculus I (MAT‑121)
Related programs: Mathematics
An advanced interdisciplinary honours seminar in the Humanities examining the life,thought, and writings of the sixteenth-century reformer John Calvin, with an emphasison his magisterial work The Institutes of the Christian Religion. Honours-level studentsfrom multiple disciplines will grapple with Calvin’s historical, theological, philosophical,and political significance.
Prerequisites:
Western Culture & Tradition II
HUM‑120
Western Culture & Tradition II (HUM‑120) Year 3 or 4 standing in an honours major in HIS, POLIS, REL
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