Student Resources

TSEM 102 (Towson Seminar) and TSEM 190 (Honors Towson Seminar) courses emphasize active learning and introduce multiple perspectives, sometimes drawing from more than one discipline. TSEM is typically taken by first-year students during either of their first two semesters.

TU student working in class

Explore current TSEM topics, learning support, opportunities and outcomes.

Student Information

Towson Seminar Topics Spring 2026

An introduction to the cultural, political, social conflicts of the 1960s in America, with emphasis on development of research and critical thinking skills. Through their study of major figures, movements and events of this period, as well as through guided study of research methodology, students will become acquainted with historical ways of thinking and writing.  
Exploration of American drug policies. Emphasis on treatment and prevention options, debates regarding decriminalization and legalization, and the domestic and international drug trade. Attention to popular perceptions of addicts, the flaws in those perceptions, and how perceptions shape policies. The historical context of current drug policy.  
Murals are paintings placed on culturally meaningful walls. “American Murals” will examine the creation and use of murals across many American ethnic and racial groups from pre-Colonial Native Americans, through the Colonial period, to the 21st Century including the 1930s Mexican Mural Movement, Works Progress Administration and mid-20th-century Civil Rights Movements.  
An interdisciplinary exploration of the game of baseball and its impact on American culture. Will study the history and development of the game, key figures in the game, the growth of the game, the effects of integrating the game, the cultural impact of the game, the sense of community the game gives, the ethical debates of performance enhancing drugs, labor relationships between owners and players, and the future of the game.  
A survey of attitudes toward the human body in different fields, eras, and cultures.  
Explores teaching-- a most exciting and challenging profession--  through inspiring examples of excellent teaching practices in order to incorporate these best practices into every challenging teaching situations. Introduction to effective strategies for gathering, evaluating and communicating information. Students will use critical thinking, team collaboration and problem solving to examine the most current scholarship surrounding these topics.  
Current issues in education related to living and learning in a digital society. This course emphasizes that critical, self-reflective understanding of the contexts of our technology use is central to becoming digital practitioners and effective teachers in a participatory culture. Students will be introduced to effective strategies for gathering, evaluating and communicating information.  
Understand the critical and often contentious issue of climate change, and to introduce students to scholarship. Scientific evidence and analysis, and an interdisciplinary perspective are needed to deal with the pressing issue of global climate change. This course will provide students with the critical thinking and analytical skills needed to weigh the evidence supporting or refuting claims of climate change or its consequences and to help students develop the research and writing skills required of college graduates.  
Focuses on the ways in which families experience risk. Places emphasis on the diversity of risk both within the family unit as well as how risk is perceived by social forces outside the family. Introduces multiple perspectives on risk and resiliency using a multidisciplinary approach. Special attention will be paid to how individual differences have the potential to increase risk for individuals, families and communities.  
Provides an integrated view of business organizations and prepares students to critically analyze business problems and develop effective solutions. Includes study of the structure and organization of businesses, common business processes, and the interrelationships among business functions.  
An examination of food: what we eat, where we eat, how we eat, and what are the industrial, economic, technological, social and political factors that shape the production of food, and what these mean for the planet. An introduction to student research and writing at the university level. Through readings, discussions, and assignments students will learn about food production and distribution in order to feed nearly seven billion people and about the nature of scholarship.  
The theme of the journey as the most enduring and complex in the literature of Western civilization. The epistemological value of the journey as exploration of self and others’ identities, the notions of quest and epic hero, the issue of ancient and modern migrations as a crossing of geographical and cultural borders.  
The theme of the journey as the most enduring and complex in the literature of Western civilization. The epistemological value of the journey as exploration of self and others’ identities, the notions of quest and epic hero, the issue of ancient and modern migrations as a crossing of geographical and cultural borders.  
The role of reason throughout the history of Western philosophy, beginning with the Platonic formalism of the ancient era, continuing into the Renaissance and Age of Enlightenment with Rene Descartes’ rationalism, David Hume’s empiricism, and Immanuel Kant’s transcendentalism, and culminating in the contemporary perspectives of Friedrich Nietzsche, Jean-Paul Sartre, Emmanuel Levinas, and Alphonso Lingis on the limits of reason.  
Introduces students to skills needed to function successfully at college, in the context of an exploration of the relationship of occupational engagement to well-being. Students will gain an understanding of the concept of occupation, and investigate the influence of various occupations on health, happiness, and well-being.  
Through reflective writing, roundtable discussions, skills workshops, a research paper, and a group presentation, students will be introduced to the rigors of academic scholarship, explore collaborative learning, and engage in critically evaluating the content and impact of mediated messages on the practice and consumption of health care across cultures.  
Immersive study of composers / performers / improvisers, their creative output, their historical and cultural context, and their continuing relevance in today’s music cultures. This course explores the development of Soviet classical music as affected by the totalitarian regime.  
Immersive study of composers / performers / improvisers, their creative output, their historical and cultural context, and their continuing relevance in today’s music cultures. This course explores the development of Soviet classical music as affected by the totalitarian regime.  
Immersive study of composers / performers / improvisers, their creative output, their historical and cultural context, and their continuing relevance in today’s music cultures. This course offers a comprehensive exploration of Radiohead's artistic journey, examining their musical influences, impact on contemporary music, cultural significance, and innovative approach to sound.  
Focuses on the study of material culture and religion through the examination of objects, spaces, bodies, senses, foods, and related items. Study will include primary and secondary readings and films about these objects, their histories, and uses, as well as direct interaction and experience with some of them in the classroom, through digital means, and/or through site visits. Introductory studies of material culture and religion will be introduced.  
A philosophical examination of the nature of the human self, with emphasis on three fundamental and interrelated issues: the identity of a person over their lifetime; the nature of free will and autonomy; the nature of human consciousness.  
Effects of sleep and sleep deprivation on optimal functioning. Exploration of sleep, sleep disorders, long term effects of sleep deprivation and treatment options.  
Cultural patterns and meanings of social media use; techniques of self-representation on social media; benefits or liabilities potentially defining social media use: virtual privilege, competing uses, and social capital in online communications; social harm and inequality on-line.  
In this seminar-style course, we will explore current issues with a focus on how understanding technology use across generations can lead to improved learning and better interactions. Course themes include technology use among P-12 students and in prior generations; understanding differences in technology familiarity and use; communication and collaboration; technology’s relationship to well-being and mental health; and learners and learning in a digital age. Through investigation of these course themes, students will be introduced to effective strategies for gathering, evaluating, and communicating information.  
A survey of literary and historical documents from several pre-modern civilizations in order to investigate the manners in which the ancients conceptualized the idea of the Underworld.  
Description: Emphasizes active learning with content focusing on representations of vampires in popular media from literary origins in the late 19th century through to recent incarnations on screen.  
By studying evocative poems, plays, short stories, and novels, the seminar will examine the seeming paradox of war and literature, of violence and art, by understanding how battle is depicted in literature and how literature is often an aesthetic battleground of conflicting personal and national ideals.  
Baltimore is a city of connections and contradictions. This class looks closely at texts written about the city from diverse perspectives: historical, sociological, environmental, journalistic, and literary. Approaches the city itself as a text to be explored; students will generate their own texts in response to their encounters with the city. Various themes will include the Chesapeake Bay, the sights and sounds of Baltimore, and urban history.  
Multiple sections linked by a connecting theme. Explorations of the social, political, cultural, creative, environmental, and legal constructions of water and its uses. Individual sections emphasize a particular approach. Limited to students in the Honors College.  

Learning Outcomes

During the seminar, students:

  • Prepare and present a compelling substantive interpretation, argument and/or analysis of a problem or issue in a research paper.
  • Gather and use academic resources effectively and according to the standards and rules of academic integrity in formulating and presenting a substantive interpretation, argument and/or analysis of a problem or issue.
  • Understand and evaluate the nature and possible causes and implications of events, behavior, problems and issues from an informed and intellectually balanced perspective.
  • Connect concepts and empirical evidence in logically coherent, valid and compelling ways.
  • Understand and appreciate social and cultural differences among individuals, groups and societies and engage and learn from others with different backgrounds and perspectives in constructive ways, when appropriate to the topic.
  • Participate responsibly and effectively in group efforts to address and solve problems, where appropriate within the course format.