12 College Classes We Wish Our Schools Had Offered
I took a course last semester called “Research Methods and Theory.”  It was as exciting as it sounds.  I would much rather have been taking  one of these 12 classes.  From pop culture to maple syrup, these aren’t  your average lectures.
With Halloween approaching, you will probably  soon discover my love of scary movies – especially bad ones (Chopping  Mall, anyone?)  That’s why I wish Bowdoin’s course “The  Horror Film in Context” was offered as a graduate class at Iowa  State.  It’s not about the psyche of Freddy and Jason, however –  students taking the class can expect to discuss why society is  infatuated with horror movies and death in general.
I’m  sure my husband is considering enrolling at the University of  California at Berkeley as we speak, just to take “Simpsons  and Philosophy.”  You’ll need to know more than Simpsons  trivia – the class takes an in-depth look at how the long-running  cartoon depicts social issues such as racism and politics.  Passing the  class, which includes writing a 22-minute show for the final exam, earns  students two credits.
Chances are you probably don’t spend too much  brain power pondering maple syrup, besides wondering whether it’s most  delicious on French toast or pancakes. Alfred University in New York is  changing that for all students who take the course “Maple Syrup – The  Real Thing.”  It covers every aspect of the sweet breakfast topping,  from production to products to, yes, recipes.
Another course near and dear to my heart is “The  Science of Harry Potter,” offered at Frostburg State University in  Maryland.  This class combines the fantastical with the physical by  asking if some of the seemingly impossible things in the popular series  could actually be plausible.  Think about it: if there is a possibility  that an invisibility cloak or a flying broomstick could actually exist,  wouldn’t you want to know?
Oprah is conquering the world.  The talk show,  the book club, the magazine… and now, history class?  The University of  Illinois at Urbana-Champaign offered “History  298: Oprah Winfrey – the Tycoon” in its class schedule several  years ago.  Like many of the other courses on this list, the class was  more than meets the eye.  Although it appears to be about the famous  talk show queen, the class uses Oprah’s cultural rise to study race,  class and gender issues.
I took an entomology class during my undergrad  and found it much more interesting than I thought I would.  Imagine how  enthralled I would have been with Oregon State’s “Far  Side Entomology,” which used Gary Larson’s Far Side cartoons to  study insects.  Larson’s tactic of giving his insects human qualities  make them more relatable, which in turn gave students research ideas and  questions they may have not otherwise thought of.  Before you commence  transfer proceedings, know that this class is no longer offered.
Do you still love C+C Music Factory?  Get  pumped to Deee-Lite’s “Groove is in the Heart” while driving?  Then the  UCLA’s “History of Electronic Dance Music” would probably be a cakewalk  for you.  According to the syllabus, “Class lectures will deal with the  historical narratives told about the music, musical form and technique  in dance music, the political and cultural implications of the  relentless hedonism of the dance floor, the influence of chemicals and  technology on music production and consumption, and the aesthetic  possibilities and pitfalls when popular music is no longer synonymous  with popular song.”
Next  February is a very important month.  Why, you ask?  Because it’s when Lost  returns.  If, like me, you’re desperately jonesing for a Lost  fix NOW, go ahead and enroll at Tufts University, the home of a 13-week  Lost seminar.  Be prepared to talk about more than Jack’s  propensity for crying and Sawyer’s offensive nicknames for the other  Lostaways, though.  Topics include thematic complexity, mechanical  complexity, literary references and philosophies.  The course culminates  with students pitching an idea for a television series to the rest of  their classmates.
If you’re excited about Whoopi Goldberg’s The  View debut, it’s too bad you missed out on Bates College’s “Goldberg’s  Canon: Makin’ Whoopi,” the only course anywhere (that I could find)  dedicated to the former Caryn Johnson.  As far as I can tell, the last  time the class was offered was the 2003-04 school year, so anyone  wanting to discuss her “controversial persona as an antagonistic public  figure” (so says the syllabus) is out of luck for now.
For some reason, I feel like the ratio of mental_floss  readers who grew up watching and learning from Sesame Street is  probably high.  Thus, by my theory, most of us would be thrilled to  count Theater Arts 80L, “Muppet  Magic: Jim Henson’s Art” at the University of California Santa Cruz  as part of our course load.  The class studies how Muppets have changed  television, film and art since Jim Henson created them.
Seriously, some days getting dressed takes a  lot more effort than it should.  Enter Princeton’s “Getting  Dressed” class, a freshmen-only course that lets students discuss  controversial topics such as jeans, baseball caps, tattoos, flip-flops  and Chuck Taylors.  It’s more complicated than just figuring out what to  wear in the morning, though.  The class discussed how people use  fashion to do everything from study history to assess character.   Although it doesn’t appear that the class is offered any longer,  Princeton does offer other interesting-sounding freshmen seminars,  including “Google and Ye Shall Find?” and “Good to be Shifty: American  Swindlers.”
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