In the Theatre Discovery, students explore theatre’s artistic and technical practices, history, and theory.
Add passion and perspective to your area of study. Discoveries provide depth in a scholarly area outside of a student’s primary major. Requiring at least 9 credit hours in an advanced subject area, discoveries bolster and broaden tools and methods across disciplines.
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Requirements
All students enrolled in the 2021-2022 Courses of Study Bulletin or later must complete one Discovery at Trinity. Students who are enrolled in the 2020-2021 COSB or prior are required to complete an interdisciplinary cluster, not a discovery.
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- Department or Program: Human Communication and Theatre
- In this Discovery, students will explore the relationship between theatre and society.Department or Program: Human Communication and Theatre
- In the Theatre Design and Production Discovery, students explore theatre’s artistic and technical practices, history, and theory.Department or Program: Human Communication and Theatre
- Transmedia storytelling is a process in which elements of fiction (or non-fiction) are communicated across different types of media, matching the message to the appropriate medium.Department or Program: Communication
- This discovery emphasizes a transnational approach to the historical discipline.Department or Program: History
- Twentieth-century History introduces students to the history of the twentieth century in a global, multidimensional way.Department or Program: History
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- This discovery introduces students to the history of the United States.Department or Program: History
- This Discovery will introduce students to different views of the business environment, first looking at how businesses are measured and controlled, then looking at the microeconomic concepts that shape the demand and supply of goods and services and finally exploring the broader role of corporations...Department or Program: Michael Neidorff School of Business
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- In this comparative literature, genre, culture, and cinema Discovery, you step through the looking glass into worlds of the imagination.Department or Program: Comparative Literature