Skip to main content
Close menu William & Mary

Courses

Sharpe students get to take courses specifically designed to foster critical thinking while engaging actively within communities. The primary goal of the Sharpe Program is to connect academic coursework with community-based learning and research. All Sharpe Scholars enroll in a common course (described below) and a community-centered COLL100/150 with others in the program.

INTR190 - Introduction to Action Research


INTR190 is
required of Sharpe Scholars in both Fall and Spring semesters (1 credit each semester), as a co-curricular course (taken with an assigned Sharpe
course)INTR190 is designed to help you integrate a critical set of academic and community skills for conducting participatory action researchSharpe scholars will learn to:

  • Develop and articulate clearly the scholarly and learning intentions associated with a community-based research project, partnership, or goal 
  • Collaborate effectively and responsively with faculty, fellow students, individuals and partners in the community, and relevant others in forming shared goals, organizing collective resources, and designing appropriate approaches to community issues, according to intercultural and group partnering dynamics
  • Facilitate learning within the classroom and outside of it, by generating knowledge for further examination, use, or development in other educational and community capacities 
  • Evaluate experiences in engaged scholarship, in terms of scholastic productivity, community impact, and other pre-determined, project-specific goals and outcomes. 

COLL100/150s

Sharpe courses are designed by university faculty to equip our students with community-based participatory research skills. Our courses immerse students in real-world engagement with social issues by asking big questions about society and examining the practical relevance of knowledge and community engagement for addressing issues. Sharpe courses train students to working ethically with and within communities through scholarship, action, and participation. 

  • All Sharpe COLL100 and COLL150 Courses are restricted to Sharpe Scholars. 
  • All Sharpe Scholars are required to register for one of the Sharpe COLL100 or COLL150 courses
Table contains a list of available courses.

BIOL 100 - From Knowledge to Discovery (Dr. Margaret Saha)

A leading researcher writes that “Bacteriophages are the dark matter of the biological world; a vastness of ill-defined genetic variation whose impacts we observe on the microbial population but of which we have little understanding.” With an estimated 10^31 particles on the planet, phage (viruses that infect bacteria) are the most abundant biological entity on earth and constitute a dynamic, ancient, and diverse population that impacts the global ecosystem and have significant biomedical applications.  In this COLL 100 course we will use bacteriophage as the model to explore how scientists acquire and evaluate knowledge. We will explore this in three ways.  First, each student will actually attempt to discover and characterize a novel bacteriophage to actually “do” science and participate in knowledge discovery. Particular emphasis will be placed on quantitative analysis of data.  Second, through readings, we will explore the history and social context of bacteriophage research; from the initial surprising discovery of phages to why phage therapy was so popular in the Soviet Union and why it was virtually banned from the United States – until now. Third, we will discuss the current applications of bacteriophage research and how it could contribute to addressing major problems in environmental biology and human health.  Given the growing problem of antibiotic resistance, phage therapy provides an attractive alternative to treat bacterial disease.  In this course, you, the student, will be doing real research -- with all of its unknowns and frustrations but also with the joy of discovering  something that no one else has ever discovered!   

Please note that this course is for potential STEM majors.  Co-enrollment  with (or placement out of) introductory biology, chemistry, or physics is required. 

ENSP 100 - Mapping for Community Nature Rx (Dr. Dorothy Ibes)

The Nature Rx movement asserts that time spent in and around nature is medicine for the human body and mind, warning that modern lifestyles (indoors, sedentary, climate-controlled, device-focused) have weakened the human-nature relationship with dire consequences for human and planetary health and well-being. This 4-credit course utilizes multimedia, place-based storytelling to support time in local greenspace and thereby community health, particularly amongst underserved populations. To this end, student teams will develop public-facing, interactive ESRI StoryMaps that integrate maps, video, audio, images, and text to share the story of our local greenspaces and support visitation. The class is active and hands-on, with extensive group work, class discussion, peer review, field work, and instructor coaching. Students will engage in workshops on the topics of field data collection, Cartography & ArcGIS Online, and StoryMap Design. Course topics integrate place-based storytelling, effective public communication, nature rx, ecotherapy, urban park planning and design, environmental justice, geography, and complementary fields.

GOVT 150 - The Life and the Law: Listening in and to Local Courts (Dr. Jackson Sasser)

Virginia court proceedings—often called “hearings”—come to order when a staffer says “Oyez”: listen. Our seminar will examine how and how well trial courts listen to the communities they serve. We’ll see their work at close hand and hear from the judges, attorneys, interest groups, legal scholars, victims of crime, and justice-involved folks who make it work—along with some of the critics who claim that it too often doesn’t.

SOCL 100 - Populating Early 20th Century Black Williamsburg (Dr. Amy Quark)

In this course, students will explore a key moment in the making of Williamsburg and its image in the world: the creation of Colonial Williamsburg from the 1920s to the 1960s. This construction of an historical tourism destination was cast as a critical turning point in the national pursuit of democracy: the creation of an ambitious “national shrine…dedicated to the lives of the "nation-builders” in the “cradle of democracy.” Yet, the wave of Black communities displaced in the name of this landscape of commemoration reveals how white supremacy remained the underpinning structure limiting the achievement of this ideal. 

This course will provide Sharpe students with opportunities to develop career-ready skills. Sharpe students will gain hands-on experience generating public-facing research designed to engage diverse voices in pressing debates over democracy. In the process, they will develop a powerful toolkit of analytical and methodological skills that have wide application to diverse career paths. Students will develop skills in identifying and collecting publicly available data from digital and physical archives, analyzing data to construct a historical narrative, and presenting this data in a compelling, public-facing product.