10 of the Easiest Classes at PSU

Penn State

Penn State University offers many different courses within hundreds of programs. Some students at PSU may be looking for easy classes to boost their GPA. Here is a list of 10 of the easiest classes at Penn State.

1. HPA 101: Introduction to Health Services Organization

The class examine the social, political, historic, and scientific factors in the development and organization of health services.

2. HDFS 249N: Adult Development and Aging

This course provides a basic introduction to concepts, theoretical perspectives, and key empirical studies on adult development and aging. Students will become familiar with key developmental trends and challenges that must be addressed to achieve healthy growth and development throughout adulthood and late life.

3. BBH 101: Introduction to Biobehavioral Health

This is an introduction course that covers interdisciplinary study of health, examining the interaction of biological processes and behavior on health.

4. PSYCH 100: Introductory Psychology

This class studies the principles of human behavior and their applications. Its overall focus is the scientific study of behavior and experience, and of associated mental and physiological processes.

5. SOC 119: Race and Ethnic Relations

Historical patterns and current status of racial and ethnic groups; inequality, competition, and conflict; social movements; government policy. the course will help you to think critically about issues related to race and ethnicity in American society.

6. ENT 202: The Insect Connection

An introduction to the diversity of insects and the ways in which they interact with humans and impact our world.

7. EGEE 102: Energy Conservation for Environmental Protection

This general education course provides students with necessary knowledge and information on the main operating principles of devices/appliances that are in common use and information on which to make the right decision in selecting the most energy efficient and economical choice.

8. INART 115: The Popular Arts in America: Popular Music

This class examine the roots, development, and significance of popular music in our culture. It covers the origin of popular music in the early nineteenth century and introduces the major genres of the art: blues, jazz, country, mainstream pop, and rock and roll.

9. GD 100: Introduction to Graphic Design

This is a introductory graphic design course. Instruction touches on the practice, theories, history and processes of the graphic design industry. This course places emphasis on problem solving and observing design, while developing intuition and creativity.

10. MUSIC 11: Under the Hood: How Classical Music Works

This course examines selected works from twenty of the greatest composers of western art music, with emphasis on the baroque, classical and romantic eras.

1. GEOL 111 – Emergence of Life

Examines important theoretical and practical questions regarding the origin and evolution of life, as well as the search for life elsewhere in the universe. 

2. MACS 101 – Intro to the Media

Introduces students to core issues in communication, ranging from the role of language in human history to political questions posed by electronic and digital technologies. Exploring key contemporary problems through timely readings, students learn and write about how the media affect everyday life. 

3. JOUR 200 – Introduction to Journalism

Discussion of the history, freedom, technologies, ethics, and functions of the news media. Training in clear, descriptive writing techniques, using journalistic models. 

4. RST 242 – Nature and American Culture

Appreciation and critique of cultural meanings associated with American natural landscapes. Traditional perspectives including colonial American, romantic, and science-based conservation are characterized, as well as revisionist themes aligned with gender, cultural pluralism, and societal meanings of parks and protected areas. Implications of diversity in cultural meanings toward nature are developed and provide the basis for assessing tenets of contemporary environmental policy and supporting concepts associated with community-based conservation.

5. KIN 100 – Development Activities

Skills and knowledge essential for leisure-time activities which are classified as developmental activities. 

6. SOC 100 – Introduction to Sociology

Examination of how societies grow and change; reciprocal effects of economic, political, community, familial, and scientific institutions on each other and on individual life changes; and social conflict, problems of bureaucratic growth and planned and unplanned social change.

7. ART 105 – Visual Design for Non-Majors

This course utilizes lectures, exercises, and projects to help students heighten their visual literacy, improve their ability to communicate in an increasingly visually oriented world, and gain a better understanding of the processes and methodologies that designers use.

8. SOC 160 – Global Inequality and Social Change

Introduces sociological concepts of poverty, inequality, and social change within a global context. Themes explored include basic food security, poverty and hunger; population and resource distribution; foreign aid and development institutions; and social policies and movements for change. Course approach is historical and transnational, and typically includes case studies from Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the United States.

9. MACS 100 – Intro to Popular TV & Movies

The goal of this course is for students to begin to develop a critical understanding of the role of popular movies and television in their own lives and in U.S. culture. The course looks at issues of the relationship of media to social violence, gender identities, sexual identities, adolescents, minority cultures, and the role of the U.S. media globally. It also considers some of the major media genres that characterize U.S. popular television and movies.

10. ECON 102: Microeconomic Principles

Introduction to the functions of individual decision-makers, both consumers and producers, within the larger economic system. Primary emphasis on the nature and functions of product markets, the theory of the firm under varying conditions of competition and monopoly, and the role of government in prompting efficiency in the economy.



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