http://www.aarweb.org/Programs/Syllabus_Project/collections.asp
Online Collections of Syllabi
General Collections
College and University Syllabi Published on the Internet
This is a site that allows visitors to easily, freely, and quickly
access hundreds of college-level course syllabi, in a variety of fields,
published on the Internet. It also allows syllabi authors to publish their
syllabi directly on this site by using the Syllabi Submission Form. To
encourage the exchange of ideas among syllabi authors and users, the site
also includes a Messages Bulletin where visitors may post messages, or
engage in syllabi-related discussion. Site maintained by Alexander
Makedon, Professor of Educational Foundations, Chicago State University.
Curriculum Resource Center, Central European University, Budapest
Part of a CEU outreach program to university teachers in the
East-Central region of Europe. Includes syllabi in a variety of areas,
mainly in the Social Sciences, from the former Soviet Union, Western
Europe and North America.
Higher Education Syllabi
A site co-sponsored by the American Educational Research Association -
Division J, and the Association for the Study of Higher Education, and
managed by James Forest. It is a collection of syllabi from a wide range
of fields, such as Education, History and Law.
World Lecture Hall
"World Lecture Hall [University of Texas] publishes links to pages
created by faculty worldwide who are using the Web to deliver course
materials in any language [and in a wide range of fields]. Some courses
are delivered entirely over the Internet. Others are designed for students
in residence. Many fall somewhere in between, and all can be visited by
anyone interested in courseware on the Internet, faculty developers and
curious students alike. Because World Lecture Hall does not administer the
courses it links to, visitors who want to know more about a specific
course should use the contact information published at that particular
course website." The Editor and Administrator is Martha Morgan.
Field-Specific Collections
American Studies: Technology and Learning - Dynamic Syllabi
Dynamic syllabi go beyond online versions of paper syllabi. Instead,
they serve as online platforms upon which to stage, manage, and enhance a
course and can include electronic resources, instructors' notes, exercises
and assignments, course projects, virtual exhibitions, links between
course readings and Web resources, rich multimedia resources and students'
projects. These are gathered by Crossroads, a project of the American
Studies Association, with sponsorship from Georgetown University, and cut
across a variety of fields.
Arts and Cultural Policy
A site managed by the Center for Arts and Culture in Washington,
managed by Doug Blandy, University of Oregon.
Classics On-Line Course Database
"Brought to you by the Classics, Teaching and Technology
Subcommittee of the APA. This resource was created in order to simplify
the process of finding online Classics syllabi and other course resources
by storing information about them in a central location. Its primary
purpose is to enable faculty members and instructors in Classics and
related disciplines to share syllabi and other course materials."
Ecology,
Environment and Religion
The Forum on Religion and Ecology is an interreligious, multi-cultural,
interdisciplinary initiative engaging in scholarly dialogue on the
environment. The Forum website is a major research oriented project
detailing various aspects of religion and ecology and how these elements
interact with other disciplines in the larger global, environmental
context. The "Class Resources" page includes syllabi,
video resources, a list of scholars to contact for speaking engagements, a
list of CD-ROM resources for classroom use, and an annotated bibliography
for the study of the world's religions.
Ethics
A small site of ethics-related course syllabi managed by Larry Hinman,
University of San Diego.
Food
and Society (requires PDF)
The Syllabi Set of the Association for the Study of Food and Society
(ASFS) and the Agriculture, Food, and Human Values Society (AFHVS) is a
joint collection of course outlines with bibliographies and other
supporting materials from courses focusing on food studies and agriculture
and society, contributed by society members from throughout the world.
Course topics include the sociology of food, food anthropology,
agriculture and society, food and the arts, and research methods in the
areas of food studies.
Human Rights
Sponsored by Human Rights Internet in Ottawa
Linguistics
This site is sponsored by The Linguist List, Eastern Michigan
University and Wayne State University.
Literature (mainly British and American)
This site highlights the syllabi, and collections of syllabi, that
creatively make use of the web. It is managed by Jack Penn, University of
Pennsylvania.
Medical Humanities
A site sponsored by New York University's School of Medicine.
History of Physics
A site sponsored by the American Institute of Physics.
Political Science
A site sponsored by the American Political Science Association, in its
effort to bring together syllabi from across the field. Some of the
syllabi are available directly on this site; some are found in published
collections, to which readers are pointed. There is reference to an
appended, published Canadian Collection, edited by Gregory Mahler.
Religious Studies and Theology
The Wabash Center Internet Guide: Syllabi Collections
Service Learning
A wide representation of course syllabi by discipline that focus on
service learning. The selection cuts across many fields. It also has a
link to Robin Crew's supplementary "Guide To College and University
Service-Learning Programs"
[http://csf.colorado.edu/sl/academic.html].
Women's Studies and Gender-Related Course Syllabi
Disciplinary sections (in 26 fields) which contain approximately 600
syllabi for women – and gender – related courses.
Language and Gender
The following collection consists of a wide variety of course syllabi for courses on language and gender taught in an array of departments (linguistics, anthropology, folklore, English, education, French, German). Special features of the collection include: syllabi for undergraduate and graduate courses, ideas for paper topics, examples of exam questions, instructions for fieldwork exercises, bibliographies of work on language and gender, comments from instructors about particularly successful techniques for teaching implemented in the course. The site is managed by Scott Kiesling, University of Pittsburgh.




