CERTIFICATE COURSES

CERTIFICATE COURSES
(5 OF ANY COMBINATION)

ENG 150: Technical and Professional Writing
This course sharpens communication skills according to appropriate purposes, audiences, and messages.  This course focuses on planning, writing, and revising of memos, letters, resumes, cover letters, short reports, proposals, and other business communications.

HIS 115: Introduction to U.S. History
This course examines the major political, cultural, social, and economic developments in the United States to the end of the Civil War.  Students examine the relationships between the Indigenous Population, Africans and Europeans, as well as major processes in U.S. History, including the evolution of the federal government, industrialization, war with Britain, and the Civil War.

HIS 121: Introduction to African American History
Trace origin and movement of African-Americans from African tribal kinship societies to present. Emphasis is placed on Africans in the Western Hemisphere including slave trading; slave uprisings in North and South America and the Caribbean; the Civil War; the Emancipation; and the Reconstruction period. Special focus is placed on chronology and history of Africans in United States 1607- to the present.

HIS 133: Introduction to African Civilizations

Beginning with the development of humankind, moving along the Nile through the regions that became called Qustal, Ta-seti, Nubia and Kmt, this class explores the rise of early African civilizations.

KMT 101: Chronology of Ancient Kmt
This course is a general survey of the archaeology of ancient Kmt in prehistoric and Per aanic times. It covers the development of the tools, instruments, and means of producing and reproducing life along the nile river for Blacks who had settled there for over 100,000 years. Attention is also given to artifacts establishing Kmt's calendar, plow technology, mathematics, engineering, building construction, art and architecture and, where appropriate, to archaeological connections with the surrounding Black cultures of Nubia, Taseti, and Punt.

KMT 109: History and Society of KMT I
A survey of the history and society of ancient Kmt from prehistoric times to the Second Intermediate Period, ca. 5000 - 1550 B.C. While the course is concerned primarily with the internal political and social history of Kmt, it also emphasizes Kmt's relations with Nubia, Western Asia, and the Aegean World. Readings include translations of original documents illustrating various aspects of Kmtian civilization such as literature, the theory of government and Kmtian historiography.

CHRONOLOGY AND ARCHAEOLOGY OF ANCIENT KMT I (KMT101)
This course is a general survey of the archaeology of ancient Kmt in prehistoric and Per aanic times. It covers the development of the tools, instruments, and means of producing and reproducing life along the nile river for Blacks who had settled there for over 100,000 years. Attention is also given to artifacts establishing Kmt's calendar, plow technology, mathematics, engineering, building construction, art and architecture and, where appropriate, to archaeological connections with the surrounding Black cultures of Nubia, Taseti, and Punt.

HISTORY OF KMT I: HISTORY AND SOCIETY OF ANCIENT KMT (KMT109)
A survey of the history and society of ancient Kmt from prehistoric times to the Second Intermediate Period, ca. 5000 - 1550 B.C. While the course is concerned primarily with the internal political and social history of Kmt, it also emphasizes Kmt's relations with Nubia, Western Asia, and the Aegean World. Readings include translations of original documents illustrating various aspects of Kmtian civilization such as literature, the theory of government and Kmtian historiography.

HISTORY OF KMT II: KMT IN DECLINE--INVASIONS, IMPERIALISM, AND WARS OF RETREAT
Ancient African Kmt's high point was between 3400-2372 bc;  after this period decline set in and the invasions came for another 2600 years non-stop.  Ancient Kmt rose and fell as an Imperial power, ca. 1850 - 1000 BC, the first age of internationalism in world history. Look at the architecture, look at the color of the leaders, the soldiers, the Black population to the south---the early African Kmt period of antiquity was the high point in African ancient civilization.  No other African civilization, or white civilization can come near the accomplishments of early Kmt before the invasions. Kmtian political and social history remain the primary emphasis, although this must now be placed in a much larger context. International relations of the period include extensive contacts with the invading Hyksos, Hittite, Mitannian, Assyrian, Persians, Jews, and Babylonian and the resulting destruction of African civilization. 

KMT MEDU-NETER I: CLASSICAL ANCIENT KMT LANGUAGE/WRITING (KMTM100) BEGINNERS

Much of this two-semester sequence will be spent learning the signs, vocabulary and grammar of the oldest (and longest lasting) language known to humanity. By the end of this introductory year, students will be reading authentic texts of biographical, historical and literary significance. This is the cornerstone course in the University of Kmt--essential for any serious work in this field.

KMT MEDU NETER II:  SELECTIONS FROM ANCIENT KMTIAN MEDU-NETER TEXTS (KMTM 201)
Selection From Middle Kmtian Hieroglyphic Texts.  Translations of Moral texts.  Translations of Scientific/mathematical texts

KMT MDU NETER III: SELECTIONS FROM ANCIENT KMT HIERATIC TEXTS (KMTM333) ADV.

Selections From Middle Kmtian Hieratic Texts. Translations of moral and mathematical texts.

ANCIENT KMTIAN LITERATURE (KMT336)

Ancient African literature at its best.  Black poems, instructions, lessons, meditations, principles, and confessions are all discussed and analyzed in this course.  Students will be expected to read (in translation) many of the most significant literary documents that survive from ancient Kmt.  Students will be expected to participate in class discussions concerning the nature, purpose, quality, and effectiveness of the works read. Students will also be expected to write three papers in this course (moral, mental, martial).

ANCIENT KMTIAN MORALITY(KMT342)

This course will provide an overview of ancient Kmtian moral system minus the religion and mysticism. We will examine such topics as the Kmtian 42 Great Ones (the council of Ancestors), cosmology, Maat, Tehuti, Heru, Ra.  The system of science and morality wedded by the priesthood into a coherent system of balance and martial reciprocity will be discussed.  The temples, pyramids, centers of meditation and study will be documented.

ANCIENT KMTIAN ART AND ARCHITECTURE (KMT366)

Ancient Kmtian art and architecture had a remarkably long history, and much that was produced is amazingly well preserved. Almost anything African in Kmt is obvious, just as those things of the invaders are also apparent. Building, temples, schools, houses, roads, dams, forts, military compounds, pools, underground facilities, the capitol/government building built out of the side of a mountain.  The valley of African Kmt Leaders.  We also show slides of sculpture, pictures, carvings, painting, and wood models.   Ancient African artisans, their skill, their training regiment, their education, their apprentices, materials, and their techniques will be presented.

INTRODUCTION TO EARLY AFRICAN KMT (KMT369)

Introduction to Early African Kmt Civilization.

AFRICAN INTERNATIONAL FORUM (New!!!)

UKMT

Classes begin JANUARY 10, 2010
ENROLL NOW FOR WINTER 2010 AT UNIVERSITYOFKMT.ORG---our New State-of-the-Art educational site.