Welcome,  

Contact the ACADEMICS Office

Tom Garrison
Assistant Principal of Academics
PhonePhone: 972.387.8700 x354
Emailtgarrison@jesuitcp.org

Social Studies Faculty

Fritz Asche
Phone Phone: 972.387.8700 x367
Email fasche@jesuitcp.org
Mark Batik
Phone Phone: 972.387.8700 x462
Email mbatik@jesuitcp.org
Mark Campbell
Phone Phone: 972.387.8700 x440
Email mcampbell@jesuitcp.org
Fred Donahue
Phone Phone: 972.387.8700 x436
Email fdonahue@jesuitcp.org
Matt DuRoss
Phone Phone: 972.387.8700 x390
Email mduross@jesuitcp.org
Katie Guinn
Phone Phone: 972.387.8700 x395
Email kguinn@jesuitcp.org
Mark Knize
Phone Phone: 972.387.8700 x485
Email mKnize@jesuitcp.org
Corey Marr
Phone Phone: 972.387.8700 x433
Email cmarr@jesuitcp.org
Tracy McFarland
Phone Phone: 972.387.8700 x417
Email tmcFarland@jesuitcp.org
Tim Murphy
Phone Phone: 972.387.8700 x528
Email tmurphy@jesuitcp.org
Patrick Naughton
Phone Phone: 972.387.8700 x478
Email pnaughton@jesuitcp.org
Dea Ochs
Department Chair
Phone Phone: 972.387.8700 x416
Email dochs@jesuitcp.org
Brooks Oliver
Phone Phone: 972.387.8700 x391
Email boliver@jesuitcp.org
Casey Profitt
Phone Phone: 972.387.8700 x499
Email cprofitt@jesuitcp.org
Joseph Ryan
Phone Phone: 972.387.8700 x306
Email jryan@jesuitcp.org
Patrick Triplett
Phone Phone: 972.387.8700 x321
Email ptriplett@jesuitcp.org
Mark Wester
Phone Phone: 972.387.8700 x515
Email mwester@jesuitcp.org

Social Studies Department

Social studies is the memory, reflection and analysis of the human group experience. Without it, we cannot know who we are, where we are, or how we arrived. Civilization is not inherited but learned, and must be learned by each generation anew. Social studies locates us in the present by connecting us to our past so we can move into the future with wisdom, for only the truly wise can be “Men and Women for Others.” Therefore, rather than emphasize a mass of data, the Jesuit Dallas Social Studies Department focuses on those trends and processes of the social sciences that enable us to better understand our world and ourselves. The various disciplines of social studies require one to train and exercise all the essential aspects of intellectual activity: inquiry, reason, self-expression and communication. Together they enable one to become a truly educated individual. Above all, social studies teaches those habits truly characteristic of an educated person: those of skepticism, criticism, perspective, objectivity, and the ability to see not only the blacks and whites of the human experience, but also the various shades of gray.

Courses Available:

AP World History [513]
World History [514]
AP United States History [524]
United States History [526]
AP Government [537]
Government [538]
AP Economics [547]
Economics [548]
AP Comparative Politics [565]
International Relations [557]
Contemporary Issues in Social Studies [558]
Global Studies – The Middle East, Africa and Latin America [567]
Global Studies – China, Korea, Japan and South Asia [568]
Psychology [571]
The Collapse of Civilizations [570]
History through Popular Media [572]
Slavery, Civil War and Reconstruction [574]
Religions of the Axial Age: An Approach to the World’s Religions [576]
Civil Rights, the Great Society and Vietnam:
The Tumultuous Years [578]
The Historical Concept of War:
Theory, Practice and Applications [580]
Mass Media and Cultural Studies [582]