San Francisco Chronicle

Cannabis studies: CCSF program first in nation

- By Steve Rubenstein Steve Rubenstein is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: srubenstei­n@ sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @SteveRubeS­F

In addition to smoking marijuana, college students can now major in it.

City College of San Francisco announced on Thursday it is planning to offer a degree in cannabis studies, which it says is the first of its kind in the United States.

“The degree is as an introducti­on to the complex biopsychos­ocial relationsh­ip of humans to cannabis in multiple cultural, institutio­nal and interperso­nal contexts,” CCSF officials said in announcing the cannabis studies associate of arts degree, suggesting that marijuana studies can be as much of a grind as any other college major.

Students will be required to take three threeunit cannabis classes — Introducti­on to Cannabis, Anthropolo­gy of Cannabis and Psychology of Psychoacti­ve Drugs — and choose from other classes on such subjects as criminal justice, drug wars, and magic, witchcraft and religion.

“We’re behavioral scientists. We make everything complicate­d,” said Jennifer DawgertCar­lin, chair of the behavioral sciences department which is offering the cannabis major.

Students will study marijuana as it relates to crime, race, income, business, revolution, religion and world history. They will do everything that can be done with marijuana except smoke it.

CCSF is a federally funded institutio­n, City College Trustee Tom Temprano said, and federal law forbids cannabis students from partaking in cannabis — at least for now.

“Let’s see what happens in a Biden administra­tion,” he said.

CCSF officials hope the new major — four years in the planning — piques student interest and boosts enrollment at the traditiona­lly cashstarve­d campus. At present, the college is ready to welcome 100 or so cannabis majors.

The official descriptio­n of the coursework required of all cannabis students suggests that cutting classes to light up is not a good idea.

According to a syllabus for Introducti­on to Cannabis Studies, students will explore the “social identity, regulation and enforcemen­t (of marijuana) through the lens of social power and inequity.”

Students must write a fourto fivepage paper “demonstrat­ing an awareness (of ) the role of mass media in shaping hegemonic narratives,” the kind of sentence best parsed while abstaining.

Students enrolled in the Anthropolo­gy of Cannabis class will study the “archaeolog­ical evidence of cannabis use” by other civilizati­ons and read up on such subjects as the “biblical representa­tions of cannabis” in the Old and New testaments.

In Psychology of Psychoacti­ve Drugs, students will make 3D clay models of the nerve cells of drug users. Other CCSF cannabis classes offered through its extension division will deal with manufactur­ing and selling cannabis.

The hope, said DawgertCar­lin, is that cannabis students will transfer to fouryear colleges — even though, she conceded, no fouryear college offers a cannabis studies program. Students will have to switch to other fields, she said.

All CCSF classes in the new major will have cannabis quizzes, cannabis homework, a cannabis midterm and a cannabis final exam. There will also be cannabis research projects — just not that kind of research.

Students will study marijuana as it relates to crime, race, income, business, revolution, religion and history.

 ?? Lea Suzuki / The Chronicle 2017 ?? The City College of San Francisco says its associate of arts degree in cannabis studies is the first in the United States.
Lea Suzuki / The Chronicle 2017 The City College of San Francisco says its associate of arts degree in cannabis studies is the first in the United States.

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