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Supply Chain Management |
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SCM 751 - Supply Chain Finance Martin J. Whitman School of Management 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Double Numbered with: 451 This course focuses on the supply chain decisions and connects them to the financial performance and financing decisions of companies. It aims to provide an integrated management of supply chain and financial flows. Additional work required for graduate students includes four case study reports.
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SCM 755 - Lean Six Sigma Martin J. Whitman School of Management 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Double Numbered with: SCM 455 Six sigma process-improvement approach focused on quality, reliability and value to customers. Skills include techniques from the define, measure, analyze, improve and control (DMAIC) approach. Lean concepts from supply chain management. Additional work required of graduate students.
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SCM 777 - Global Supply Chain Management & Risk Mgmt Martin J. Whitman School of Management 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Crosslisted with: MAR 777 Double Numbered with: SCM 477 Topics include: design of global facility networks, containerization and logistical planning across borders, benefits and risks of outsourcing and offshoring while integrating financial and accounting-related matters such as exchange rates, duties, drawbacks and tax differentials. PREREQ: MBC 616, MBC 638
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SCM 960 - Doctoral Seminar in Supply Chain Management Martin J. Whitman School of Management 3 credit(s) Irregularly Repeatable
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SCM 962 - Marketing and Supply Chain Models Martin J. Whitman School of Management 3 credit(s) Irregularly Crosslisted with: MAR 962 Statistical/econometric and management science modeling approaches to marketing/supply chain management problem solving.
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SCM 999 - Dissertation Martin J. Whitman School of Management 0-15 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
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Secondary Education |
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SED 613 - Methods and Curriculum in Teaching School of Education 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Double Numbered with: SED 413 Lesson planning, developing broad units, planning curricula for specific grade levels and content areas under the guidance of major advisors in each teaching field. COREQ: SPE 612
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SED 616 - Assessment & Data-Driven Instruction School of Education 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Crosslisted with: SCE 616 Double Numbered with: SED 416 Use of formal and informal assessments to assess and document growth for varying student populations, evaluate instructional effectiveness, and adjust curriculum and instruction. Classroom management to support accompanying student teaching placement. Additional work required of graduate students. PREREQ: SED/SCE 413/613 COREQ: EDU 508
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SED 634 - Teaching and Learning Functions School of Education 3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5 Crosslisted with: MTD 634 Double Numbered with: SED 434 Functions as an organizing theme for mathematics education, 5-14. Theoretical development of the function concept and multiple representations. Applications throughout algebra with applications to geometry and probability. Use of software and data collection equipment. Additional work required of graduate students.
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SED 636 - Assessing Mathematical Understanding School of Education 3 credit(s) Upon sufficient interest Crosslisted with: EED 636 , MTD 636 Background and perspectives on assessment and mathematical understanding. Methods of assessment and issues of implementation. Development of assessment plan.
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SED 637 - Teaching and Learning Geometry School of Education 3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8 Crosslisted with: MTD 637 Double Numbered with: SED 437 Geometric thinking as an organizing theme for mathematics education, 5-14. Theoretical development of geometric concepts and notion of proof. Applications and connections of geometry throughout the curriculum. Use of geometry software. Additional work required of graduate students.
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SED 640 - Participation in the Professional Development School School of Education 0-1 credit(s) Every semester Crosslisted with: EED 640 Double Numbered with: SED 340 Individual involvement in research, discussion and decision making with teachers, university faculty, and colleagues who are members of the Professional Development School Cadres and Academies. Repeatable 7 time(s), 8 credits maximum
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Sports Media & Communications |
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SMC 601 - Sports Media & Communications Proseminar S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications 1 credit(s) Only during the summer This class is an examination of the sports media field. Students will discuss career paths within the industry and the roles sports media professionals play.
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SMC 621 - Sports PR and Athlete Advocacy Sports PR and Athlete Advocacy 1 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Double Numbered with: 421 This course examines and explores the unique situations and skills required for public relations practitioners, through both a domestic and global look at sports industry and reputation management. Additional work required of graduate students.
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SMC 622 - Sports Production Sports Production 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Double Numbered with: 422 This class examines how promos, long form, studio and live sports production utilizes storytelling, interviews, music, shot selection and editing techniques. Additional work required of graduate students.
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SMC 623 - Sports Documentary Sports Documentary 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Double Numbered with: 423 This workshop course examines the history of sports filmmaking and challenges students to utilize studied techniques to find their own voice and produce documentary short(s). Additional work required of graduate students.
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SMC 624 - The Sports Media Pitch The Sports Media Pitch 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Double Numbered with: 424 Students will collaborate with a real-word partner and industry professionals on content creation, programming, advertising and social media to create a promotional campaign for a major brand/advertiser. Additional work required of graduate students.
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SMC 630 - Topics in Esports and Media S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Double Numbered with: SMC 330 Students learn the history of Esports, trending technologies, fan experience and Esports reporting. Students will develop skills that enhance an Esports media property’s social media, distributed content and brand management. Esports media properties rotate as industry partners. Additional work is required of graduate students.
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Sociology |
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SOC 500 - Selected Topics Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 1-6 credit(s) Upon sufficient interest In-depth selected study of certain social problems. Repeatable
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SOC 513 - Statistics for Social Science College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Designed for first-year graduate students and sociology majors considering graduate study. Measures of central tendency and dispersion, hypothesis testing, and indices of association between variables. Application of statistics to social science data.
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SOC 600 - Selected Topics Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 1-6 credit(s) Irregularly Exploration of a topic (to be determined) not covered by the standard curriculum but of interest to faculty and students in a particular semester. Repeatable
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SOC 606 - Quantitative Research Design Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Formulation of sociological research questions and the logic of testing and inference. Major quantitative methodologies will be reviewed. Relationship between problems formulation, theoretical perspective, and research methods.
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SOC 611 - Sociological Theory Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Examination of theoretical approaches in sociology. Readings include writings by classic and contemporary social theorists, critiques of their theories and empirical writings that attempt to apply theoretical approaches to research studies.
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SOC 618 - Introduction to Field Research and Interviewing Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Introduction to qualitative methods in sociology with a focus on ethnography (participant observation, in-depth interviewing, content analysis) but also including some other methods.
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SOC 621 - Contemporary Sociological Theories Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Upon sufficient interest Major contemporary approaches to sociological theory. Reading representative works and comparing their application to selected topics.
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SOC 625 - Feminist Organizations Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Crosslisted with: WGS 625 Double Numbered with: SOC 425 Analyzes feminist organizing/activist work within and beyond the U.S. Interrogates what counts as feminist organizing and how different organizations use feminist principles in work for social change. Additional work required of graduate students.
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SOC 627 - New York City: Black Women Domestic Workers Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Crosslisted with: AAS 627 , WGS 627 Double Numbered with: SOC 427 Historical understanding of Black women’s engagement in paid domestic work in the United States, increasing need for domestic workers in the ever-changing economy and family, and the social construction of Black women as “ideal” domestic workers.
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SOC 635 - Political Sociology Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Irregularly Double Numbered with: SOC 335 Relationships between society and politics. Impacts of individuals, groups, parties, and institutions on state power in global perspective. Additional work required of graduate students.
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SOC 643 - Aging in the Context of Family Life Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Only during the summer Crosslisted with: SWK 643 , HFS 643 Double Numbered with: SOC 443 An overview of theory, research, and public policy concerning older adults and their families. Issues of relevance to aging families will be examined from multidisciplinary perspectives: sociology, psychology, demography, public health, and social work. Additional work required of graduate students.
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SOC 645 - The Caribbean: Sex Workers, Transnational Capital, and Tourism Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Crosslisted with: AAS 645 , WGS 645 Double Numbered with: SOC 445 A political economy approach to educating students about the human and capital costs of tourism to the Caribbean. The integral relationship between sex work and Caribbean tourism exposes the region’s development that has resulted in its current configuration.
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SOC 646 - The Social Impact of the Internet Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Irregularly Double Numbered with: SOC 446 Sociological implications of instantaneous communication, online publishing, identities and interactions, communities transcending geographic borders, and openly available information and opinion. Additional work required of graduate students. Offered only online.
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SOC 648 - The Dynamics of Prejudice and Discrimination Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Irregularly Double Numbered with: SOC 448 Research and theory of prejudice and discrimination: inclusion/exclusion of individuals/social groups; classification of in/out groups; contributing roles of processes (difference, power, labeling, silencing). Recommended for upper-level students with some social science background and other coursework dealing with social inequities.
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SOC 649 - The Sociology of Evil Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Irregularly Double Numbered with: SOC 449 Social conditions and processes allowing systematic dehumanization; perspectives of victim, perpetrator, audience, possibility of reconciliation. Extreme examples of evil; subtle ways of dehumanizing the other. Ethnic cleansing, international trafficking, terrorism. Additional work required of graduate students. Offered only online.
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SOC 651 - Classics in the Sociology of Religion and Morals Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Irregularly Crosslisted with: ANT 651 , REL 651 Classical sociological writings of Emile Durkheim and Max Weber and their contemporary significance.
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SOC 655 - Sociology of Health and Illness Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Covers topics in medical sociology including: epidemiological transition, medicalization, social determinants of health, fundamental cause theory, health disparities and inequalities, sick role, narratives of health and illness, and organization of the US medical system.
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SOC 663 - Studies in Urban Sociology Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Upon sufficient interest Life and structure of American cities. Sociological perspectives on urban life, growth, decline, and restructuring of cities.
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SOC 664 - Aging and Society Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Crosslisted with: HFS 664 WGS 664 Double Numbered with: SOC 364 Current policy issues in an aging society. Health care, end-of-life, social security, productive aging, and generational equity. Special problems facing elderly women and minorities.
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SOC 667 - Population Processes Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Causes and consequences of three fundamental population processes-mortality, fertility, migration- and topics related to health, aging, families, segregation, and ecological demography. Estimation and interpretation of basic demographic measures.
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SOC 670 - Experience Credit Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 1-6 credit(s) Irregularly Participation in a discipline or subject related experience. Student must be evaluated by written or oral reports or an examination. Permission in advance with the consent of the department chairperson, instructor, and dean. Limited to those in good academic standing. Repeatable
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SOC 672 - Topics in Sociolinguistics College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Upon sufficient interest Crosslisted with: LIN 674, ANT 674 Double Numbered with: ANT 374, LIN 374, SOC 372 Functions of language in society. Geographical, socioeconomic, and male-female differentiation. Functions of various types of speech events. Requirements include a research project. Repeatable 1 time(s), 6 credits maximum
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SOC 677 - Class, Status, and Power Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Upon sufficient interest Double Numbered with: SOC 377 Structures, causes, and consequences of socio-economic inequalities in modern societies. Poverty and wealth, social mobility, and the persistence of inequality. Comparison and assessment of theories of social stratification.
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SOC 704 - Science, Technology, and Society Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Irregularly Sociology and social history of science and technology. Interaction of science, technology, and society. Technical controversies. Planning technological change. Suggested complement to PSC 705.
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SOC 714 - Intermediate Social Statistics Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Introduction to multivariate statistical techniques to social science data. PREREQ: SOC 513
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SOC 760 - SOC 800: Sociology of Immigration and Immigrant Incorporation Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Irregularly This class will provide an overview of issues related to immigration. In the first part of the course students will focus on the history of immigration and immigration policy. In addition, students will learn about sociological theories of immigrant incorporation as well as specific issues related to the second-generation children of immigrants including their educational, labor-market, and transnational experiences.
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SOC 800 - Selected Topics Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 1-6 credit(s) Upon sufficient interest Exploration of a topic (to be determined) not covered by the standard curriculum but of interest to faculty and students in a particular semester. Repeatable
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SOC 810 - Readings on Theory and Methodology Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Irregularly Repeatable
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SOC 811 - Advanced Seminar in Qualitative Research I Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Crosslisted with: EDU 810 , WGS 812 Expand fieldwork skills and increase theoretical understanding: emphasis on “thinking qualitatively;” intensive fieldwork. PREREQ: EDU 603 /SOC 614
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SOC 812 - Advanced Seminar in Qualitative Research II Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Crosslisted with: EDU 815 Applications to issues of special education and related educational or human service settings.
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SOC 813 - Advanced Social Statistics Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Upon sufficient interest Examination of some current issues in multivariate analysis. Most issues examined are based on linear model. Focus varies by term. Examples of topics covered are path analysis, non-recursive models, unmeasured variables and measurement issues.
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SOC 816 - Ethnography Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring This graduate course will provide you with an overview of key issues and approaches to the epistemology, methodology, and politics of ethnography. Students will carry out intensive ethnographic research throughout the semester.
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SOC 821 - Feminist Methodologies Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Upon sufficient interest The feminist critique and its implications for planning, conducting, and reporting on empirical studies.
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SOC 825 - Foundations of Organizational Sociology Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Upon sufficient interest Examines fundamental questions and approaches related to the sociological study of complex, formal organizations. Readings enable students to understand the intellectual development of theory and various historical shifts in emphasis in the field.
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SOC 833 - Race, Class and Gender Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Upon sufficient interest Crosslisted with: WGS 833 Intersecting dimensions of inequality that structure social life in contemporary societies. Multiple effects of cross cutting oppressions and privileges, including sexuality and ability/disability.
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SOC 997 - Master’s Thesis Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 1-6 credit(s) Every semester
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SOC 999 - Dissertation Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 1-15 credit(s) Every semester Repeatable
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Social Science |
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SOS 575 - Philosophy of Social Science Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8 Crosslisted with: PHI 575 Philosophical and methodological issues in social and behavioral science. Role of laws in explanation of human action, methodological individualism and holism, functional explanation, value-neutrality, behaviorism, and com puter simulation.
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SOS 604 - Public Policy Analysis: Theory and Practice Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Crosslisted with: PSC 602 Overview of policy literature, including political economy and practical politics. Formal analyses and case studies.
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SOS 620 - Interpersonal Conflict Resolution Skills Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Enhanced communication skills to interact more effectively and solve problems creatively. Emphasizing reflective listening, problem solving, assertion, and managing conflicts among needs and values. Presenting theories demonstrating skill, practice, and critique. Additional work required of graduate students. Repeatable
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SOS 621 - Mediation:Theory and Practice Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Only during the summer Mediation skills to facilitate the resolution of disputes and differences. Techniques of third party intervention with individuals and groups. Learning approach includes lectures, simulations, modeling and practice mediations. Additional work required of graduate students.
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SOS 623 - Leadership: Theory and Practice Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Only during the summer Leadership skills to exercise responsible leadership and effective group membership in various contexts. Focus on individual leadership style and growth. Development of skills for a collaborative model of leadership. Additional work required of graduate students.
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SOS 624 - Conflict Resolution in Groups Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Only during the summer Skills to enhance understanding of conflict and conflict resolution and manage conflict in intragroup and intergroup settings. Unstructured small group experience to learn how groups function and to present a context for practice.
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SOS 625 - The European Union Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Irregularly Crosslisted with: HST 625 Interdisciplinary introduction to history, politics, and economics of the European community.
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SOS 705 - Theories of Development Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5 Crosslisted with: GEO 705 Review of theories of development, economic growth, and social change. Comparison of explanatory power and limits of each theory. Review of prospects for synthesis and implications for empirical research in geography and other social sciences.
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SOS 716 - Foundations of American Political Thought Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Irregularly Crosslisted with: HST 682 , PSC 716 American political thought to about 1820. Puritans, American Revolution, establishment of the Constitution, and thought of Hamilton and Jefferson.
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SOS 750 - Readings and Research in Social Sciences Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 1-9 credit(s) Irregularly Interdepartmental seminars for graduate students enrolled in the social sciences program. Open to students in the respective disciplines. Repeatable
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SOS 890 - Readings and Research in International Development Policy Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Irregularly For students preparing research for Ph.D. or Masters thesis, or in-depth research papers. Permission of instructor. Repeatable
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SOS 991 - Social Science Dissertation Proposal Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 3 credit(s) Irregularly Seminar in evaluating and developing research design. Application of social science methods to a specific research project. Preparation of detailed dissertation proposal by each student.
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SOS 999 - Dissertation Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 1-15 credit(s) Every semester
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Spanish |
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SPA 601 - Literary Theory and Research Methods College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Irregularly Reading in semiotics and research theory concerning literary texts.
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SPA 620 - Language Training in Preparation for Research Using Spanish College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Language training to prepare students to conduct research in areas that require knowledge of Spanish. Repeatable 3 time(s), 12 credits maximum
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SPA 635 - Spanish Phonetics and Phonology College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Double Numbered with: SPA 435 Introduction to formal linguistic analysis of the Spanish sound system. Survey of dialectal variation. Additional work required of graduate students.
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SPA 636 - The Structure of Spanish College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Double Numbered with: SPA 436 Introduction to the formal linguistic analysis of the structure of Spanish sentences. Additional work required of graduate students.
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SPA 637 - Introduction to Spanish Linguistics College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Double Numbered with: SPA 437 Formal linguistic analysis of the Spanish language: phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, and language variation (sociolinguistics and dialectology). Taught entirely in Spanish. Additional work required of graduate students.
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SPA 638 - History of the Spanish Language College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Double Numbered with: SPA 438 The evolution of modern Spanish. The causes of linguistic change, the development of the phonological and morphosyntactic systems, the semantic/lexical development of the language. Additional work required of graduate students.
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SPA 639 - Community Outreach: Language in Action College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Irregularly Double Numbered with: SPA 439 Language immersion in the Spanish-speaking community in the Syracuse area. Emphasis on improving spoken and written Spanish through a service learning component. Additional work required of graduate students.
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SPA 641 - Medieval and Golden Age Literature College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Irregularly Critical reading of significant literary works drawn from the Middle Ages and the 16th and 17th centuries.
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SPA 643 - Cervantes College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Irregularly Don Quixote, with selections from other representative works by Cervantes.
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SPA 652 - Spanish Enlightenment to Modernism: Aesthetics and Power College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Through a diverse theoretical approach, analyzes the construction of the following notions: literature, nation, identity, and gender. Representations of women in literary and cinematic texts.
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SPA 653 - Sinner and Saints in 19th and 20th Century Spanish Literature and Film College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Crosslisted with: WGS 653 Representations of women in novel, poetry, theater, and film through diverse theoretical approaches. Issues of power, sex, hierarchy, and institution.
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SPA 655 - Caribbean Spaces College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8 This course explores visions of urban imaginaries in Caribbean and U.S. Caribbean cultures. It analyzes the intersections between urban spaces and the formation of local/global subjectivities.
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SPA 656 - Reality and Desire: Theater and Poetry (20th Century) College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) A diachronic study of the Spanish theater and poetry. Literary works will include texts by Valle-Inclán, Machado, Garcia Lorca, Aleixandre, Cernuda, Sastre, Buero Vallejo, among others.
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SPA 658 - Narrative and Film in Spain (1940 to the Present) College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Diachronic study of the “art of adaptation” in Spain. Exploration of the language of translation. Exchange between literature and film during and after Franco.
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SPA 662 - Latin American Colonial Literature College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Literature written during the Colonial period and contemporary criticism and theory about that period.
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SPA 663 - Latin American Theater College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Inclusive instructional strategies for students with disabilities, with particular focus on students with autism. Collaborative teaching approaches, IEP implementation, positive behavior supports, fostering communication and adaptations to access enriching curricula. Implementation during field experience. Effective Fall 2010
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SPA 664 - Nineteenth Century Latin American Literature College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Narratives and poetry written during the 19th century in Latin America. Analyzed in relation to literary movements such as costumbrism, romanticism, realism, naturalism, and the gaucho trend.
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SPA 665 - Performance and Postmodernism in Latin America College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Latin American theater written or performed from 1990 to the present alongside theories on performance and postmodernism related to Latin America and its theater.
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SPA 671 - Latin American Literature and Feminist Theory College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Crosslisted with: WGS 671 Includes reading and critical discussion of novels by 20th-century Latin American women writers and an introduction to feminist theory as it pertains to Latin America.
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SPA 672 - Gay and Lesbian Hispanic Caribbean Literature College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Caribbean poetry and fiction in homosexual literature. Includes literary theories and social, political, cultural, and religious values related to homosexuality.
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SPA 673 - Afro-Hispanic Literature of the Caribbean College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Evolution of the African culture within the Cuban Literature of the 20th century. The relationship of Santeria/Revolution is especially emphasized.
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SPA 674 - Cuban Neo-Baroque College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Analysis of three contemporary Cuban writers: Alejo Carpentier, José Lezama Lima, and Severo Sarduy. Literary theories of novel, poetry, and lectures.
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SPA 678 - Latin American Literature in the New Millenium College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Upon sufficient interest This course will trace the major developments in Latin American literature and cultural phenomena that followed the Boom, with emphasis on the production of the 21st century.
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SPA 679 - Contemporary Trends In Latin American Literature, Culture and Film College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Irregularly Cultural debates, literary developments and film in contemporary Latin America.
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SPA 681 - U.S. Latina/o Literature College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Literary texts written by Latina/os in Spanish from the 17th century to present. Focus from late 19th century to the present; examining socio-historic, cultural and literary contexts.
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SPA 685 - Contemporary Spanish-American Literature College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Irregularly Precursors, modernists, and postmodernists
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SPA 686 - Thinking/Writing the Nation College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring An introduction to texts within the variety of discursive modernity models of 19th century Latin America. From Independence Era to the end of that century.
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SPA 687 - Revisiting Foundational Fictions College of Arts and Sciences 3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5 A discussion of Anderson’s Imagined Communities and Sommer’s Foundational Fictions, to determine how helpful they are today in the study and mapping of 19th century Latin American narrative texts.
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SPA 690 - Independent Study College of Arts and Sciences 1-6 credit(s) Every semester In-depth exploration of a problem or problems. Individual independent study upon a plan submitted by the student. Admission by consent of supervising instructor or instructors and the department. Repeatable
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Special Education |
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SPE 409 - Teaching Children and Adolescents with Autism Teaching Children and Adolescents with Autism 3 credit(s) Only during the summer Double Numbered with: SPE 609 Cognitive, social, and communication needs of children and adolescents with autism. Examines program development, behavioral management, and effective educational strategies for this population of students.
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SPE 500 - Selected Topics School of Education 1-6 credit(s) Exploration of a topic (to be determined) not covered by the standard curriculum but of interest to faculty and students in a particular semester. Repeatable
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SPE 520 - Methods and Curricula in Early Childhood Special Education School of Education 3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring Curricula, program design, and teaching methods for educating infants and young children with disabilities.
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