| | Name | Time | Instructor |
|
| AH 6200 | Art & Architecture of the Middle Ages | Tu/Th 1:00-2:15 | Gunhouse |
| Covers Europe and Christian Europe from the fourth century through the fourteenth, focusing on the church arts of Italy, Byzantium,
France, and Germany. |
|
| ANTH 6200 | Urban Anthropology | M 4:30-7:00 | Guano |
| Social organization of urban environments including preindustrial and industrial societies; process of urbanization. |
|
| ANTH 6490 | Global and Local Culture | Tu/Th 9:30-10:45 | TBA |
| Study of the interrelationship between global and local culture; the impact of globalization on
cultures and the formation of global cultures. Includes the study of tourism, immigration, popular culture, world cities, transnational intellectuals, ethnicities, and ideologies. |
|
| ANTH 6590 | Archaeological Methods | Tu/Th 2:45-4:25 | Kantner |
| Data recovery techniques, analytic methods, and theoretical concepts. Experience with
archaeological materials. |
|
| FOLK 6020 | America's Folk Crafts | M/W 5:30-6:45 | Burrison |
| Traditional hand skills of North American folk-culture regions including folk arts, crafts, architecture, food-ways, and pre-industrial technology, their Old World sources, and display in folk museums. |
|
| GEOG 6532 | Geographic Information Systems | M 5:30-8:50 | Hendrix |
| Fundamental concepts and applications of raster and vector-based
geographic information systems involving the integration and synthesis of geographic data with map overlays, databases, computer graphics, and/or remote sensing imagery. |
|
| GEOG 6764 | Urban Geography | Tu/Th 1:00-2:15 | Hartshorn |
| Comparative study of the location, function, and internal spatial structure of urban area. Special attention given to the impact of transportation, residential,
commercial, and industrial activity on the changing form of cities and suburbs. |
|
| HADM 8500 | Economic and Cultural Impact of Travel and Tourism | Th 4:30-7:00 | Pavesic |
| This course provides an overview of the economic and
cul- tural impact of travel and tourism on local, state, regional and national economics. The benefits and costs of tourism development, components of tourism and tourism
management, the planning and development of tourism destination/venues, understanding tourism policy, and tourism organizations are covered. |
|
| HIST 8000 | Introduction to Historical Research | Tu 1:00-4:20 | Heitzman |
| Study of the meaning and purpose of history and an introduction to research methods, exercises in bibliographical problems, research, and
historical criticism. Required of all history majors. To be taken in the first term of residence if possible. A grade of B or higher is required of all candidates for the M.A. degree. |
|
| HIST 8030 | Seminar in U.S. History in the 20th Century | M 4:30-7:00 | Brophy |
| |
|
| HIST 8600 | Introduction to Historic Preservation | M 7:15-9:45 | Laub |
| Historical evolution of preservation as a public movement in the United States, with emphasis on programs of local, state, and federal governments. |
|
| HIST 8610 | Preservation Law | T 7:15-9:45 | Reap |
| The law applicable to historic preservation and the many legal issues relevant to it. An overview of legal systems at the federal, state, and local levels, as they relate to historic preservation. |
|
| HIST 8620 | Conservation of Historic Building Materials | W 7:15-9:45 | Laub |
| Introduction to the theory and practice of building materials conservation, restoration, rehabilitation, and appropriate techniques for restoration and rehabilitation of historic structures. |
|
| HIST 8645 | Historic Resource Evaluation | Th 7:15-9:45 | Luce |
| An introduction to the philosophical and practical aspects of historic resource survey and evaluation, including application of the National Register of Historic Places criteria. |
|
| HIST 8670 | Seminar in Archives Administration and Use | Th 4:30-7:00 | Young |
| Through a prescribed field experience students are given the opportunity to apply knowledge, theory, and understanding gained from courses. May be repeated if topics vary. |
|
| HIST 8680 | Internship | TBA | Laub |
| Through a
prescribed field experience students are given the opportunity to apply knowledge, theory, and understanding gained from courses.
May be repeated if topics vary. |
|
| HIST 8710 | History and the Public | W 4:30-7:00 | Kuhn |
| An introduction to key theoretical, methodological, and practical issues addressed by historians who bring history to a wider public beyond the university. Issues include questions of audience and authority in presenting history; the relationship between history and memory; the politics and ethics of public history; and the applications of history in diverse formats and media. |
|
| HIST 8900 | Directed Readings | TBA | Staff |
|
| ID 8650 | History of Interior Design I | Tu/Th 2:30-5:20 | TBA |
| Decorative arts and interior design from the eighteenth through the nineteenth century. |
|
| PAUS 8011 | Urban Policy Arena | W 7:15-9:45 | Newman |
| A course designed to familiarize the student with the scope of urban studies. An interdisciplinary approach will be utilized to examine the major theories of
urbanization developed by the social sciences. |
|
| PAUS 8091 | Communication in Public Service | F 4:30-7:00 | Streib |
| The purpose of this course is to teach
students the essentials of effective communication in the public sector
environment. Students will be versed in tools such as graphical and
elective presentation of data and information. Access to information and
the effective dissemination of that information is addressed. Students
will not only gain substantive knowledge in the essentials of effective
communication, but will have opportunities to develop their own skills
in both written and oral formats. |
|
| PAUS 8111 | Public Administration and Organizations | T 4:30-7:00 | Waugh |
| This course provides students with an introduction to the study, practice, and structure of public administration and management in
the United States. Major disciplinary and conceptual foundations of public administration are covered, including theories of organization and bureaucracy, administrative
behavior and management, politics and administration, and public policy-making. |
|
| PAUS 8231 | Nonprofit Leadership | Th 4:30-7:00 | Vanslyke |
| This course examines and develops the leadership skills necessary to maximize group effectiveness in voluntary nonprofit organizations. The role of the
executive director and board governance are among the topics explored. |
|
| PAUS 8241 | Marketing in the Nonprofit Sector | Th 7:15-9:45 | Dvorak |
| A study of marketing principles and practices in the nonprofit sector. Students will conduct a marketing audit of a local nonprofit organization
and develop a plan of action to improve the organization's strategic marketing performance. |
|
| PAUS 8561 | GIS Applications to Planning and Policy Analysis | F 4:30-7:00 | Ghobrial |
| Prerequisite PAUS 8121. Integration and synthesis of geographical data with composite map overlay, databases and
computer graphics. Applications of GIS include local government, planning, transportation, emergency management, nonprofit, environment, marketing, real estate, housing,
and taxation. Business strategies and policy implications of different applications are discussed. |
|
| RE 8020 | Real Estate Investment Analysis | Tu 4:30-7:00 | Ziobrowski |
| |
|
| RE 8040 | Legal and Regulatory Environment of Real Estate | Th 7:15-9:45 | Black |
| This course deals with the basic legal concepts and legal instruments
associated with real estate and with the legal and governmental environment within which the use and development of real estate are regulated. Attention is given to real
property law as a risk management process with emphasis upon acquiring, managing, and disposing of space in the built environment and the decision-making process.
Applications of legal data sources, both traditional and electronic, are examined as a part of the decision-making process. |
|