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Spring 2004 Courses in Heritage Preservation


 NameTimeComputer#Instructor

ANTH 6112 Modernity and Identity M 4:30p-7:00p 15051 Guano
Representations of modernity in postcolonial and metropolitan nation-states. National identities and their articulation with gender, race, and class.

ANTH 6420 Women in Cross-Cultural Perspective Tu/Th 1:00p-2:15p 10175 Fennell
Behavioral patterns, status, roles, and symbols linked to gender in human cultures and societies. Holistic and comparitive analyses of biological, psychological, and cultural similarities and differences among women.

ANTH 8040 Seminar in Anthropology Tu 4:30p-7:00p 15054 Kantner
Advanced topics in anthropology that vary each offering; may be taken more than once when topics differ.

FOLK 6100 British Folk Culture M/W 5:30p-6:45p 15037 Burrison
The oral, musical, customary, and material traditions of England, Scotland, and Wales, including their regional variation and reflection of major historical currents.

GEOG 6536 Internet GIS and Visualization M/W 1:00p-2:40p 11800 Crampton
History, concepts, and applied methods of online GIS geographic visualization. Includes an examination of applications of distributed mapping.

GEOG 6766 Urban Transportation Planning Tu/Th 2:45p-4:25p   Hartshorn
Impact of automobiles, paratransit, and mass transit on the spatial structure of the city; transportation planning process.

HIST 6320 Metropolitan Atlanta W 4:30p-7:00p 11752 Crimmins
Interdisciplinary perspective focusing on social, historical, and geographic processes which have shaped the Atlanta region.

HIST 7010 Issues and Interpretation in American History Th 1:00p-4:20 11754 Steffen
Study and discussion of important historical questions; introduction to the historiography of the field.

HIST 8000 Intro to Historical Research M 5:30p-8:50p 11756 Reid
Study of the meaning and purpose of history and an introduction to research methods, exercises in bibliographical problems, research, and historical criticism.

HIST 8060 Seminar: History of the South Th 5:30p-8:50 15016 Eskew
Selected topics in the political, social, cultural, and economic history of the antelbellum and postbellum South.

HIST 8635 U.S. Cities Tu 7:15p-9:45p 11764 Crimmins
The history of the U.S. city from colonial times to the present, focusing on spatial development, technological change, and their relationship to the civic culture.

HIST 8640 Preservation Planning W 7:15p-9:45p 11765 Laub
Planning tools for the identification and preservation of the historic environment.

HIST 8650 Historic American Landscapes and Gardens M 7:15p-9:45p 11766 Cothran
American landscapes and gardens with respect to the social, cultural, historical, and geographic factors that influence their design and development.

HIST 8680 Internship   11767 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 8690 American Architectural History Th 7:15p-9:45p 11768 Moffson
Major themes in American architecture from European colonization to modernism. Selected architects, buildings, and vernacular traditions are examined.

HIST 8700 Case Studies in Historic Preservation Tu 7:15-9:45 11769 Laub
Research seminar in the techniques of documentation and analysis of historic sites and districts.

HIST 8720 Museum Studies Th 7:15p-9:45p 11770 Kelly
Comprehensive overview of museums in the U.S., their history, philosophical backgrounds, and ethical issues. Museum management, artifact accession, and exhibition production will be examined.

HIST 8900 Directed Readings     Laub
Comprehensive overview of museums in the U.S., their history, philosophical backgrounds, and ethical issues. Museum management, artifact accession, and exhibition production will be examined.

PAUS 8111 Public Administration and Organizations W 4:30p-7:00p 14925 Nigro
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 8210 Into the Non-Profit Sector W 4:30p-7:00p 14926 Rushton
The course provides an overview of the nonprofit sector in society with a consideration of the nonprofit sector's relationship to the state and to for-profit sectors. Attention will be given to the social settings in which nonprofit organizations exist, and to contemporary public policy issues regarding the nonprofit sector.

PAUS 8221 Fundraising for Nonprofits Tu 7:15p-9:45p 14098 O'Kane
A study of fundraising cycles and techniques for nonprofit volunteer organizations; fundraising through volunteers; board development and management for fundraising and public relations.

PAUS 8311 Planning Theory and Analysis Tu 4:30p-7:00p 13841 Helling
A course using spreadsheet software and assigned readings to analyze issues. Case problems may include population, employment, land use, environmental and transportation examples

PAUS 8351 Local Government Management M 4:30p-7:00p 14928 Eger
An examination of the challenges governing America's urban areas from a public management perspective. A special effort will be made to integrate course materials with developments in the Atlanta metropolitan area.

PAUS 8381 Natural Resource Management Th 5:30p-8:00p 14189 Isley
The purpose of this course is to introduce the student to key legal and regulatory concepts that are of primary importance to the natural resources planner/administrator. The emphasis of the class will vary from year to year, one year giving particular emphasis to water resource systems, another year to land use systems.

PAUS 8531 Policy Analysis M 7:15p-9:45p 15862 Staff
This course provides focused study about policy analysis and process techniques. This course concentrates on policy development decision strategies. Students will conduct problem solving exercises using a number of decision methods appropriate to policy analysis and evaluation. Students will leave the course with an understanding of the policy-making process at all levels of government and a knowledge of different techniques available to develop, implement, and assess policy initiatives.

RE 8000 Applied Real Estate Market Analysis W 4:30p-7:00p 12862 Rabianski
This course is an introduction to the principles of real property analysis and use. Subjects include the nature of real estate and real property, fundamentals of real property law, public and private limits on the rights of ownership, fundamentals of property valuation and market analysis, principles of location theory, and an introduction to legal documents such as the contract, the lease, and the warranty deed. Where applicable, e-commerce is incorporated into the course material. The course is accentuated with exercises in the use of the financial calculator, the spreadsheet software, and the Internet.


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