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CAS Archives

March 4, 2009

Anthropology

Contact: David Privler
Phone: (212) 998-8588
E-Mail: David.Privler@nyu.edu

Dept. Website
http://anthropology.as.nyu.edu/page/undergraduate

UG Course Listings
http://anthropology.as.nyu.edu/object/anthropology.0810.ug.courseofferings

The requirements for the department's minor can be found here:
http://anthropology.as.nyu.edu/object/anthropology.0810.ug.req

Overview:
The Anthropology department offers a holistic approach to the study of humans and seeks to expose students to all four of the traditional sub-disciplines of anthropology - Archaeological Anthropology, Socio-cultural Anthropology, Linguistic Anthropology, and Physical Anthropology

Liberal Arts Core:
Social Science

Art History

Maya Dean
303 Silver
Art History
tel: 212 998 8180
fax 212 995 4182
maya@nyu.edu

Dept. Website
http://arthistory.as.nyu.edu/page/home

Course Offerings
http://arthistory.as.nyu.edu/object/ah.fall2009courses (Fall 2009 Only)

The requirements for the department's minor can be found here:
http://arthistory.as.nyu.edu/object/finearts.0810.ug.req

Overview:
The Department of Fine Arts offers courses in the history and criticism of the visual arts in major world cultures.

Special Information:
For all courses that have prerequisites, Gallatin students must fulfill the preliminary requirements before they enroll. Once they have had the necessary introductory courses, they may enroll in advanced courses, just as CAS students may. The department almost never make exceptions to this rule. If there is some reason why a student hopes to do something normally not available or permitted, s/he may contact Maya Dean. Permission from the Director of Undergraduate Studies in Art History will be required.

Only majors may enroll in Art History seminars. On rare occasions, when a student from Gallatin has sufficient background, the department MAY make an exception but only at the start of the semester, when all senior, Art History majors have been accommodated. Priority is given to Art History seniors for these courses because they are required for the Art History degree. If, however, at the start of a semester there are open places in a seminar, and if a Gallatin student has sufficient background to profit from the seminar and to participate in it, the student should contact Maya Dean. Permission from the Director of Undergraduate Studies in Art History, as well as the instructor, will be required for enrollment.

Liberal Arts Core:
Humanities

Biology

Rosemarie Campos
Assistant to Director of Undergraduate Studies
Silver Center, Room 1009
Phone: 212-998-8203
Email: rc10@nyu.edu

Dr. Ignatius Tan
Email: ignatius.tan@nyu.edu
Phone: (212) 998-8295
Fax: (212) 995-4015

100 Washington Square East
Rm 1009
New York, NY 10003-6688

Dept. Website
http://biology.as.nyu.edu/page/home.html

UG Course Offerings
http://biology.as.nyu.edu/object/biology.0810.ug.courseofferings

The requirements for the department's minor can be found here:
http://biology.as.nyu.edu/object/biology.0810.ug.req

Liberal Arts Core:
Math/Science

Chemistry

Cesar Grullon
Undergraduate Assistant
Email: cg8@nyu.edu
Phone: 212-998-8400

100 Washington Square East, Room 1001
New York, NY 10003-6688

Dept. Website
http://chemistry.fas.nyu.edu/page/home

UG Course Offerings
http://chemistry.fas.nyu.edu/object/chemistry.0810.ug.courseofferings

Requirements for the department's minor can be found here:
http://chemistry.fas.nyu.edu/object/chemistry.0810.ug.req

Overview:
The Chemistry department offers courses in General Chemistry, Organic Chemistry and Modern Chemistry to name a few.

Liberal Arts Core:
Math/Science

March 9, 2009

Comparative Literature

School: CAS
Professor Cristina Vatulescu, Director of Undergraduate Studies
Director of Undergraduate Studies (currently undetermined)
19 University Place, 3rd Floor
Phone: 212-992-9764
E-Mail: cristina.vatulescu@nyu.edu

Dept. Website
http://www.nyu.edu/fas/dept/complit/index.html

UG Course Offerings
http://www.nyu.edu/fas/dept/complit/undergrad/courses.html#fall09

The requirements for the department's minor can be found here:
http://www.nyu.edu/fas/dept/complit/undergrad/requirements.html#minor

Overview:
Comparative literature is an innovative, interdisciplinary department that allows students to explore literature and literary questions unfettered by national borders and institutional boundaries as well as to understand literature as a unique cultural form through investigating its relation to other cultural practices.

Liberal Arts Core:
Humanities

Classics

Nancy Smith Amer
Department Administrator
Silver Center
100 Washington Square East
Room 503
Phone: 212-998-8597
Email: nas1@nyu.edu

Dept. Website
http://classics.as.nyu.edu/page/home

UG Course Offerings
http://classics.as.nyu.edu/object/classics.0810.ug.courseofferings

The requirements for the deparment's minor can be found here:
http://classics.as.nyu.edu/object/classics.0810.ug.req

Overview:
The Department of Classics explores all aspects of the Greek and Roman worlds, including their languages and literatures, art and archaeology, history, philosophy, religion, politics, economics, and law. Courses offered both in the original languages and in English translation

Liberal Arts
Humanities

Computer Science

Michael S. Caponegro
Program Administrator
Undergraduate Division
Room 323, Warren Weaver Hall
(212) 998-3094
Michael Caponegro
Program Administrator
Warren Weaver Hall, 4th Floor
Phone 212-998-3094
Email: michael.caponegro@nyu.edu OR undergrad@cs.nyu.edu

Dept Website
http://www.cs.nyu.edu/web/index.html

UG Course Offerings
http://www.cs.nyu.edu/web/Academic/Undergrad/course_descriptions.html

The details for the department's minor can be found here:
http://cs.nyu.edu/web/Academic/Undergrad/minors.html

Other updates can be found here:
http://www.cs.nyu.edu/web/Academic/Undergrad/contact.html

Overview:
Computer science is an academic discipline rooted in mathematics as well as a practical art underlying innovation in business, science, economics, graphic design, communications, government, and education. Courses combine practical programming experience with techniques for analyzing problems and designing computer algorithms.

Special Information:
Gallatin students may register for courses on Albert that either have no
prerequisites or have prerequisites the students have already met. If a student does not meet the prerequisite, and would like to take a particular course, he or she should contact the Undergraduate Program Administrator.

The department prides itself on individual service to students and its staff is always available
to meet with students to discuss program options.

Liberal Arts Core:
Math/Sci

Dramatic Lit

Taeesha Muhammad
Drama Literature Program
212.998.8801
ttm201@nyu.edu
Department of Dramatic Literature
19 University Place, Fifth Floor
New York, NY 10003

Dept Website
http://www.nyu.edu/fas/dept/dramalit/

UG Course Offerings
http://www.nyu.edu/fas/dept/dramalit/undergrad/courses_fall09.pdf

Details of the department's minor can be found here:
http://www.nyu.edu/fas/dept/dramalit/undergrad/index.html

Overview:
The department offers courses in dramatic literature, theatre production, playwriting, cinema and survey courses in the theory and history of drama.

Liberal Arts Core:
Humanities

East Asian Studies

CAS
Prof. Tom Looser
Director of Undergraduate Studies
715 Broadway, Room 309
Phone: 212-998-7619
tom.looser@nyu.edu

UG Course Descriptions
http://www.nyu.edu/pages/east.asian.studies/courses/093.html

Dept Website
http://www.nyu.edu/pages/east.asian.studies/index.html

Please contact the department regarding language requirements. The department offers a minor. Requirements can be found here:
http://www.nyu.edu/pages/east.asian.studies/undergraduate/major.html

Overview:
The East Asian Studies Department offers courses on the language and culture of China, Japan and Korea. The focus is primarily on languages and literature, as well as on how these cultures have interacted with the Western world. Courses include six-semester sequences of Chinese, Japanese and Korean languages; Arts of China; and Readings in Modern Japanese Writings.

Liberal Arts Core:
Humanities

Economics

Andrew Whitney, Administrator
Department of Economics
19 W. 4th Street, 6FL
New York, NY 10012
212 998-8922
andrew.whitney@nyu.edu

Current UG Course Offerings:
http://econ.as.nyu.edu/object/economics.0810.ug.courseofferings

Dept Website
http://econ.as.nyu.edu/page/home

Registration:
As of the fall of 2005, there will be three prerequisites for courses in the Economics department: Principles of Economics I, Principles of Economics II and Calculus. After fulfilling these prerequisites students should be able to register for most courses directly on Albert. If students encounter courses with registration restrictions after they have fulfilled the prerequisites, they can contact the department for access codes. Access code are given on a case by-case basis.

Liberal Arts Core:
Social Science

English

Shanna Williams
Undergraduate Assistant 19 University Place, 5th Floor
Phone: 212-998-8800
Email: Shanna.williams@nyu.edu

Current UG Course Offerings\
http://english.fas.nyu.edu/object/english.ug.courseinformation
Dept. Website
http://english.fas.nyu.edu/page/home

Overview:
The department offers a full and varied curriculum in literary history, critical theory, dramatic literature, theatre history, and literary culture.

Liberal Arts Core
Humanities

Environmental Studies

Amanda Anjum
Administrative Aide
212-992-7999
amandaanjum@nyu.edu

Current UG Course Offerings:http://environment.as.nyu.edu/object/environment.Fall2009

**Note: Registration for V36.0100 and V36.0101 is restricted during the first week to ES majors only; V36.0800 is open to majors only; V36.0900 is open to ES majors and Gallatin-ES Partnership students only. (See below for more information on the Gallatin-ES Partnership.)

Dept Website
http://environment.as.nyu.edu/page/home

Special Information:
Students interested in Environmental Studies are encouraged to enroll in the Gallatin-Environmental Studies Partnership. This agreement will allow students to complete an individualized concentration in Gallatin in the usual way while also selecting a series of environmental studies courses and becoming a part of the Environmental Studies Program community. Students who participate in the partnership will become eligible to take the capstone seminar offered by the Environmental Studies program. When they graduate, students will receive a note on their transcripts indicating that they have completed the Gallatin-Environmental Studies partnership. Students may formally sign up to join in this partnership, with their adviser's approval, beginning in the second semester of their sophomore year, and no later than the completion of their 80th credit.

Gallatin and ES have an agreement that sets aside spaces in V36.0100, V36.0101 and V36.0900 for participants in the Partnership. Details may be found here: http://environment.as.nyu.edu/object/environment.es.gallatin

Students enrolled in the G-ES Partnership should contact Prof. Gene Cittadino (ec15@nyu.edu) or Prof. Peder Anker (peder.anker@nyu.edu) with questions.

European and Mediterranean Studies

Leah Ramirez
Center for European and Mediterranean Studies
285 Mercer St, 7th Fl.
Phone: 212-998-3838
E-mail: lr39@nyu.edu

Course listings:
http://cems.as.nyu.edu/object/cems.ug.fall09schedule
The listings in bold are CEMS sponsored courses.

Overview:
The Center for European Studies (CES) was established in 1991 to support and promote the study of contemporary Europe. CES is an academic department as well as a study center for American and European scholars. Courses and lectures on European societies and cultures are taught in collaboration with the Institute of French Studies, the Program in Irish Studies, and the Program in Italian Studies.

Special Information:
Most courses at CES do not require any special permission with the exception of research seminars that are only open to your majors and graduate students.

Liberal Arts Core:
Humanities

French

Alex Teachey
Undergraduate Administrative Aid
19 University Place, 6th floor
Phone: (212) 998-8701
teachey@nyu.edu

Dept Website
http://french.as.nyu.edu/page/home

UG Course Offerings
http://french.as.nyu.edu/object/french.ug.upcomingschedule

The department offers four minors:
French Studies, Francophone Studies, French Lit in Translation, and Lit in Translation.

Overview:
Department of French offers courses in French and Francophone language, literature, and civilization. The program emphasizes immersion of the student in foreign culture and language.

Special Information:
Students must have a French SATII score or take the placement test (www.nyu.edu/cas/placementexams) to take a French language class, or alternatively, a score of 4 or 5 on the French Language AP test. (Please note a score lower than 4 on the French AP test cannot be used to place students in a course). More information on placement and AP scores can be found here: http://french.as.nyu.edu/object/advising.html

Content (Literature or Culture) courses taught in French typically require successful completion of Written Contemporary French (V45.0105), and in some cases Readings of French Literature (V45.0120 or V45.0121) as well. Courses taught in English are open to all students.


Liberal Arts Core:
Humanities

German

Elke Siegel
German Department Language Coordinator
19 University Place, Room 323
Phone: (212) 998-7575
Email: elke.siegel@nyu.edu

Dept Website
http://german.as.nyu.edu/page/home

UG Course Offerings
http://german.as.nyu.edu/object/german.ug.schedule

The department does not offer a group language placement test. All placement is done on an individual basis. Please contact the department regarding placement.

The department offers a minor as well. The requirements can be found here:
http://german.as.nyu.edu/object/german.mmh

Overview:
The German department offers a comprehensive program in modern German language and literary studies from the 18th century to the present. The department specializes in theoretically inflected analyses of German literature, technology, cultural history and media such as film, painting and photography.

Liberal Arts Core:
Humanities

Hebrew & Judaic Studies

Jeffrey Rubenstein
Director of Undergraduate Studies
Heyman Hall
51 Washington Square South
Phone: 212-998-8978 OR Davin Engel Phone: 212-998-8988

Dept Website
http://hebrewjudaic.as.nyu.edu/page/home

UG Course Offerings
http://hebrewjudaic.as.nyu.edu/object/hebrew.0810.ug.courseofferings

All students must take a placement test prior to enrolling in a Hebrew Language course. Please contact the department regarding the exam.

The department offers a minor in Hebrew Language and Culture and a minor in Jewish History and Civilization.

Overview:
The Skirball Department of Hebrew and Judaic Studies offers Hebrew language and literature courses as well as all courses on Jewish history and culture, from the ancient through the medieval to the modern. Courses are taught by faculty whose specialties include ancient Judaism, medieval Jewish history, modern Jewish history, Biblical studies, Middle Eastern studies, Postbiblical and Talmudic literature, Jewish mysticism, Jewish philosophy, and related fields.

Liberal Arts Core:
Humanities

Hellenic Studies

Niki Kekos
Administrator 285 Mercer Street 8th Floor
Phone: 212-998-3990
Email: niki.kekos@nyu.edu

Dept Website
http://hellenic.as.nyu.edu/page/home

UG Course Offerings
http://hellenic.as.nyu.edu/object/hellenic.0810.ug.courseofferings

The department offers a minor which is described below
http://hellenic.as.nyu.edu/object/hellenic.minor

Overview:
The Program in Hellenic Studies offers an interdisciplinary understanding of the language, literature, history, and politics of post-classical Greece.

Liberal Arts Core:
Humanities

March 11, 2009

History

Sadie Paschke
King Juan Carlos I of Spain Building
53 Washington Square South, 7th Floor
Phone: 212-998-8647
Email: sadie.paschke@nyu.edu

If the course requires "Permission from DUGS," contact Hasia Diner (hasia.diner@nyu.edu), the Director of Undergraduate Studies in the History department.

Dept Website
http://history.fas.nyu.edu/page/undergrad

UG Course Offerings
http://history.fas.nyu.edu/object/Fall2009UndergraduateSchedule.html

The department offers a minor the requirements of which can be found here:
http://history.fas.nyu.edu/object/history.ug.minor.html

Special Information
Students outside the History department may only register for history lectures during the first two weeks of registration. After that workshops and seminars will open up to non-majors (unless otherwise noted on ALBERT.)


Liberal Arts Core:
Humanities

Irish Studies


Anne Solari
Program Coordinator
One Washington Mews, 2nd floor
Phone: 212-998-3952
Email: anne.solari@nyu.edu

Dept Website
http://irelandhouse.fas.nyu.edu/page/home

UG Course Offerings
http://irelandhouse.fas.nyu.edu/page/ugcoursedescriptions

The department offers a minor. Requirements can be found here.
http://irelandhouse.fas.nyu.edu/page/minor

Please contact the deparmtent regarding language placement.

Overview:
The department offers an interdisciplinary program, providing students with the opportunity to study the history and culture of Ireland and Irish America, exploring literature, history, drama, politics, art, cinema studies, music, and the Irish language.

Liberal Arts Core:
Humanities

Italian

School: CAS
Roberta Garbarini-Philippe
Casa Italiana Zerilli-Marimo
24 West 12th Street
Phone: 212-998-3859
Email: roberta.garbarini@nyu.edu

Dept Website
http://italian.as.nyu.edu/page/home

UG Course Offerings
http://italian.as.nyu.edu/object/italian.0810.ug.courseofferings

The deparment offers a minor. Requirements can be found here.
http://italian.as.nyu.edu/object/italian.0810.ug.req

Please contact the department regarding language placement.

Overview:
The Department of Italian at New York University is one of the country’s leading centers for Italian studies. Courses include: Elementary Italian I, Elementary Italian II, Intermediate Italian I, Intermediate Italian II, Advanced Language Courses, Advanced Review of Modern Italian, Quattro Chiacchiere: Conversations in Italian.

Registration:
There is a prerequisite for taking courses in the Italian department. Students must take a placement exam in order to determine their language level and to clear the prerequisite. After students have taken the placement exam and obtained their results, they must go to the Italian department and meet with Roberta Garbarini in order to register. (Contact Crystal Parsons for more information regarding placement exams: Silver Center, 100 Wash Sq E, room 908, (212) 998-8114; cpp1@nyu.edu) Please note: After students have taken their first Italian course, they do not have to follow the process listed above. They may register directly via Albert. Department Notes:

Liberal Arts Core:
Humanities


Journalism

Department of Journalism
20 Cooper Square
Sixth Floor
New York, N.Y. 10003

For course advisement, contact Cathleen Dullahan (Head of Undergraduate Affairs) at 212-998-7996 or cd8@nyu.edu. For registration assistance, email Don Starr (Undergraduate Aide) at undergraduate.journalism@nyu.edu

Dept Website
http://journalism.nyu.edu/

UG Course Offerings
http://journalism.nyu.edu/courses/undergrad_fall09.html

The department does not offer a minor.

Overview:
The Department offers courses in newspaper, magazine, broadcast journalism and courses in journalism for the digital age.

Registration:
Students may register on Albert for The Foundations of Journalism, V54.0501; Journalism Ethics and First Amendment Law, V54.0502; or Journalistic Inquiry, V54.0101 (requires V54.0501 pre-requisite). To enroll in The Beat, V54.0201 or Advanced Reporting, V54.0301, students must have fulfilled the listed prerequisites and register through the department.

The Foundations of Journalism V54.0501 is a prerequisite for most courses in the department. Indeed, the department especially promotes The Foundations of Journalism, V54.0501 (Fall only); Journalism Ethics and First Amendment Law, V54.0502 (Spring only); and Journalism & Society, V54.0503 to Gallatin students interested in integrating journalism into their studies.

Note: All summer courses are open and do not require prerequisites.

Liberal Arts Core:
Social Science

Social & Cutural Analysis (Includes: Africana Studies, Latin American/Carribean Studies, Metropolitan Studies, Gender/Sexuality Studies, Asian/Pacific/American Studies and American Studies)

Ramona Knepp
Academic Coordinator
20 Cooper Square, 4th Fl.
Phone: 212-998-2136
Email: Ramona.knepp@nyu.edu

Dept. Website:
http://sca.as.nyu.edu/page/home

Course Offerings:
http://sca.as.nyu.edu/object/sca.course.sched.ug.fall09

Overview:
The Department of Social and Cultural Analysis (SCA) explores the range of relationships between human collectivities, on the one hand, and institutions and structures of power, on the other, taking into account how these are affected by such modern global developments as intensified urbanization, increased transnational exchange, and proliferating diasporic populations.

Because these matters are highly complex, SCA combines research methods from the social sciences and the humanities, and examines such varied phenomena as consumer culture, industrial activity, mass media representations, artistic productions, subcultural practices, and aspects of everyday life in their economic, material, political, and historical contexts.

Registration Information:
Students may register for most courses through Albert. Those courses that require an access code are clearly noted and, in some cases, notes on restrictions offer more detailed instruction for permissions.

Special Information:
The department offers 6 minors: Africana Studies, American Studies, Asian/Pacifican/American Studies, Latin-American/Caribbean Studies, Gender and Sexuality Studies and Metropolitan Studies. Details can be found below:

http://sca.as.nyu.edu/object/sca.minors


Courses in the department's Metropolitan Studies Program fulfill Social Social requirements.

Linguistics

School: CAS
Dr. Maria Gouskova
Director of Undergraduate Studies
linguistics.dugs@nyu.edu

726 Broadway, 7th Floor, New York, N.Y. 10003
Tel: (212) 998-7950
Fax: (212) 995-4707

Overview:
The faculty and students in this Department of Linguistics study both the structural and the social aspects of language as well as their interaction. They specialize in phonetics/phonology (Davidson, Gafos), syntax (Baltin, Collins, Kayne, Postal), semantics (Szabolcsi), and sociolinguistics (Blake, Guy, Singler), and branch out into historical (Costello), computational (Dougherty), and neurolinguistics (Pylkkänen). They have working relations with the departments of Anthropology, Philosophy, and Psychology.

Liberal Arts Core:
Social Science

Mathematics

School: CAS
Jackie Klein
Undergraduat Program Administrator
251 Mercer St., 705
Phone: 212-998-3163
E-Mail: jklein@cims.nyu.edu

Dept Website
http://www.math.nyu.edu/

UG Course Offerings
http://www.math.nyu.edu/courses/ug_course_descriptions.html

The department's minor requirements can be found here:
http://math.nyu.edu/degree/undergrad/majors.html

Information regarding Calculus placement can be found here:
http://www.math.nyu.edu/degree/undergrad/placement.html

Overview:
The Mathematics Department offers a wide variety of courses in pure and applied mathematics. The department focuses on the application of mathematics to technology and other branches of science and stresses an interdisciplinary approach to mathematics. Courses include Multivariable Calculus, Risk Management and Mathematical Statistics

Liberal Arts Core:
Science/Math

Medieval and Renaissance Studies

Crystal Parsons
Program Administrator


19 Univeristy Pl, Rm 219
New York, New York 10003
Mail Code: 6021
Tel.: 212/998-8698, Fax: 212/995-4685
E-mail: mar.center@nyu.edu

Department Website
http://www.nyu.edu/fas/center/marc/welcome.html

UG Courses
http://www.nyu.edu/fas/center/marc/undergrad/courses.html

The department offers a minor. Requirements can be found here:
http://www.nyu.edu/fas/center/marc/undergrad/majorsminors.html

Overview:
The Medieval and Renaissance Center (MARC) is an interdisciplinary center of learning and research specializing in the history, institutions, languages, literatures, thought, faith, art, and music of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. It aims to provide students and faculty a forum of intellectual dialogue on all matters relating to medieval and early modern studies.

Liberal Arts Core:
Humanities

Middle Eastern & Islamic Studies

Everett Rowson
Director of Undergraduate Studies
Kevorkian Center, Rm. 304
50 Washington Sq. South
Phone: 212-998-8880
E-Mail: er67@nyu.edu

Dept Website
http://www.nyu.edu/gsas/dept/mideast/index.html
UG Course Offerings
http://www.nyu.edu/gsas/dept/mideast/Courses/course_undergrad.html

The department offers a Middle Eastern Studies and South Asian Studies minor. Requirements can be found here.

Middle Eastern Studies
http://www.nyu.edu/gsas/dept/mideast/Programs/bachelor_arts.html

South Asian Studies
http://www.nyu.edu/gsas/dept/mideast/Programs/prog_southasian.html

Language placement test are offered a week before the start of the Fall semester. For morei information regarding language placement, please contact the department.

Overview:
The Department of Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies provides training in the study of the history, societies and cultures, languages, literatures, and religions of the Middle East.

Registration:
Non-majors can general register for classes via Albert. However, if a class is open to MEIS students only and non-majors would like to take it, they should contact the professor of that particular class and ask for written permission.

For Spring 2010, the department would like to recommend this new course:

V77.0190 Topics in the 20th Century: Reading Orhan Pamuk: The East, The West and the Novel

Friday 9:45-12:30
Sibel Erol
Call Number: 76821


This course will examine the translated works of the Nobel Prize- winning Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk. Pamuk’s most favorite literary form is the novel. He has played with this genre, putting it in conversation with and opposition to a variety of other forms, ranging from painting, photography, and miniatures to theater, poetry, comic books, encyclopedias, and in his latest novel, museum making and exhibitions. We will read all his translated works, The White Castle, The Black Book, The New Life, My Name is Red, Snow, Istanbul, and The Museum of Innocence, to see how he transforms the form of the novel, all the while looking for “the secret center,” which he says all good novels have.

In our investigation, we will pay close attention to the problems of similarity and difference, self and other, that get represented as East and West. We will ask if his works are examples of “World Literature”, and study how he is able to write about Turkish society and, yet, appeal to an international audience.


Liberal Arts Core:
Humanities

March 16, 2009

Russian and Slavic Studies

Irina Belodedova
Director of Undergraduate Studies
19 University Place, rm 205
Email:irina.belodedova@nyu.edu

Dept Website
http://www.nyu.edu/fas/dept/russian/undergrad/index.html
UF Course Offerings
http://www.nyu.edu/fas/dept/russian/undergrad/index.html#8

Registration:
Most courses are open to non-majors and registration is unrestricted on Albert. If a course requires permission, students may contact the instructor of the course for approval and then bring that approval to Genya Altman (ga2@nyu.edu) in the Russian & Slavic Studies department. The department may require the student to fill out a form in person as well.

Please contact the dept regarding language placement. Student need special permission to register for Czech language courses. Special courses for Russian heritage speakers are available.

Liberal Arts Core:
Humanities

Sociology

Jamie Lloyd
Student services
295 Lafayette Street, room 4168
Phone: (212) 998-8344
Email: Jamie.lloyd@nyu.edu

Dept. Website
http://sociology.fas.nyu.edu/page/undergrad

Course Offerings
http://sociology.fas.nyu.edu/object/sociology.0810.ug.courseofferings

Overview:
The Department of Sociology emphasizes both theoretical creativity and substantive empirical research on important social issues. It encourages a range of analytic perspectives and maintains strength in both quantitative and qualitative methods.

Non-major students can generally register for classes via Albert. Advanced Seminars are restricted to Juniors and Seniors who are majors.

Liberal Arts Core:
Social Science

Spanish and Portuguese Languages

For Inquiries Regarding Spanish Literature Courses:
Sibylle Fischer
Director of Undergraduate Studies
Email: spanish.dugs@nyu.edu

For Inquiries Regarding Spanish Language Courses:
Maria de Lourdes Davila
Acting Director of Spanish Language Program
Email: mdd5@nyu.edu

Department of Spanish & Portuguese
New York University
13-19 University Place, 4th floor
New York, NY 10003
Phone: (212) 998-8770

Dept Website
http://spanish.as.nyu.edu/page/undergraduate

UG Course Offerings
http://spanish.as.nyu.edu/object/spanish.0810.ug.courseofferings
(Dept doesn't list Fall 2009 courses, please refer to Albert or the Registrar's website for course listings. Please note that Advanced Grammar & Composition (V95.0100) is the gateway course to all other advanced Spanish courses. Please contact the dept regarding language placement)

Overview:
The hallmark of the Spanish and Portuguese Department is its trans-Atlantic and inter-American focus. They bridge traditional divides between Spain and Spanish America; between North and South America; between Portugal, Brazil and Africa; and between Spanish America and Brazil, in order to rethink historical, literary and linguistic boundaries from new perspectives. Courses include all levels of Spanish and Portuguese, Modern Brazilian Fiction, Topics in Brazilian Literature and Culture, Literature, Culture, and the Arts in Spain, Introduction to Latin American Cultures, Readings in Spanish American Literature

June 15, 2009

Physics

Bill LePage
Assistant to Director of Undergraduate Studies
Department of Physics
New York University
4 Washington Place, Room 424
New York, NY 10003
212 998-7704
lepage@nyu.edu

Dept. Website:
http://physics.as.nyu.edu/page/home

Overview:
Physics at the College of Arts and Science is a multidimensional discipline. The department offers several tracks of study designed for pre-professional students as well as aspiring physicists. In addition to technical physics courses, the department offers a wide range of general interest courses intended to broaden the scientific background of non-science majors.

Registration:
Non-major students can general register for classes via Albert. Many courses have prerequisites, which are listed on the departmental website. Undergraduate course listings may be found here:
http://physics.as.nyu.edu/page/undergrad


Special Information:
Students who are interested in taking physics courses but do not have a strong physics background are advised to take courses that have course numbers below V85.0110.

Liberal Arts Core:
Science/Math

August 3, 2009

Game Center

Frank Lantz
Interim Director
NYU Game Center
frank.lantz@nyu.edu

Overview:
The NYU Game Center is a pioneering new University-wide academic initiative for the research, design, and development of digital games. Drawing on a faculty that teaches nearly 70 courses related to game design across NYU, the center would have as its long term goal graduate and undergraduate degrees. The Center will be a collaboration of faculty members in computer science, engineering, new media theory, and the arts.

The NYU Game Center has been initially funded with an anonymous gift of $ 1 million and a $200,000 grant from The Rockefeller Foundation’s NYC Cultural Innovation Fund, a new initiative that supports creative engagement with the issues shaping the City’s creative future. The Center’s initial home will be in the Skirball Center for New Media in the Tisch School of the Arts. An advisory committee made up of NYU faculty and staff is presently conducting a search for a director of the Center. A related effort, the Games for Learning Institute, was launched in October 2008 with $1.5 million in funding from Microsoft. The Institute will provide the fundamental scientific evidence to support the potential of games as learning tools for math and science subjects among middle-school students.

“Digital games are becoming more and more a part of our mainstream culture the world over,” said Mary Schmidt Campbell, dean of NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts. “Not only are they enormously popular, but the appeal of digital games cuts across all ages and gender. The Tisch School is proud to participate with Steinhardt, Courant, and NYU Poly in this important initiative to establish a multi-school center for game study and development. ”

David W. McLaughlin, provost of NYU, said “Modern video games are, at heart, cross-disciplinary creations that draw on talents from across a university community: mathematicians, computer scientists, engineers, artists, dramatic writers. The mission of the NYU Game Center, to be sure, will be to produce the next generation of game designers, entrepreneurs, and researchers, and to advance the science, technology, and practice of gaming through research. Beyond that, we also look to this new center as a laboratory for innovation, intellectual risk-taking, and cross-disciplinary collaborations.”

The Center is a partnership between several NYU schools and affiliates: the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences; the Polytechnic Institute of NYU; the Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development; and the Tisch School of the Arts. Beginning in spring 2009, the Center will offer a series of talks and panel discussions that will be open to the public and featuring leading game designers. In fall 2009, it will offer undergraduate courses to 10-12 students a year who may choose a minor, major or double major. Graduate courses are slated for fall 2010. Approximately six graduate students a year will be admitted to the two-year Master’s program or certificate program.

The NYU Game Center’s interim director is Frank Lantz, adjunct assistant professor in the Tisch School’s Interactive Telecommunications Program. “I am excited to be a part of this historic new initiative in gaming at New York University," he said. “The work going on across the University in this field has made NYU one of the most vibrant gaming institutions on the east coast.”

Lantz, a game designer who has worked in the field of game development for 20 years, is also creative director and co-founder of the game development firm area/code. He has taught game design at New York University, the School of Visual Arts, and the New School. His writings on games, technology and culture have appeared in a variety of publications.

Members of the advisory committee for the NYU Game Center are: Mary Schmidt Campbell, dean, Tisch School of the Arts; Sheril Antonio, associate arts professor, associate dean of Film, TV, and New Media, and interim chair, Clive Davis Department of Recorded Music, Tisch School of the Arts; Bonita Engel, area manager for Skirball Center for New Media; Alexander R. Galloway: associate professor, Department of Media, Culture, and Communication at The Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development; Leslie Greengard, professor, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, and director of Courant; Katherine Isbister, associate professor, Polytechnic Institute of NYU, with an affiliation at the ITU Copenhagen Center for Computer Games Research; Frank Lantz; Yann LeCun, professor, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences; Rosanne Limoncelli, director of production for Film& New Media, Kanbar Institute of Film & Television; Ken Perlin, professor, Media Research Laboratory, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, and the Center for Advanced Technology; Ron Robin, professor and associate dean for Academic Affairs, The Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, and Dan Shiffman, assistant arts professor, Interactive Telecommunications Program at the Tisch School.

November 5, 2009

Expository Writing

Three upper-level courses will be offered by the College of Arts and Sciences' Expository Writing Program in Spring 2010.

V40.0016 Advanced Essay Writing for Science
Instructor: Helen Polson, Language Lecturer, EWP
Credits: 4
Prerequisite: Writing the Essay (any version).
Science writing as practiced in Advanced Essay Writing for Science extends an invitation to students to think about the theory, practice, and culture of science. We’ll draw on a selection of science and nature essays, writing by professional scientists, science journalism, the popular culture of science, and the history and philosophy of science. We’ll be visited by professional science writers, go on fieldtrips to hear speakers, visit exhibits and labs. We’ll read from Dawkins, Wilson, Gould, Judson, Dennett, Pinker, Eiseley, Sacks, and Tyson as well as Galileo, Hooke, Kuhn, Popper, Hume, and Snow.


V40.0017 Writing in Community
Instructor: Laura Weinert-Kendt, Language Lecturer, EWP
Credits: 4
Prerequisite: Writing the Essay and the permission of the course instructor.

Writing in Community is a course for students who are passionate about writing and community service and would like to explore the dynamic relationship between these two pursuits. As a team, we will head off campus each week to mentor under-served high school students in essay writing. Back on campus, we will have weekly meetings to help us enhance our writing and mentoring skills as we develop our own ideas into essays. We will study writers, artists, and filmmakers whose service and/or community engagement has become a basis for work that documents and reflects on pressing social concerns.
Students require an access code to register for the course. Interested students should contact Laura Weinert-Kendt at law320@nyu.edu.


V40.0018 Writing and Speaking in the Disciplines
Instructor: Andrea McKenzie, Director, Writing in the Disciplines
Credits: 4
Prerequisites: V40.0100, Writing the Essay (any version). Students performing independent studies projects must obtain the instructor’s permission and the permission of the faculty advisor involved in the project. (Contact: andrea.mckenzie@nyu.edu or am127@nyu.edu)

Course Description
This communications-intensive course pairs writing-intensive research in the student’s own chosen discipline with the study and practice of scholarly presentations in those disciplines. Students will practice observing, analyzing and assessing the broad structure and elements of academic research writing and presentations in the Humanities, Social Sciences and Sciences; they will then analyze writing and speaking practices in their own chosen major or minor. Elements studied will include audience, visual design, structural elements, rhetorical patterns, logic, and evidence in communicating with scholarly audiences. Students will then design and present their own critical thinking and research in oral presentations and written research. Major assignments will include oral and written design proposals, plus research results presentations and reports. Students will be encouraged to present their research at New York University’s Undergraduate Research Conference.

About CAS

The College of Arts and Science offers the B.A. and the B.S. degrees in a wide range of programs in the humanities, science, social sciences, and foreign languages and literatures.

Polytechnic Institute is the next category.

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