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Supervised Advanced Clinical/Counseling Practicum II

Students provide therapy and assessment services under supervision (group and individual) of licensed faculty in the department. In addition to weekly seminars, individual and group supervision, and peer supervision, students prepare and present case reports for feedback from supervisors and peers.
Course #
APSY-GE 3608
Credits
2
Department
Applied Psychology

Supervised and Unsupervised Machine Learning

Classification and clustering are important statistical techniques commonly applied in many social and behavioral science research problems. Both seek to understand social phenomena through the identification of naturally occurring homogeneous groupings within a population. Classification techniques are used to sort new observations into preexisting or know groupings while clustering techniques sort the population under study into groupings based on their observed characteristics. Both help to reveal hidden structure that may be used in further analysis. This course will compare and contrast these techniques, including many of their variations, with an emphasis on applications.
Course #
APSTA-GE 2011
Credits
2
Department
Applied Statistics, Social Science, and Humanities

Supporting Teachers and Teaching

Deals with research & practice regarding school leadership & teacher work, including analysis of current policies, practices, standards of ethical behavior, & trends in professional & student development. The conditions of teachers’ work, support for ongoing professional learning, engagement in planning & decision making are explored. Also focuses on workforce development (recruitment, staffing, tenure, promotion, & retirement); fiscal issues (salary, welfare, & fringe benefits); distributed power (academic freedom, teacher unionism, negotiations, grievance procedures); development of staff, board, & community relationships, collaboration with colleges & universities in teacher preparation.
Course #
EDLED-GE 2085
Credits
3
Department
Administration, Leadership, and Technology

Surveillance/Sousveillance

Optical and auditory powers of inspection, traversing, facial recognition algorithms, drone overflights and surveillance capitalism have historically and politically rendered residual concepts of movement, communication and privacy anachronistic. History can be surveilled and reedited through counterfactuality. The technocratic, political and corporate centralization of exposure precipitates counter-surveillance activism or sousveillance such as Black Lives Matter, new aesthetic strategies of evasion and new cognitive mappings of public/private space.
Course #
MCC-GE 2116
Credits
4
Department
Media, Culture, and Communication

Survey of Developmental Psychology

Nature of psychological development in childhood & adolescence considered & attention paid to developmental implications for adulthood & old age. Rigorous analysis of developmental theories is undertaken with emphasis on research findings & methods as reported in current literature.
Course #
APSY-GE 2271
Credits
3
Department
Applied Psychology

Survey of Developmental Psychology: Introduction

This course is designed to give students a comprehensive overview of developmental psychology following a chronological approach. The course covers major theories and research findings on human development, and provides students with the opportunity to appreciate the practical significance of sound theory and research. The course has two distinguishing features: (1) a cross-cultural focus and, (2) an applied emphasis. By the end of the semester, students will be able to: (a) summarize the major theories, concepts and research methods in developmental psychology, especially as these relate to the study of child development in different contexts, (b) identify basic developmental processes and milestones, and (c) apply developmental concepts to real life situations through the observation of children in their natural settings.
Course #
APSY-UE 9010
Credits
4
Department
Applied Psychology

Survey of Medical Conditions

This course reviews etiology, pathology, and sequela of selected medical, orthopedic, and neurological conditions of adults and children, that frequently necessitate occupational therapy intervention. Standard diagnostic systems and somatic treatments are reviewed.
Course #
OT-GE 3303
Credits
2
Department
Occupational Therapy

Survey of Mental Health Conditions

This course reviews the etiology, pathology, and sequela of selected psychiatric and psychological conditions that frequently necessitate occupational therapy intervention. Standard diagnostic systems are reviewed.
Course #
OT-GE 2739
Credits
2
Department
Occupational Therapy

Survey Research Methods

The survey is the leading mechanism for collecting information on a wide array of topics in our data-driven world. This course is designed to introduce students to the fundamental aspects of the survey & ways for evaluating this form of data collection. Principal topics include: survey design; coverage, sampling, & non-response; modes of data collection; questionnaire construction & evaluation. Throughout this course, students will be given opportunities to engage in actual survey research activities.
Course #
APSTA-GE 2139
Credits
3
Department
Applied Statistics, Social Science, and Humanities

Sustainability and Health

The concept of sustainability is important in our current moment, yet we use the
term in a variety of ways and via different frameworks of understanding. This course explores how we talk about and understand the concept of sustainability, including as environment and climate change, food production and consumption, and individual and community health. Students will examine the concept of sustainability through these different lenses, exploring the connections among them.
Course #
FOOD-UE 1184
Credits
4
Department
Nutrition and Food Studies

Sustainability in the Urban Environment

Urban policy makers embrace local food systems as a solution to a myriad of urban problems, including lack of green space and a dearth of healthy food availability. At the local and state levels, policies are often based on visions of how food might be grown in a city without considering logistic feasibility or economic viability. This course probes the practical implications of growing food within urban environments.
Course #
FOOD-GE 2262
Credits
3
Department
Nutrition and Food Studies

Sustainable Places: A Field Studies Approach

Students will learn and practice the design and organization of the nature park experience. Course is designed to deepen student awareness of human-nature relationships and develop professional skills in environmental advocacy. The course involves class meetings on campus- followed by a required field visit to the study site- and production of a final deliverable consisting of key elements of a nature park master plan. Students in Environmental Conservation Education will evaluate and design environmental education elements- and students from other disciplines can develop a sustainability reporting plan for the site.
Course #
ENYC-GE 2010
Credits
3
Department
Teaching and Learning

Systematic Reviews Health Prof Interventions I: Writing a Protocol

Students explore how to develop a protocol for a systematic review of an intervention for their health profession. Topics covered include formulating questions, identifying populations, intervention/comparisons, and outcome measures with consideration of health inequities in underrepresented populations, planning search strategies, using multiple databases, collecting records, conducting screenings and data extractions, evaluating risk of bias, statistical review, and introduction to meta-analysis and GRADE. Final project is a complete protocol for a full review.
Course #
PT-GE 3021
Credits
2
Department
Physical Therapy

Systemic Reviews Health Prof Interventions II: Synthesizing Data

This course enables students to use their own data to assess and synthesize the effects and quality of evidence of outcomes for a systematic review. Topics include evaluating risk of bias across studies, assessing heterogeneity, using GRADE to evaluate quality of evidence, conducting meta-analyses, assessing publication bias,
completing a Summary of Findings Table (SoF table), writing up results, discussion, and implications for practice and research with consideration for health inequities. The final project is a completed systematic review.
Course #
PT-GE 3022
Credits
2
Department
Physical Therapy

Tangible Electronics for Teaching and Learning

The course combines theory and practice for researching, designing, and
prototyping tangible educational technology. Students will gain experience applying theoretical frameworks for learning and design as they develop an educational experience with a client. Learners will analyze a learning context, conduct primary & secondary research, engage in ideation & prototyping, and iterate on their designs with stakeholders. Students will learn how to use microcontrollers to interface with sensors and actuators, in order to implement their designs and gain feedback.
Course #
EDCT-GE 2184
Credits
3
Department
Administration, Leadership, and Technology

Tango and Mass Culture

This course explores Tango as an aesthetic, social, political, and cultural formation in Argentina and Latin America. During the rapid modernization of the 1920s and 1930s, Tango, formerly seen as primitive and exotic, emerged as a kind of modern art form and quickly came to occupy a central space in nationalist discourse. The course explores how perceptions of primitive and modern converge in this unique and exciting art, and considers tango as a global metaphor with connections to urban poverty, social marginalization, and masculine authority.
Course #
MCC-UE 9121
Credits
4
Department

Tap Dance

Basic course in jazz tap, waltz clog, & soft-shoe styles of tap dance. Relates the cultural & generic origins of these styles to their introduction to & development in theatre as performing art. Includes fundamental skills & traditional steps & sequences for creating tap dance choreography.
Course #
MPAVP-GE 2126
Credits
1
Department
Music and Performing Arts Professions

Tap Dance

This class introduces students to the art of tap dance, including its history, artists and technique. Beginning students develop a working tap dance vocabulary of steps and sequences, including classic repertory, as well as the rudiments of tap improvisation and choreography. More advanced students focus on more difficult steps as well as on developing virtuosity and expressiveness in their dancing.
Course #
MPADE-UE 1013
Credits
1 - 2
Department
Music and Performing Arts Professions

Tap Dance

Basic course in jazz tap, waltz clog, & soft-shoe styles of tap dance. Relates the cultural & generic origins of these styles to their introduction to & development in theatre as performing art. Includes fundamental skills & traditional steps & sequences for creating tap dance choreography.
Course #
MPAVP-UE 1126
Credits
1
Department
Music and Performing Arts Professions

Tap Dance

This class introduces students to the art of tap dance, including its history, artists and technique. Beginning students develop a working tap dance vocabulary of steps and sequences, including classic repertory, as well as the rudiments of tap improvisation and choreography. More advanced students focus on more difficult steps as well as on developing virtuosity and expressiveness in their dancing.
Course #
MPADE-GE 2023
Credits
1 - 2
Department
Music and Performing Arts Professions