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Dynamics of Vocational Development

Nature of work, career patterns, occupations choice, job satisfaction, work & leisure as problems of education & vocational development.
Course #
APSY-GE 2634
Credits
3
Department
Applied Psychology

Dysphagia in Adults and Children

Description of swallowing disorders in adults and children associated with various structural, neurological, and behavioral disorders. Assessment and remediating approaches will be addressed.
Course #
CSCD-GE 2060
Credits
3
Department
Communicative Sciences and Disorders

Ear Training for Audio Engineers

This course will examine theories & techniques related to analyzing recorded & environmental sounds. Students will sharpen listening skills with comprehensive ear training exercises & guided listening explorations. Topics include frequency discrimination, reverberation, dynamics, distortion, sonic effects, sound ecology & other related topics.
Course #
MPATE-GE 2650
Credits
3
Department
Music and Performing Arts Professions

East Asian Media and Popular Culture

This course examines contemporary mass media in East Asia by focusing on media institutions and practices in Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong and mainland China. Special attention is paid to such issues as media regulations and censorship, press freedom and journalistic practices, the rise of East Asian media industries, intra-region flows of information and entertainment, and the presence and influence of transnational media companies in East Asia.
Course #
MCC-UE 1023
Credits
Department
Media, Culture, and Communication

Economics and Finance of Higher Education

Considers essential elements of economic theories of the public finance and human capital. Examines arguments for and against various policy strategies for funding higher education. Provides knowledge of higher education finance and budgeting and undergraduate student aid. Includes a Virtual University simulation that provides experience working with key variables.
Course #
HPSE-GE 3110
Credits
Department
Administration, Leadership, and Technology

Economics of Education

Using economic principles to analyze K-12 education, beginning with an examination of the demand for education, both by the private and the public sector. Consideration of the production and supply and cost of education. New ways of driving performance and providing choice to students. The class is run as a seminar in which we discuss the content of the assigned readings. Class time will be used to apply findings from the readings to make recommendation that are empirically and theoretically justified on economic grounds for achieving high performance of students in large urban areas.
Course #
EDPLY-GE 2025
Credits
Department
Applied Statistics, Social Science, and Humanities

Economics of the Visual Arts

Course focuses on the fundamentals of applied microeconomics to the production, pricing, selling, and reselling of works of art. Topics include the production economics of the artist's studio and analysis of art markets in terms of supply and demand, property rights, and other concepts from microeconomics and related business strategy. The course applies economic analysis to for-profits (galleries and auction houses), non-profits (museums), and hybrid models (technology-driven start-ups/artist-led social-practice)
Course #
ARVA-GE 2024
Credits
3
Department
Art and Art Professions

Ed Tech Studio: Co-designing Game Based Lrng Experiences

Summer institute focused on co-designing game-like learning strategies to address authentic educational problems. Through face-to-face and online activities, this blended course partners graduate students with pre and in-service teachers to create usable learning materials, which are then archived online to support continued collaborations. Final project allows students to test game-based designs at an onsite children's summer camp. Course targets students seeking to apply design to real-world settings and teachers seeking unique professional development.
Course #
EDCT-GE 2553
Credits
3
Department
Administration, Leadership, and Technology

Ed Tech Studio: Creative Learning Design

Students engage with concepts, theories, designs, and examples of learning experiences that may or may not be seen as "creative" by learners and stakeholders in China. Explores what creative learning might be in Chinese contexts through hands-on projects, qualitative data collection/analysis, and applications of theories of learning, design, and creativity to experiences and sites across the lifespan. Students create case studies which critique, problematize, and challenge traditional notions of creative learning and assembled into a shared online resource publication.
Course #
EDCT-GE 2253
Credits
3
Department
Administration, Leadership, and Technology

Ed Tech UX Studio: Design for a Client

Working with a real world client, students will work collaboratively on an integrated design project to imagine creative solutions to emergent problems, think critically, communicate effectively, & manage both human and material resources. On teams with graduate student peers, faculty, and external clients students will develop skills to understand, empathize & ‘frame’ client challenges & opportunities responsive to challenging times. Students will present solutions to problems and opportunities,
and iterate based on feedback.
Course #
EDCT-GE 2554
Credits
3
Department
Administration, Leadership, and Technology

EdTech Entrepreneurship

This course is an introduction to entrepreneurship in education where students learn how to critically evaluate ideas, companies, and markets related to educational technology, especially in relation to some of the key problems and challenges of educating all people to their fullest potential. Students hear from
guest experts, explore in-depth case studies, and do field work with companies in the NYU Edtech Accelerator. Students may also participate in a concurrent optional internship (permission of instructor required).
Course #
EDCT-GE 2116
Credits
3
Department
Administration, Leadership, and Technology

Educating Students with Disabilities in Middle Childhood and Adolescent Settings

Strategies for general and special education teachers to meet the cognitive, emotional, and social needs of adolescents with disabilities in general education classes in middle and high schools. Methods for collaboration with teachers, parents and other professionals, including participation in IEP development. Examination of service delivery models at the middle and high school levels. Issues of transition planning, curriculum development, instructional planning, uses of technology, identifying strengths and differentiating instruction, with a special focus on the development of literacy skills and processes that promote social skill development and interpersonal communication
Course #
SPCED-GE 2162
Credits
3
Department
Teaching and Learning

Education & Social Reform in South Africa

An in-depth study of education reform in an international context. The goal is to understand education policy reform, with attention to the contexts & variables contributing to reform initiatives, With emphasis on original research & the exchange of ideas, students will explore educational reform’s contextual variables & the push & pull factors such as globalization & key international institutions involved in reform. Different theoretical frameworks used to understand educational reform will be examined.
Course #
AMLT-GE 2073
Credits
3
Department
Administration, Leadership, and Technology

Education Abroad: Theory and Practice

Learn essential concepts in the design and administration of study abroad and apply learning through support of short-term study abroad programming. In a series of seminars, participants will study theories of education specific to study abroad including those related to pedagogical practices, risk management, access and equity, and the field of education abroad. Students partner with faculty and global affairs staff to create a personalized practicum that applies concepts learned to the administration and delivery of a short-term, faculty-led study abroad program.
Course #
INTE-GE 2583
Credits
1 - 3
Department
Applied Statistics, Social Science, and Humanities

Education and Conflict

This course explores the politics of civil conflict, peacebuilding, and the role of education in promoting violence or peace. Specifically it explores the humanitarian efforts of international actors (international organizations, bilateral donors, NGOs), local actors (civil society associations, nationalist and ideological factions), and their influence on education systems during war and emerging peace. Case studies may include Afghanistan, Colombia, Sierra Leone, Pakistan, and West Bank/Gaza.
Course #
INTE-GE 2028
Credits
3
Department
Applied Statistics, Social Science, and Humanities

Education and Law

In this course students examine the legal and ethical issues confronting public
schools; explore various legal principles and their application; and analyze current school practices from the standpoint of potential legal controversies, including the ability to recognize “preventative law” situations. In addition to identifying pragmatic approaches to the law, students engage in academic discourse involving issues of social justice and the democratic underpinnings of education.
Course #
EDST-UE 1415
Credits
4
Department
Applied Statistics, Social Science, and Humanities

Education and Social Entrepreneurship

Innovative solutions in education are emerging from the private sector every day. Business ventures from Teach for America to Khan Academy are changing the way teachers are prepared, the way students learn, and the way institutions use data. These ideas are started by “social entrepreneurs,” people who try to improve lives through solutions that have a market and customers. Students in this course learn about social entrepreneurship, how to identify critical issues in the education-related space, and how to develop their own entrepreneurial solutions accordingly.
Course #
EDST-UE 1503
Credits
4
Department
Applied Statistics, Social Science, and Humanities

Education and Social Policy

Course is designed to introduce students to public policy & provide a foundation for understanding & assessing education policies in particular. Students will examine the theoretical perspectives in policy as well as examine the policy process & the institutions under which policies are formed, specifically the difference between market systems & the role of government. Fourth, the methods & tools for policy analysis, both before & after policies are implemented will be studied. Finally, students will examine the role of institutions as well as policy design. Topics may include No Child Left Behind, financial aid for higher education, tax reforms to encourage saving for college, school reform in major cities, poverty & inequality, among others.
Course #
EDPLY-GE 2030
Credits
3
Department
Applied Statistics, Social Science, and Humanities

Education and the American Dream: Historical Perspectives

The course will examine historical perspectives on the relationship between public schooling and the promotion of democratic ideals. Students will explore some of the central goals and purposes of American public education over the past two centuries, and the historiographical debates about those goals and purposes. In the second half of the course, students will the relationship between schooling and civic education, and between schooling and specific communities, in order to ask whether the goals of schooling might promote or contradict the goals of particular groups who seek to benefit from public education, and ways in which education does not promote democratic ideals.

Liberal Arts Core/CORE Equivalent - satisfies the requirement for Society & Social Sciences
Course #
HSED-UE 610
Credits
4
Department
Applied Statistics, Social Science, and Humanities
Liberal Arts Core
Societies and the Social Sciences

Education as a Social Institution

This course considers the role of education as a social institution and the ways in which it fosters, prevents, and maintains social inequities in the U.S. We examine the structural and cultural ways in which schools have played a role in building and sustaining social hierarchies and shaped the character of our society. We explore how schooling socializes students differently based on their real/perceived culture, race, class, gender, sexual identity, and immigrant status and how that leads to differential outcomes for different groups. Students explore the origins, development, and current state of social theory and practice/research on education.
Course #
SOED-UE 1015
Credits
4
Department
Applied Statistics, Social Science, and Humanities