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Postcolonial Visual Culture

This class addresses how colonialism and postcolonialism are shaped and mediated through images and the gaze. The dynamics of colonial history motivate and shape colonial and postcolonial perceptions and influence their patterns of global circulation when the boundary between the world out there and the nation at home is increasingly blurred. Course surveys a range of image texts through various media (photography, television, cinema) and sites (war, the harem, refugee camps, prisons, disasters); nationalist mobilization, counter-insurgency, urban conflict, disaster management, the prison system, and the war on terror.
Course #
MCC-UE 1403
Credits
4
Department
Media, Culture, and Communication

Postcolonial Visual Culture

This class addresses how colonialism and postcolonialism are shaped and mediated through images. The course surveys a range of media (photography, television, cinema) and sites (war, the harem, refugee camps, prisons, disasters); nationalist mobilization, counter-insurgency, urban conflict, disaster management, the prison system, and the war on terror.
Course #
MCC-UE 9403
Credits
4
Department

Postcolonialism and Media

The aim of this advanced graduate seminar is to bring together two fields which are rarely discussed together: postcolonial theory and global media studies. Although postcolonial theory is primarily concerned with issues of race, class, gender and decolonization, it has a deep underlying interest in the role of novels, narrative and visual modes in the process of decolonization. Global media studies, which focuses largely on the recent flow of money, images, peoples and commodities, needs to be critically aware of the ways in which minds,
bodies and states throughout the world are still entangled in colonial modes of thought and practice. Bringing these frameworks together can cast new light on power, mediation and coloniality.
Course #
MCC-GE 3134
Credits
4
Department
Media, Culture, and Communication

Power + Politics of Data

The course empowers students to improve the social impact of data-driven analysis. Students explore human experiences shaped by algorithms, machine learning, and artificial intelligence while learning how to systematically collect, share, analyze, visualize, and interpret data. The course provides historical background on issues of data privacy, digital exclusion, and online discrimination. Building both quantitative reasoning and critical thinking skills, the course is designed for students either in the sciences or humanities. No statistics prerequisite.
Course #
APSTA-UE 1301
Credits
4
Department
Applied Statistics, Social Science, and Humanities

Pract in Educ Theatre

Problems in academic theatre: research projects; instructional procedures; creative expression in acting, directing, and writing. Exploration of the uses of drama at all levels of education.
Course #
MPAET-GE 2301
Credits
1 - 6
Department
Music and Performing Arts Professions

Pract in Pathokin Research II

Experience in clinical research centers under supervision of experienced clinical researchers of problems concerned with human motion of cardiopulmonary function.
Course #
PT-GE 3002
Credits
3
Department
Physical Therapy

Practicum in Applied Statistics: Applied Probability

This course will first cover Kolgomorov's axioms of probabilities, basics of set theory, discrete combinatorial probability, Bayes' theorem, probability distributions and their properties and assumptions of dependence and independence, followed by the foundational topics of statistics: sampling distributions, the law of large numbers and the central limit theorem. This course will mix theoretical approaches with simulation-based illustrations of these main topics. The student will solve via analytical and simulation based approaches in statistical programming language R.
Course #
APSTA-GE 2351
Credits
3
Department
Applied Statistics, Social Science, and Humanities

Practicum in Applied Statistics: Interactive Data Sci using R Shiny

This lab course focuses on the practical elements of interactive tool development for data analysis, with specific emphasis on Shiny, an R package for building interactive web apps, including dashboards, interactive visualizations, learning modules, and simulation tools. Students learn coding skills, principles and processes of user centered design, and develop their own portfolio of increasingly complex applications. Special emphasis on communicating results from statistical models and on tools designed expressly for learning. Prerequisite: some experience with R.
Course #
APSTA-GE 2358
Credits
3
Department
Applied Statistics, Social Science, and Humanities

Practicum in Applied Statistics: Multi-Level Models

No description available.
Course #
APSTA-GE 2356
Credits
1
Department
Applied Statistics, Social Science, and Humanities

Practicum in Applied Statistics: Soc Sci Research Methodology

This course will introduce the student to active research in the social sciences, emphasizing the connections between the substantive research and appropriate statistical methods. To fulfill the course requirements, students will attend research seminars offered through PRIISM and other departments/centers and engage in discussions in a weekly class. Concurrently, students will gain familiarity with academic papers that use quantitative methodology.
Course #
APSTA-GE 2353
Credits
1 - 2
Department
Applied Statistics, Social Science, and Humanities

Practicum in Applied Statistics: Statistical Computing

This course will introduce the student to statistical programming and simulation using R. Students will first understand variables, data structures, program flow (e.g., conditional execution, looping) and functional programming, then apply these skills to answer interesting statistical questions involving the comparison of groups. Most statistical analysis will be motivated via simulations, rather than mathematical theory. The course content (programming and data analysis) requires significant outside reading and programming.
Course #
APSTA-GE 2352
Credits
3
Department
Applied Statistics, Social Science, and Humanities

Practicum in Clinical Intake and Diagnosis

Students will learn structured and semi-structured techniques for clinical interviewing to inform diagnosis and treatment recommendations. Under the supervision of the course instructor, students will complete intake assessments with clients in the Center for Counseling and Community Wellbeing, including determining appropriate diagnoses and making clear, specific, and realistic treatment recommendations.
Course #
APSY-GE 3031
Credits
2
Department
Applied Psychology

Practicum in Counseling for Mental Health and Wellness

Students apply critical counseling skills learned in previous coursework in a mental health setting with clients. Under the supervision of the course instructor and the onsite supervisor, students work to develop competencies as a professional mental health counselor. Students must complete 100 hours of practical experience (minimum of 40 direct contact hours) and participate in weekly supervision with a licensed mental health professional. Students must have a field site prior to starting the course and all field sites must have departmental approval.
Course #
APSY-GE 2812
Credits
3
Department
Applied Psychology

Practicum in Intervention-Research of Policy-Research II

This two-semester course is an integral part of the PSI doctoral program. Practicum site experiences involve activities along a continuum of intervention development, implementation, and/or evaluation, and occur in a setting that is action-oriented, not research-oriented. Students engage in required fieldwork relating to activities such as refining a logic model or conducting a needs assessment, collaborating to conceptualize or implement an intervention, planning and facilitating a process or outcome evaluation, or engaging in policy analysis and dissemination.
Course #
APSY-GE 2828
Credits
3
Department
Applied Psychology

Practicum in Intervention-Research or Policy-Research I

This two-semester course is an integral part of the PSI doctoral program. Practicum site experiences involve activities along a continuum of intervention development, implementation, and/or evaluation, and occur in a setting that is action-oriented, not research-oriented. Students engage in required fieldwork relating to activities such as refining a logic model or conducting a needs assessment, collaborating to conceptualize or implement an intervention, planning and facilitating a process or outcome evaluation, or engaging in policy analysis and dissemination.
Course #
APSY-GE 2827
Credits
3
Department
Applied Psychology

Practicum in Multi-Level Models

This is a practicum course on models for multi-level growth curve data. This course is a natural sequel to E10.2040 Multi-Level Modeling Growth Curve. Building on the theory and examples developed in that course, students will participate in a guided, larger research project that employs multi-level growth curve models. Students will meet in groups with the instructor in a lab setting to fit, evaluate and describe these models. The final project for the course will consist of a 'results and discussion' section, journal article quality write-up.
Course #
APSTA-GE 2041
Credits
1
Department
Applied Statistics, Social Science, and Humanities

Practicum in School Counseling

Students will apply critical counseling skills learned in previous coursework in a K- 12 school setting (elementary, middle or high school). Under the supervision of the course instructor and the onsite supervisor, students will work to apply the ASCA National Model. Students must complete 100 hours of practical experience (minimum of 40 direct contact hours with a K-12 student) and participate in weekly supervision with a certified school counselor. Students must have a field site prior to starting the course, and all field sites must have departmental approval
Course #
APSY-GE 2648
Credits
3
Department
Applied Psychology

Practicum in Supervision and Consultation

The course examines and applies training models for clinical interaction with clients. Students conduct structured training activities with MA level students, including teaching and supervision, under the supervision and oversight of clinical/counseling faculty. Models of consultation are reviewed and practiced in class.
Course #
APSY-GE 3629
Credits
3
Department
Applied Psychology

Practicum Pathokin Research 1

Experience in clinical research centers under supervision of experienced clinical researchers of problems concerned with human motion of cardiopulmonary function.
Course #
PT-GE 3001
Credits
3
Department
Physical Therapy

Practicum: Individualizing Writing Instruction

Focuses on conferencing strategies for assessing and working with an individual's writing processes and problems. Analyzes teaching-learning dialogues in whole-class and tutoring contexts to explore the role of conversation in encouraging the revision process. Includes working with an individual writer.
Course #
ENGED-GE 2101
Credits
4
Department
Teaching and Learning