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Summer Session -- New Brunswick
2000 Summer Catalog
SATURDAY COURSES

SATURDAY MORNING CLASSES

Undergraduate Tuition
NJ Resident $153.90/credit
Non-Resident $314.20/credit

Graduate Tuition
NJ Resident $279.30/credit
Non-Resident $412.30/credit


UNDERGRADUATE COURSES


AMERICAN STUDIES 050

ARTS ADVENTURE. (CR.3.)
01:050:301: SEC. T1:83539
N.B. DAY 6/3, 6/10, 6/17, 6/24,
7/8, 7/15, 7/22, 7/29
SATURDAY, JUNE 3 MEETS FROM 1:00 TO 7:00 P.M.
OTHER SATURDAY MEETING TIMES
WILL BE ANNOUNCED IN CLASS.
ROBINSON-APPELS
CAMPBELL HALL A2

PLEASE NOTE: June 3 meeting is mandatory.

Behind the scenes visits to museums and galleries as well as off-Broadway dance, music, and theater performances and studios to experience the avant-garde arts of our times. The focus will be on new, experimental, visual and upcoming performing arts of New York City, but New Jersey cultural institutions will also be visited.


After the June 3 meeting, most other Saturday meetings will involve both afternoons and evenings. Approximate admission

costs will be $75.00.

Transportation to the various locations in New York City and New Jersey will be the responsibility of the student.

ART HISTORY 082

IMPRESSIONISM. (CR.3.)
01:082:396: SEC. T1:83424
N.B. DAY 6/3-8/11
SATURDAY 8:30-12:30
BOYLAN
MURRAY HALL 301

PREREQUISITES: Introduction to Art History, 082:105,106 or permission of instructor.

Subject, style and social significance of nineteenth-century French impressionism, including Manet, Monet, Degas, and themes of women, café society, urbanization, leisure.

LIFE SCIENCES 119

All 119-Biological Sciences Courses are now listed under subject heading "Life Sciences." Life Sciences now include subject codes Biological Sciences 119, Cell Biology and Neuroscience 146,Genetics and Microbiology 447, and Molecular Biology and Biochemistry 694.

GENETICS, LAW, AND SOCIAL POLICY. (CR.3.)
01:119:154: SEC. T1:82050
N.B. DAY 6/3-8/12
SATURDAY 8:30-12:15
HAVILAND
SCOTT HALL 203

PREREQUISITE: Sophomore standing.

Principles of human and behavior genetics and their legal, ethical, and social implications. Topics include: genetic screening, counseling, and engineering; reproductive regulation; human behavior genetics.

CELL BIOLOGY AND NEUROSCIENCE 146

FUNDAMENTALS OF NEUROBIOLOGY. (CR.3.)
01:146:245: SEC. T1:82560
N.B. DAY 6/3-8/12
SATURDAY 8:30-12:15
CREMINS
SCOTT HALL 215

(Formerly Fundamentals of Neurobiology, 146:245)

PREREQUISITE: General Biology, 119:101,102 or equivalent.
Introduction to biology of the nervous system. Topics covered include nerve cell signaling sensory and motor systems, neuroendocrinology, and higher brain processes.

GENETICS AND MICROBIOLOGY 447

BIOLOGY OF CANCER. (CR.3.)
01:447:245 SEC. T1:81838
N.B. DAY 6/3-8/12
SATURDAY 8:30-12:15
D'ARVILLE
MURRAY HALL 208

(Formerly Biology of Cancer, 119:495).

PREREQUISITE: Genetics, 119:380 or 447:380.

Biological and medical aspects of malignancy. Oncogenic viruses, environmental chemical carcinogens, cell growth regulation, tumor immunology, genetics of cancer.

COMMUNICATION AND MEDIA STUDIES 189

INTRODUCTION TO COMMUNICATION AND INFORMATION. (CR.3.)
04:189:101: SEC. T1:82445
N.B. DAY 6/3-8/12
SATURDAY 8:30-12:15
CAPUANO
SCOTT HALL 101

PLEASE NOTE: Replaces Introduction to Communication, 192:101.

Theory and practice in Communication studies with emphasis on receiving, processing, and transmitting information. Particular attention to interpersonal, organizational, and intercultural contexts.

COMMUNICATION 192

INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION PROCESSES. (CR.3.)
04:192:201: SEC. T1:82145
N.B. DAY 6/3-8/12
SATURDAY 8:30-12:15
ENTNER
SCOTT HALL 221

PREQUISITES: Introduction to Communication and Information, 189:101 and Introduction to Media Systems and Processes, 189:102.

Patterns of human interaction, types and stages of relationships, verbal and non-verbal exchanges, strategies, and tactics.

ECONOMICS 220

INTRODUCTION TO MICROECONOMICS. (CR.3.)
01:220:102: SEC. T1:82450
N.B. DAY 6/3-8/12
SATURDAY 8:30-12:15
STAFF
SCOTT HALL 216

The market system and alternative mechanisms for determining prices and allocating resources. Economic analysis of monopoly, cartels, wage and price controls, pollution, and other contemporary problems. The role of government in promoting economic efficiency.

INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS. (CR.3.)
01:220:103: SEC. T1:82451
N.B. DAY 6/3-8/12
SATURDAY 8:30-12:15
STAFF
SCOTT HALL 205

Determinants of aggregate employment and national income; evaluation of government policies to alleviate inflation and unemployment. Money, banking, and monetary policy. International trade and finance, and the prospects for world economic development.

ENGLISH 350

TWENTIETH-CENTURY LITERATURE. (CR.3.)
01:350:311: SEC. T1:83596
N.B. DAY 6/3-8/12
SATURDAY 8:30-12:15
BRAZIER
SCOTT HALL 106

PREREQUISITE: Expository Writing, 355:101, or equivalent.

Writing from 1900 to 1945, including one or more of the following: American, British, other literatures in English.

MILTON AND OTHER EARLY MODERN WRITERS. (CR.3.)
01:350:325: SEC. T1:83597
N.B. DAY 6/3-8/12
SATURDAY 8:30-12:15
HARRIS
SCOTT HALL 115

PREREQUISITE: Expository Writing, 355:101, or equivalent.

Selected writings of Milton studied in relation to other sixteenth or seventeenth-century writers, such as Spenser, Shakespeare, Donne, Marvell, Cavendish, or Dryden.

AMERICAN HISTORY 506

FILM AND HISTORY. (CR.3)
01:506:241: SEC. T1:81170
N.B. DAY 6/3-8/12
SATURDAY 8:30-12:15
KELLER
MURRAY HALL 210

Presentation of films relating to history and culture, combined with readings and discussions of standard history accounts.

HISTORY, AFRICAN, ASIAN, AND LATIN AMERICAN 508

NATIVE AMERICAN HISTORY II. (CR.3.)
01:508:380: SEC. T1:83588
N.B. DAY 6/3-8/12
SATURDAY 8:30-12:15
BROCKLEY
MURRAY HALL 111

Confrontation and interaction of native and European civilization from the conquest to the present.

AMERICAN HISTORY 512

DEVELOPMENT OF THE UNITED STATES. (CR.3.)
01:512:104: SEC. T1:82142
N.B. DAY 6/3-8/12
SATURDAY 8:30-12:15
WILSON
SCOTT HALL 121

The political, economic, and social history of the U.S. from the Civil War to the present.

WORLD WAR I. (CR.3.)
01:512:240: SEC. T1:83654
N.B. DAY 6/3-8/12
SATURDAY 8:30-12:15
NELSON
MURRAY HALL 113

A study of the causes, course, and consequences of World War I, with particular emphasis on American culture and foreign policy within Western civilization.

MUSIC 700

INTRODUCTION TO MUSIC. (CR.3.)
07:700:101: SEC. T1:80280
N.B. DAY 6/3-8/12
SATURDAY 8:30-12:15
STAFF
BISHOP HOUSE 101

For students with little or no background in music. Basic concepts for intelligent listening to all kinds of music. Emphasis on aspects of sonority, rhythm, melody, harmony, and structure.

PHILOSOPHY 730

CURRENT MORAL AND SOCIAL ISSUES. (CR.3.)
01:730:105: SEC. T1:82144
N.B. DAY 6/3-8/12
SATURDAY 8:30-12:15
DUNCAN
SCOTT HALL 102

Examination of such issues as abortion, contraception, sterilization, capital punishment, sexism, racism, censorship, privacy, drug abuse and drug laws, consumption and scarcity of resources.

POLITICAL SCIENCE 790

AMERICAN GOVERNMENT. (CR.3.)
01:790:201: SEC. T1:82471
N.B. DAY 6/3-8/12
SATURDAY 8:30-12:15
STAFF
SCOTT HALL 120

Comprehensive analysis of American political institutions. Issues and problems faced by federal, state, and local governments under the impact of modern conditions. The leading political, economic, and social influences affecting democratic government.

PSYCHOLOGY 830

PREJUDICE AND CONFLICT. (CR.3.)
01:830:375: SEC. T1:81091
N.B. DAY 6/3-8/12
SATURDAY 8:30-12:15
REICH
SCOTT HALL 115

PREREQUISITES: General Psychology, 830:101, or equivalent and one other course in Psychology.

Social psychology of development and consequences of stereotypes and attitudes towards outgroups; special emphasis on interactions within the classroom.

STATISTICS 960

STATISTICS I. (CR.3.)
01:960:211: SEC. T1:83180
N.B. DAY 6/3-8/12
SATURDAY 8:30-12:30
STAFF
SCOTT HALL 202

PREREQUISITE: Precalculus College Mathematics, 640:115, or permission of department.

Beginning course in principles and methods of statistical methodology. Includes frequency distributions, measures of central tendency and dispersion, simple probability, sampling, and introduction to regression and correlation analysis, curve fitting, and introduction to tests of significance. Emphasis on use of basic statistical methods in developing judgment and interpreting statistical data.

GRADUATE COURSES

SOCIAL WORK 910

ISSUES IN SOCIAL POLICY: CHILDREN AND FAMILIES. (CR.3.)
19:910:585: SEC. T1:82396
N.B. DAY 6/3-8/12
SATURDAY 8:30-12:15
VIETZE
SCOTT HALL 104

PREREQUISITE: Successful completion of the professional foundation.

Required for students in the Children and Family cluster. Models of policy analysis applied to children and family issues and problems. Content addresses understanding of values and sociopolitical forces that define problems; populations affected; current policies and programs and their impact; service delivery and resource allocation; unmet needs; trends; and analysis of political processes and change strategies.

ISSUES IN SOCIAL POLICY: HEALTH, MENTAL HEALTH, AND AGING. (CR.3.)
19:910:587: SEC. T1:82397
N.B. DAY 6/3-8/12
SATURDAY 8:30-12:15
NAGLE
SCOTT HALL 105

PREREQUISITE: Successful completion of professional foundation. Required for students in the Health, Mental Health and Aging cluster.

Models of policy analysis applied to health, mental health, and aging issues and problems. Content addresses understanding
of values and sociopolitical forces that define problems; populations affected; current policies and programs and their impact; service delivery and resource allocation; unmet needs; trends; and analysis of political processes and change
strategies.



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SATURDAY COURSES
2000 Summer Catalog
Summer Session -- New Brunswick