Nicole L Barron

Submitted by admin on
Primary Title:  
Furnishings and Interiors Project Manager
Institution:  
Amherst College
Department:  
Planning, Design & Construction
Email Address:  
nbarron@amherst.edu
Telephone:  
+1 (413) 542-8578
Office Building:  
Service Building/Police Department
Office Room Number:  
Room 206

John Bailes

Submitted by admin on
Primary Title:  
Buddhist Chaplain
Institution:  
Amherst College
Department:  
Religious & Spiritual Life
Email Address:  
jbailes@amherst.edu
Telephone:  
+1 (413) 542-8489

Fabio A Ayala

Submitted by admin on
Primary Title:  
Assistant Director of the Center for Restorative Practices
Institution:  
Amherst College
Department:  
Center for Restorative Practices
Email Address:  
fayala@amherst.edu
Office Building:  
79 South Pleasant Street
Office Room Number:  
Room 120

Jessi Anderson

Submitted by admin on
Primary Title:  
Receiver
Institution:  
Amherst College
Department:  
Dining Services
Email Address:  
janderson@amherst.edu
Office Building:  
Keefe Campus Center
Office Room Number:  
Room 002C

Omar Amaya

Submitted by admin on
Primary Title:  
First Cook
Institution:  
Amherst College
Department:  
Dining Services - Culinary
Email Address:  
oamaya@amherst.edu
Office Building:  
Valentine Dining
Office Room Number:  
Room 025

Renee Alvarez

Submitted by admin on
Primary Title:  
Casual Server
Institution:  
Amherst College
Department:  
Dining Services - Operations
Additional Department:  
Dining Services
Email Address:  
ralvarez@amherst.edu
Office Building:  
Valentine Dining

Sex Gender Body S. Asia

(Offered as HIST 376 [AS/TC/TE/TR/TS], ASLC 376 [SA] and SWAG 377) This course explores how categories of sex, gender, and the body have been configured in South Asian history. We will draw upon primary sources including texts, images, films, and documentaries. We will also read scholarly literature that explores South Asian history through the analytics of sex, gender, and body.

Groups, Rings and Fields

A brief consideration of properties of sets, mappings, and the system of integers, followed by an introduction to the theory of groups and rings including the principal theorems on homomorphisms and the related quotient structures; integral domains, fields, polynomial rings. Four class hours per week.

Requisite: MATH 211 and either MATH 271 or 272, or consent of the instructor. Students with a grade of B+ or lower in linear algebra are encouraged to take another 200-level course with proofs before taking MATH 350.

Designing Your Path

Whether you are starting your Smith journey, embarking on or returning from an immersive experience abroad, weaving your interests through a Concentration or self-designed major, or wrestling with expressing what a Smith education has prepared you to do, this is the class for you. Test different integrative paths of your own design, tell your own story, and create a digital portfolio to showcase your work. By the end of class, you will be able to articulate connections between your work in and outside of the classroom, and to explain how Smith is preparing you to engage with the world beyond.
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