Ballet I

"Beginning-Intermediate" study of the principles and vocabularies of classical ballet. Emphasis on correct alignment, whole body movement, musicality, and embodiment of performance style. Pointe work included as appropriate. Students must have a solid basic training and knowledge of ballet vocabulary. Also taught at Mount Holyoke and Smith.

Modern Dance I

Introductory study of modern dance techniques. Topics include kinesthetic perception, efficient alignment, strength, flexibility, movement qualities, exploring new vocabularies and phrasing styles, and individual embodiment of movement material. Also taught at Hampshire, Mount Holyoke, and Smith.

Tonya Menard

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on
Primary Title:  
Clerk
Institution:  
UMASS Amherst
Department:  
Biostatistics & Epidemiology
Email Address:  
tonyamenard@umass.edu
Telephone:  
413-545-4603
Office Building:  
Arnold House

Martha Pamela Dardano

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on
Primary Title:  
Maintainer
Institution:  
UMASS Amherst
Department:  
Facilities & Campus Services
Email Address:  
mdardano@umass.edu
Telephone:  
413-577-8225

ST-Appl/UnmannedAerialSysEngin

This course is designed to teach students about the fundamentals associated with the development of innovative technology applications in the air transportation systems area. Emphasis will be placed on airport, ground operations; the design and deployment of the next generation air traffic management system (NEXTGEN); and the integration of unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) into the national air space (NAS).

Quantum Information Systems

Fundamentals of quantum information systems, including quantum computation, quantum cryptography, and quantum information theory. Topics include: quantum circuit model, qubits, unitary operators, measurement, entanglement, quantum algorithms for factoring and search, quantum key distribution, error-correction and fault-tolerance, information capacity of quantum channels, complexity of quantum computation.

Science & Society/Modern China

Science has meant many things in modern Chinese history. It has been pursued as a force for sovereignty, enlightenment, civilization, modernity, economic development, social transformation, political liberation, state authority, democracy, populism, individual opportunity, international solidarity, global power, and more. This course will explore how science has shaped modern Chinese history and the roles played by scientists in supporting and challenging the state.

Econometrics

This course provides an introduction to Econometrics. Econometrics applies economic theory and the tools of descriptive and inferential statistics to economic data to answer a wide variety of interesting questions. Econometrics theory and tools can be used to: describe the characteristics of a population; create hypotheses and test the predictions of a theoretical model; and estimate the statistical relationship between two variables. This course will introduce you to the theoretical foundations and empirical applications of multiple regression analysis.

Intro/Public Relations

This course addresses the principles and practices of public relations and strategic communication in the public, private, for-profit and no-profit arenas. Course includes lectures, readings, multimedia viewings and student-engaged, collaborative and classroom and online learning methods.
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