S-BFA Seminar: Animation
Description not available at this time
Senior Sem: Computer Studio
Students develop and complete individual semester-long projects of personal interest in preparation for B.F.A. Degree Project. Involves written component and weekly critiques. Prerequisites: at least five prior courses in area of specialization and all area core requirements. Required of all CPD area students in semester prior to B.F.A. Project.
Business Ethics
Survey of basic concepts and theories of ethics. Consideration of specific ethical problems that businesses and business people are apt to face.
Printmaking: Intaglio II
Advanced study of materials, techniques, and aesthetic considerations relevant to etching, engraving and aquatint.
Printmaking-Int II
Studio, workshop. Continuation of ART 241. In-depth exploration of various techniques; emphasis on individual creative development. Extensive use of color in etching techniques. Final portfolio of all printed work required. Attendance mandatory; additional workshop activity during scheduled monitored periods expected. $50 cost of materials.
Coastal Processes
Processes that govern the movement of sediment, the shaping of coastal landforms, and the geologic evolution of coastlines. Course topics include basic principles for water waves, tidal and estuarine processes, and the geomorphic development of beach and barrier systems. Prerequisite: GEO-SCI 445 or permission from instructor; introductory calculus course recommended.
Food Science
Introduction to legal, regulatory, ethical, and scientific considerations involved in developing a new food product. Involves the theoretical development, processing, packaging, labeling, and marketing of a new product with due regard for regulatory issues, control, and safety.
Reproductive Justice
Reproductive Justice course is designed to explore social scientific, feminist, and critical approaches to reproductive health issues. It looks at reproduction in the broader structural (socioeconomic and political) contexts in which it is situated. In particular, in the course we explore the gendered, racialized, cultural, sexual, and classed dimensions that underlie women?s reproduction, with special attention to the long-term health effects of racism, poverty, and sexism.