Data Structures

An introduction to the design, analysis, and implementation of data structures. This course teaches you how to build, test, debug, document, and evaluate objects that encapsulate data and their associated operations using programming constructs and data abstractions of a modern programming language. Concepts and techniques covered include linear and non-linear structures, recursive structures and algorithms, traversal algorithms, binary search trees, balanced trees, priority queues, union-find, hash tables, bloom filters, and graphs.

Film Auteurs

This class will focus on one or two specific filmmakers and will aim to highlight their cinematic models, distinctive style and recurrent themes, within the theoretical framework of the "auteur theory," thus offering students an introductory and comprehensive view of perhaps the most central concept in film studies.

Film Auteurs

This class will focus on one or two specific filmmakers and will aim to highlight their cinematic models, distinctive style and recurrent themes, within the theoretical framework of the "auteur theory," thus offering students an introductory and comprehensive view of perhaps the most central concept in film studies.

Writing in Engineering

This course fulfills the University's Junior Year Writing Requirement for students in the College of Engineering. Students will be introduced to traditional technical and scientific writing forms, including outlines, summaries, mechanical and technical descriptions, extended technical definitions, research reports, and proposals. Grammar review, oral presentations and on-line research are significant components of this course. Students will also investigate ethics in engineering practice and research.

Microwave Metrology

Lecture, laboratory. Metrology fundamentals. Advanced microwave measurement techniques including error correction, de-embedding, and noise effects in amplifiers and oscillators. Prerequisites: familiarity with microwave CAD software, basic microwave theory.

ST- Literature and Migration

Focusing on a variety of literary genres this course will explore aesthetic representations of and engagements with migration, as well as texts born of migration. In addition to primary sources, course materials include scholarship on the labeling, classification and positioning of these texts, their public-political interventions and literary (re)conceptualizations of home, belonging, refuge, citizenship, exile, and migration.

Topics in Design: Public Art

This course focuses on the analysis, planning, design, and facilitation of creative projects for public spaces. This course will examine the conceptual framework for what public art is, how artists and designers are engaged, and how public art projects are produced in the United States. In addition, students will gain practical experience and knowledge of the design process for public art. The course will begin with an introduction to public art practice, including a brief history and exploration of public art and design in context.

Topics in Design: Public Art

This course focuses on the analysis, planning, design, and facilitation of creative projects for public spaces. This course will examine the conceptual framework for what public art is, how artists and designers are engaged, and how public art projects are produced in the United States. In addition, students will gain practical experience and knowledge of the design process for public art. The course will begin with an introduction to public art practice, including a brief history and exploration of public art and design in context.

Graduate Design VI

A key focus of this studio will be to explore systems at both a technical and a performative level, and how integrating them into the conception of a building's design from the outset can yield a richer, more sophisticated, and more cultural and environmentally engaged kind of architecture.
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