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  • 3.00 Credits

    Reynolds. Prerequisite(s): FNAR 662, FNAR 061. This course explores the concepts and technologies behind non-linear storytelling through mediums like DVD's and the world wide web. Students will learn to make interactive DVD videos as a form of expression and explore the possibilities of streaming videomaking.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Van Cleve. This course focuses on the practices and theory of producing narrative based cinema. Members of the course will become the film crew and produce a short digital film. Workshops on producing, directing, lighting, camera, sound and editing will build skills necessary for the hands-on production shoots. Visiting lecturers will critically discuss the individual roles of production in the context of the history of film.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Adkins. Prerequisite(s): FNAR662. Sonic Measures is a comprehensive introduction to the theory and practice of digital audio design, including sound for video, sound installation, composition, and sound art. Projects and demonstrations will familiarize students with all aspects of recording and synthesis of sound using Apple's Logic Pro software. Assignments will combine technical issues alongside an ongoing conceptual development individual to each student's interests. No musical knowledge needed.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Staff. Prerequisite(s): FNAR 662. This course presents students with an advanced level investigation into various forms of digital video projects as well as non-traditional presentation formats. Structured to create a more focused environment for individual projects, students will present and discuss their work in a series of group critiques. Lecture topics, screenings, and technical demonstrations will vary depending on students' past history as well as aesthetic and theoretical interests.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Churchman. Prerequisite(s): FNAR 566 AND FNAR 569 or Permission of Instructor. This course will explore advanced commercial, public and personal forms of visual communication. Emphasis will be placed on creative problem solving with consideration for audience. Discussion of design history, current ideology and future design applications will inform individual student projects. Work generated in this studio can be used to build a portfolio.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Wahl. Prerequisite(s): FNAR 571. Lab Fee $50. The large format camera is the most versataile and widely used camera for fine art, architectural and commerical photography. This course will introduce the student to the basic and advanced operations of the camera. The class will also explore the use of artificial lighting in a studio environment. Recommended for Fine Arts and Architecture students. $50 Studio Fee.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Staff. Prerequisite(s): See Graduate Progam Coordinator for section numbers. Hours and credits arranged.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Prerequisite(s): ECON 10 [or ECON 001, ECON 002], MATH 104, ACCT 101 and STAT 101. Acct 101 and Stat 101 may be taken concurrently. This course provides an introduction to the theory, the methods, and the concerns of corporate finance. The concepts developed in FNCE 100 form the foundation for all elective finance courses. The main topics include: 1) the time value of money and capital budgeting techniques; 2) uncertainty and the trade-off between risk and return; 3) security market efficiency; 4) optimal capital structure, and 5) dividend policy decisions.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Prerequisite(s): ECON 010 [or ECON 001, ECON 002] and MATH 104. Students cannot receive credit forboth FNCE 101 and ECON 102 [ECON 4] WHARTON STUDENTS ARE REQUIRED TO TAKE FNCE 101. This is an intermediate-level course in macroeconomics and the global economy, including topics in monetary and international economics. The goal is to provide a unified framework for understanding macroeconomic events and policy, which govern the global economic environment of business. The course analyzes the determinants and behavior of employment, production, demand and profits; inflation, interest rates, asset prices, and wages; exchange rates and international flows of goods and assets; including the interaction of the real economy with monetary policy and the financial system. The analysis is applied to current events, both in the US and abroad.
  • 3.00 Credits

    FRESHMAN JOSEPH WHARTON HONORS SCHOLAR STUDENTS ONLY, Non-Honors students need permission. The course covers introductory microeconomics and macroeconomics with particular attention given to global and long-run growth issues. The microeconomic portion introduces the discipline and fundamental tools of economics. It proceeds to study the workings of a price system and theories of consumer and firm decision-making. It further analyzes particular market structures characterized by perfect and imperfect competition, reviews the strengths and weaknesses of a market economy, and considers the government's role in correcting market failures and promoting competition. The macroeconomic portion studies the domestic and international forces that govern the determination of the aggregate level of economic activity, and pays particular attention to the determinants of long-run economic growth and stabilization policies used to dampen business cycles. The course concludes with global issues including the determinants of trade, trade policy, capital mobility, international financial instability, and international economic integration and the extent of globalization.
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