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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Problems involving uncertainty and/or complex interactions can be too difficult to grasp intuitively. This course introduces spreadsheet modeling, simulation, decision analysis and optimization to represent and analyze such complex problems. First, the use of decision tress for structuring decision problems under uncertainty is discussed. Next, Monte Carlo simulation is used as a modeling environment, using add-in programs as necessary. Prerequisite: Familiarity with Excel, enrollment in the Master of Engineering Management program, or permission of instructor
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1.00 Credits
Instruction in the writing and study of fiction. Recommended for students before they take English 103S, 104S, 201S, 202S, or 203S. Instructor: Staff
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1.00 Credits
Instruction in the writing and study of poetry. Recommended for students before they take English 105S or 106S. Instructor: Staff
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1.00 Credits
Basic film theory and history of motion picture technology. Introduction to experimental, documentary, and narrative forms of Third World, European, and United States cinemas. Economics and aesthetics. Not open to students who have taken Theater Studies 132 or who have taken this course as FVD 130. Instructor: Gaines or Paletz
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1.00 Credits
Basic theoretical approaches to high and low culture<197>Bourdieu and Adorno, the Frankfurt School and the Birmingham Center for Contemporary Cultural Studies; Third World and feminist approaches; the avant-garde and subcultural resistance. Analysis of sport and leisure, film and photography, law and the arts, popular and classical music, painting and advertising imagery. Instructor: Staff
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1.00 Credits
Techniques of independent field research and reporting in the documentary tradition. Emphasis on structure, development, and style of factual narrative-including exercises in redrafting and editing-culminating in a final piece of documentary writing based on students' fieldwork experience. Historical development of documentary writing in relation to the diverse cultures that produced it. Instructors: Staff
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1.00 Credits
Advanced writing projects for feature film. Study of existing scripts and videos, application of techniques. Not open to students who have taken this course as FVD 107S. Instructor: Staff
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1.00 Credits
Intensive writing of the short story, with students completing a minimal of thirty pages of finished and presumably publishable fiction. Discussion of students' manuscripts and individual conferences with the instructor, taking into consideration questions of the aesthetics, ethics, and morality of fiction, as well as procedures for its publication. Instructor: Staff
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1.00 Credits
See English 103S. Recommended for, but not limited to, students who have taken English 100A. Instructor: Staff
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1.00 Credits
Meter, image, tone, and dramatic organization in traditional and modern poems as a basis for original composition. Recommended for, but not limited to, students who have taken English 100C. Instructor: Staff
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