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Course Criteria
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1.00 Credits
Topics in genome sciences and policy. Instructor: Staff
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1.00 Credits
Individual research in a genome sciences and/or policy topic of special interest, under the supervision of a faculty member, the major product of which is a substantive paper or written report containing significant analysis and interpretation of a previously approved topic. Meets the research experience requirement for the Certificate in Genome Sciences and Policy as well as the general requirement of a curriculum research (R). Open to all qualified students with consent of supervising instructor and IGSP Director of Undergraduate Studies. May be repeated. Instructor: Staff
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1.00 Credits
Create and apply knowledge gained through certificate course work and research experiences in an intensive, interdisciplinary, small group setting. Students work in small teams learning to analyze current issues in genome sciences and policy and to consider the issue from scientific, social, and ethical perspectives. Teams will present their research as an oral final project. Open only to graduating seniors in the Genome Sciences and Policy program or by consent of instructor. Instructor: Willard or staff
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1.00 Credits
Exploration of current DNA technology and potential impacts which are in continual flux because of new scientific findings, medical advances, judicial rulings. Introduction to the structure of the genome, genetic variation, and the genetic basis of disease to study existing and future medical, ethical, and policy issues. Intended for nonmajors. Instructor: Goldstein and Angrist
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1.00 Credits
Introduction to the foundation of genomic sciences with an emphasis on recent advances and their social, ethical and policy implications. Foundational topics including DNA, proteins, genome organization, gene expression, and genetic variation will be interwoven with contemporary issues emanating from the genome revolution such as pharmacogenetics, genetic discrimination, genomics of race, genetically modified crops, and genomic testing. Genomic sciences and policy science applied to present and future societal, and particularly ethical, concerns related to genomics. Intended for non-Biology majors. Not open to students who have taken Biology 194FCS, 118, 101L or 102L. Instructor: Hill
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1.00 Credits
Exploration of DNA and all of its meanings: scientific, cultural, societal, legal, artistic. Course will begin with identification of DNA as genetic material and move forward to the current and future impact of personal genomics and whole-genome sequencing. Writing-intensive. Open only to students in the Focus program. Instructor: Angrist
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1.00 Credits
No course description available.
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1.00 Credits
This course explores German conducts of war in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Our explorations begin with Prussian military pursuits in the 1860s and end with the war efforts of Nazi Germany and their defeat in 1945. Paying special attention to languages and experiences of war, we will situate the German imagination and practice of war within the larger fabric of German state and society and relate military strategy to the pursuit of global power and empire. Instructor: Bonker
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1.00 Credits
First semester of introductory language course. Practice in spoken and written German (speaking, listening, reading, writing); introduction to German culture and society through poems, songs, films, internet, and other authentic materials. Proficiency oriented, communicative approach to language study. Instructor: Staff
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1.00 Credits
Introduction to the language of commerce and industry; modes of expression for technology and marketing. Particular attention to cultural differences affecting German-American business transactions. Instructor: Staff
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