UNDERGRADUATE
ARTS AND SCIENCES
Click on the department of the classes you wish information on:
- African American Studies
- American Studies
- Anthropology
- Art
- Art History
- Arts and Sciences
- Astronomy
- Biology
- Botany
- Business Courses - See: School of
Business
- Chemistry
- Childhood Studies
- Classics
- Computer Science
- Criminal Justice
- Economics
- English (includes Literature, Film, Linguistics, Writing
- Film Studies - Honors College
- Fine Arts Departments (Visual, Art History, Music, Speech, Theater)
- Foreign Language Departments (French, German, Greek, Italian, Latin, Spanish)
- French
- Geology
- German
- Greek
- History
- Italian
- Latin
- Mathematics
- Music
- Applied Music
- Nursing
- Philosophy
- Physics
- Political Science
- Psychology
- Religion
- Sociology
- Spanish
- Speech
- Statistics
- Teacher Preparation
- Theatre
- Urban Studies
- Women's Studies
AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES
Special Topics in African-American Studies: The African-American Woman (D)(Cr.3)
50:014:381:Sec.A3:82587 ATG 106
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Gallon
Email: kgallon@camden.rutgers.edu
COURSE CANCELLED 5/19/08.
Special Topics in African-American Studies: History and Biography (D)(Cr.3)
50:014:382:Sec.D2:82585 ATG 106
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Glasker
Email: glasker@camden.rutgers.edu
Crosslist with 50:512:392. Examines the relationship of history and biography. Explores how the lives of individual Americans can be used to illuminate critical themes in American History and demonstrates how individual lives are shaped by historical forces, including figures such as Dr. Charles Drew, Rosa Parks and Malcolm X.
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AMERICAN STUDIES
Introduction to American Studies(Cr.3)
50:050:201:Sec.A2:84413 ATG 205
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Hoffman
Email: thoffman@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:350:102. Crosslisted with 50:352:391:A2, 50:354:391:A2. In this course we will study, in an American context, the phenomenon of passing, i.e., passing oneself off as a member of another group as defined on the basis of ethnicity, race, class, gender, or sexual orientation. We will begin with a narrative about a female slave passing as a white man to escape the South and end with accounts of contemporary scenes of passing on the Internet (including your own). In between, we will encounter non-fiction, fiction, poetry, and film featuring: gay men passing as straight men (and vice versa), women passing as men (and vice versa), wealthy Americans passing as poor Americans (and vice versa), black women passing as white women, black men passing as white women, black men passing as white men (and vice versa), and Jews passing as Gentiles. We will seek to understand the reasons behind passing in the light of the American experience, and will explore issues of power, anxiety, resistance, and desire surrounding the construction of identity in these forms of artistic expression.
Introduction to American Studies(Cr.3)
50:050:201:Sec.J3:84412 ATG 205
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Matarazzo
Email: cjmatarazzo@yahoo.com
Prerequisite: 50:350:102. Crosslisted with 50:352:325:J3. Readings in multicultural literature of the United States—for example, Anglo European, African-American, Asian-American, Chicano, Jewish-American, and Native American—with emphasis on relationships between culture and literary form, theme, and language.
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ANTHROPOLOGY
Gods, Cults and Rituals (G)(Cr.3)
50:070:317:Sec.A6:82592 ATG 106
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
McCarty
Email: pmccarty@camden.rutgers.edu
Introduction to the basic theoretical approaches anthropologists bring to the study of religious institutions, symbols, and practices. Ethnographic case studies of religious groups in the United States and around the world used to explore how these groups adapt to and explain their larger social worlds, especially in the current era of transnational migration and economic change.
Anthropology of American Culture (Cr.3)
50:070:323:Sec.D6:84005 ATG 106
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
McCarty
Email: pmccarty@camden.rutgers.edu
Unity and diversity of American culture. Methods of study. Class, race, and ethnicity. Marginal and central groups. Community studies and ethnography.
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ARTS AND SCIENCES
FOR WORLD MASTERPIECES, SEE ENGLISH
Internship in Arts and Sciences (Cr.3)
50:090:399:Sec.C1:81495
5/27-7/25 Time by arrangement
Marino
Email: jmarino@camden.rutgers.edu
By permission of instructor. Open to matriculated students in the College of Arts & Sciences (School 50) from all academic departments. This course requires a minimum of 150 hours in the field, along with additional classroom time (3 sessions) on various professional development topics. Students must secure the internship and have it approved by the internship coordinator prior to registering for the course. Please contact the Career Center, located in the Lower Level of the Campus Center for necessary forms and help in finding your internship. Special Note: Open to any Class of 2008 graduate from the Camden Campus who would like to use this course to do a post graduate internship. This can be relevent for those students who never had the opportunity to do an internship or for those students planning to attend graduate/professional school in the Fall. Students who wish to do an internship outside the Delaware Valley are also eligible for this course.
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ASTRONOMY
Description Astronomy (Cr.3)
50:100:306:Sec.A6:80393 FA 110
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Gambs
Email: Jgambs@pit.edu
Satisfies the college’s natural science requirement. Introduction to astronomy and astrophysics. Emphasis on the solar system and Keplar’s Laws, stellar magnatudes, distances, and stellar evolution, the galaxy, black holes, and the Big Bang. Recommended for nonscience majors; however, numerical examples are used. Depending on time of year, students also may be required to participate in a star-viewing program. Occasional short field trips.
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BIOLOGY
General Biology I (Cr.3)
50:120:101:Sec.D2:80394 FA 110
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 11:30am-2:10pm
Sporer Springer, R.
Email: sporers@camden.rutgers.edu
Corequisite: 50:120:107. Principles of biology, including the cellular basis of life; genetics; evolution; and the morphology, physiology, and development of plans and animals, including man. Required laboratory includes techniques such as microscopy, dissection, physiological experimentation, and use of the scientific method.
General Biology I (Cr.3)
50:120:101:Sec.D3:84610 FA 110
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 11:30am-2:10pm
Sporer Springer, R.
Email: sporers@camden.rutgers.edu
FOR NURSING STUDENTS ONLY. Principles of biology, including the cellular basis of life; genetics; evolution; and the morphology, physiology, and development of plans and animals, including man. Required laboratory includes techniques such as microscopy, dissection, physiological experimentation, and use of the scientific method.
General Biology Lab I (Cr.1)
50:120:107:Sec.D1:81046 BSB 307
6/27-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-11:00am
Prasad
Email: nripesh@camden.rutgers.edu
Corequisite: 50:120:101. $40 materials fee. Laboratory for General Biology I.
General Biology Lab I (Cr.1)
50:120:107:Sec.D3:81047 BSB 307
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 2:30pm-5:30pm
Elton
Email: elton@camden.rutgers.edu
Corequisite: 50:120:101. $40 materials fee. Laboratory for General Biology I.
General Biology II (Cr.4)
50:120:102:Sec.J2:80395 FA 219
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 11:30am-2:10pm
Quinty
Contact department at 856-225-6142.
Prerequisite: 50:120:101. Corequisite: 50:120:108. A continuaton of General Biology I.
General Biology Lab II (Cr.0)
50:120:108:Sec.J1:81048 BSB 307
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-11:00am
Prasad
Email: nripesh@camden.rutgers.edu
Corequisite: 50:120:102. $40 materials fee. Laboratory for General Biology II.
General Biology Lab II (Cr.0)
50:120:108:Sec.J3:81049 BSB 307
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 2:30pm-5:30pm
Elton
Email: elton@camden.rutgers.edu
Corequsiite: 50:120:102. $40 materials fee. Laboratory for General Biology II.
Biology of Cancer (Cr.3)
50:120:103:Sec.D6:81182 SLH
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Lee, H.
Email: hylee@camden.rutgers.edu
Satisfies the college’s natural sciences requirement for nonscience majors. Although open to biology and biomedical technology majors, does not satisfy the biology major elective requirement. Discussion of the basic mechanisms underlying carcinogenesis and its prevention and treatment. Topics include the cellular basis of cancer, regulation of cellular reproduction, cancer as a hereditary disease, induction of cancer, occupational cancer, consumer products and cancer, and prevention and treatment of cancer.
Facts of Life (Cr.3)
50:120:105:Sec.A1:81045 INTERNET
5/27-6/20 Time by arrangement
Evans
Email: revans@camden.rutgers.edu
Internet course. Note: This course will end of 6/20/08. Students need to: 1) access the website http://crab.rutgers.edu/~revans/FactsofLife/ to see how the course will operate; 2) send the instructor an email revans@camden.rutgers.edu telling him what email address they wish to use for the course; 3) use the directions in the web-site to make sure their computer is properly configured for the course; 4) items 1 – 3 must be completed by Monday, May 12, 2008 in order to take this course—no exceptions. Not normally open to biology or biomedical technology majors. Satisfies the college’s natural science requirement for nonscience majors. Introduction (without laboratory) to biological principles. Covers basic concepts involved in understanding the structure, function, and evolution of organisms with an emphasis placed on the application of biological knowledge to problems of man and society. Topics include human nutrition, disease, reproduction and development, genetic engineering, pollution, and conservation.
Human Reproducton and Development 9Cr.3)
50:120:106:Sec.A6:81183 SLH
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Lee, H.
Email: hylee@camden.rutgers.edu
Not normally open to biology or biomedical technology majors. Satisfies the college’s natural sciences requirement for nonscience majors. Topics include the formation of germ cells, chromosomes and sex, anatomy and physiology of the reproductive system, hormonal control of reproduction, infertility, growth and development, genetic counseling, birth defects, and sexually transmitted diseases.
Special Problems in Biology I (Cr.BA)
50:120:491:Sec.A1:80497
5/27-6/19 Time by arrangement
Staff
50:120:491:Sec.D1:80396
6/23-7/17 Time by arrangement
Staff
50:120:491:Sec.J1:80613
7/21-8/13 Time by arrangement
Staff
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor. No more than 8 credits can be counted toward the biology major (maximum of 4 credits per instructor). Designed to meet the needs of outstanding students who have demonstrated an aptitude for original work and may wish to undertake special problems.
Special Problems in Biology II (Cr.BA)
50:120:492:Sec.A1:80493
5/27-6/19 Time by arrangement
Staff
50:120:492:Sec.D1:80685
6/23-7/17 Time by arrangement
Staff
50:120:492:Sec.J1:80397
7/21-8/13 Time by arrangement
Staff
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor. No more than 8 credits can be counted toward the biology major (maximum of 4 credits per instructor). Designed to meet the needs of outstanding students who have demonstrated an aptitude for original work and may wish to undertake special problems.
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BOTANY
Basic Botany (Cr.3)
50:130:201:Sec.D1:81646 INTERNET
6/23-7/17 Time by arrangement
Evans
Email: revans@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: Biology 105 or another college biology course. Not open to biology majors. Internet course. Students need to: 1) access the website http://crab.rutgers.edu/~revans/BasicBotany/ to see how the course will operate; 2) send the instructor an email revans@camden.rutgers.edu telling him what email address they wish to use for the course; 3) use the directions in the web-site to make sure their computer is properly configured for the course; 4) items 1 – 3 must be completed by Monday, June 9, 2008 in order to take this course—no exceptions. An introduction to the members of the plant kingdom with emphasis on their structure and function, growth and development, worldwide distribution, ecology and economic importance. Additional topics include plant biotechnology, herbs and spices, and the origins of agriculture.
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CHEMISTRY
Consumer Chemistry (Cr.3)
50:160:101:Sec.A2:81050 ATG 225
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Schwartz
Email: fschwart@camden.rutgers.edu
For nonscience majors. Introduces areas of chemistry that are encountered in everyday living. Typical topics include nuclear chemistry, power plants, nuclear waste, radiation therapy, food chemistry, additives, fats, carbohydrates, proteins, fermentation, consumer products, soaps, toothpaste, detergents, drugs, and pharmaceuticals from aspirin to vitamins.
General Chemistry I (Cr.3)
50:160:107:Sec.A3:80568 SLH
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 12:00pm-4:00pm
Craig
Email: mrcraig@camden.rutgers.edu
Note: Primarily for students majoring in nursing or other allied health professions. Students requiring the regular scientific chemistry courses should register for Chemical Principles I 50:160:115. Corequisite: 50:160:109. Note special schedule. Introduction to the scope and method of chemistry, concepts of atomic and molecular structure, major theories of chemical change, and the development of fundamental laws governing chemical reactions.
General Chemistry Lab I (Cr.1)
50:160:109:Sec.A1:81951 SCI 103
5/28-6/18 M,W 8:00am-11:30am
Craig
Email: mrcraig@camden.rutgers.edu
Note: Primarily for students majoring in nursing or other allied health professions. Corequisite: 50:160:107. Laboratory fee: $40. Laboratory exercises to demonstrate the fundamental principles of chemistry.
General Chemistry Lab I (Cr.1)
50:160:109:Sec.A2:81952 SCI 103
5/27-6/19 Tu,Th 8:00am-11:30am
Craig
Email: mrcraig@camden.rutgers.edu
Note: Primarily for students majoring in nursing or other allied health professions. Corequisite: 50:160:107. Laboratory fee: $40. Laboratory exercises to demonstrate the fundamental principles of chemistry.
General Chemistry II (Cr.3)
50:160:108:Sec.D3:80569 SLH
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 12:00pm-4:00pm
Paulsen
Email: traciep@camden.rutgers.edu
Note: Primarily for students majoring in nursing or other allied health professions. Students requiring the regular scientific chemistry courses should register for Chemical Principles II, 50:160:116. Prerequisite: 50:160:107. Corequisite: 50:160:110. Note special schedule. Largely devoted to an introduction to organic chemistry, with particular emphasis on biologically active compounds.
General Chemistry Lab II (Cr.1)
50:160:110:Sec.D1:81949 SCI 103
6/23-7/16 M,W 8:00am-11:30am
Paulsen
Email: traciep@camden.rutgers.edu
Note: Primarily for students majoring in nursing or other allied health professions. Prerequisite: 50:160:109. Corequisite: 50:160:108. Laboratory fee: $40. Laboratory exercises to demonstrate the fundamental principles of chemistry.
General Chemistry Lab II (Cr.1)
50:160:110:Sec.D2:81950 SCI 103
6/24-7/17 Tu,Th 8:00am-11:30am
Paulsen
Email: traciep@camden.rutgers.edu
Note: Primarily for students majoring in nursing or other allied health professions. Prerequisite: 50:160:109. Corequisite: 50:160:108. Laboratory fee: $40. Laboratory exercises to demonstrate the fundamental principles of chemistry.
Chemical Principles I (Cr.3)
50:160:115:Sec.A1:80790 SLH
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-11:30am
Fazen
Email: paul.fazen@villanova.edu
Note: Primarily for students planning to major in the natural sciences, pre-medicine/dentistry, or engineering. Corequisite: 50:160:125. Note special schedule. Introduction to fundamental principles of chemistry; atomic structure; bond characteristics of gases, liquids, solids, and solutions; acids and bases; rates of chemical reactions and chemical equilibria. Study of common elements and their compounds.
Chemical Principles Lab I (Cr.1)
50:160:125:Sec.A2:80792 SCI 103
5/28-6/18 M,W 12:00pm-4:30pm
Paulsen
Email: traciep@camden.rutgers.edu
Note: Primarily for students planning to major in the natural sciences or engineering. Laboratory fee: $40. Corequisite: 50:160:115. Demonstrates fundamental chemical principles and chemical properties of matter.
Chemical Principles Lab I (Cr.1)
50:160:125:Sec.A3:80793 SCI 103
5/27-6/19 Tu,Th 12:00pm-4:30pm
Paulsen
Email: traciep@camden.rutgers.edu
Note: Primarily for students planning to major in the natural sciences or engineering. Laboratory fee: $40. Corequisite: 50:160:115. Demonstrates fundamental chemical principles and chemical properties of matter.
Chemical Principles II (Cr.3)
50:160:116:Sec.D1:80791 SLH
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-11:30am
Fazen
Email: paul.fazen@villanova.edu
Note: Primarily for students planning to major in the natural sciences, pre-medicine/dentistry, or engineering. Prerequisites: 50:160:115, 50:160:125. Corequisites: 50:160:126, 50:640:121 or 130. 50:160:116 is a prerequisite for all advanced chemistry courses. Note special schedule. A continuation of Chemical Principles I.
Chemical Principles Lab II (Cr.1)
50:160:126:Sec.D2:80794 SCI 103
6/23-7/16 M,W 12:00pm-4:30pm
Lammers
Email: klammers@camden.rutgers.edu
Note: Primarily for students planning to major in the natural sciences or engineering. Laboratory fee: $40. Prerequisite: 50:160:125. Corequisite: 50:160:116, 50:160:125 is a prerequisite to all advanced chemistry courses. Demonstrates fundamental chemical principles and chemical properties of matter.
Chemical Principles Lab II (Cr.1)
50:160:126:Sec.D3:80865 SCI 103
6/24-7/17 Tu,Th 12:00pm-4:30pm
Lammers
Email: klammers@camden.rutgers.edu
Note: Primarily for students planning to major in the natural sciences or engineering. Laboratory fee: $40. Prerequisite: 50:160:125. Corequisite: 50:160:116, 50:160:125 is a prerequisite to all advanced chemistry courses. Demonstrates fundamental chemical principles and chemical properties of matter.
Organic Chemistry I (Cr.3)
50:160:335:Sec.A1:80795 FA 110
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 8:30am-11:30am
Burke
Email: burke@camden.rutgers.edu
Note: Both 50:160:335 and 50:160:336 must be completed to receive credit. Prerequisite: 50:160:116. Corequisite: 50:160:339. Note special schedule. Introduction, structure and properties, stereochemistry, alkyl halides, nucleophillic substitution and elimination, alkenes, alkynes, alcohols, NMR, IR, and MS.
Organic Chemistry Lab I (Cr.1)
50:160:339:Sec.A2:80797 SCI 327
5/28-6/18 M,W 12:00pm-5:00pm
Rabinowitz, Sheryl
Email: sheryl@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:160:126. Corequisite: 50:160:335. Note: Laboratory fee: $40. Introduction to the techniques used in the synthesis, isolation, identification of organic compounds;stereochemistry.
Organic Chemistry Lab I (Cr.1)
50:160:339:Sec.A3:80798 SCI 327
5/27-6/19 Tu,Th 12:00pm-5:00pm
Rabinowitz, Sheryl
Email: sheryl@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:160:126. Corequisite: 50:160:335. Note: Laboratory fee: $40. Introduction to the techniques used in the synthesis, isolation, identification of organic compounds;stereochemistry.
Organic Chemistry II (Cr.3)
50:160:336:Sec.D1:80796 FA 110
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 8:30am-11:30am
Burke
Email: burke@camden.rutgers.edu
Note: Both 50:160:335 and 50:160:336 must be completed to received credit. Prerequisites: 50:160:335, 50:160:339. Corequisite: 50:160:340. Note special schedule. Ethers and epoxides, conjugated systems, MO theor, aromatic compounds, electrophillic aromatic substitution, aldehydes and ketones, amines, carboxylic acids, caroxylic and derivatives.
Organic Chemistry Lab II (Cr.1)
50:160:340:Sec.D2:80799 SCI 327
6/23-7/16 M,W 12:00pm-5:00pm
Rabinowitz, Sheryl
Email: sheryl@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:160:339. Corequisite: 50:160:336. Note: Laboratory fee: $40. Multistep synthesis; isolation, identification, and synthesis of natural products; instrumentation techniques.
Organic Chemistry Lab II (Cr.1)
50:160:340:Sec.D3:80800 SCI 327
6/24-7/17 Tu,Th 12:00pm-5:00pm
Rabinowitz, Sheryl
Email: sheryl@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:160:339. Corequisite: 50:160:336. Note: Laboratory fee: $40. Multistep synthesis; isolation, identification, and synthesis of natural products; instrumentation techniques.
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CHILDHOOD STUDIES
Special Topics: Children and the Law (Cr.3)
50:163:380:Sec.D1:84491 FA 221
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Gallagher
Email: brian_d_gallagher@hotmail.com
COURSE CANCELLED 6/09/08.
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CLASSICS
Study Abroad in Greece: Greek Art and Archaeology (Cr.3)
21:190:299:Sec.H1
7/9-8/12 Time by arrangement
Staff
Corequisite: 21:510:299. Note special schedule. Off campus course. Additional fees apply. This course, taught in Greece during the summer, introduces students to two millennia of Greek art and architecture. Visiting numerous museums, archaeological sites, this course examines sculpture, painting, and architecture from the Bronze Age, Archaic, Classical Hellenistic and Roman periods in particular. It is taught and must be registered in conjunction with History 510:299. For more complete information and fee schedule, see the website at http://studyabroad.rutgers.edu/program_greece.html.
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COMPUTER SCIENCE
Programming Fundamentals (Cr.3)
50:198:111:Sec.B6:81513 CS 213
5/27-7/3 M,Tu,Th 6:00pn-8:30pm
Brown
Email: jobrown@camden.rutgers.edu
Corequisites: 50:640:121, 129, or 130 and 50:198:112. Fundamental concepts of structured programming and algorithmic problem solving; primitive data types, control structures, functions and parameter passing, top-down design, arrays, files, and the mechanics of compiling, running, testing, and debugging programs. These concepts will be taught using a high-level language such as C/C++ or Java.
Software Lab I (Cr.1)
50:198:112:Sec.B8:81514 CS 213
5/27-7/3 M,Tu,Th 8:35pm-9:40pm
Brown
Email: jobrown@camden.rutgers.edu
Corequisite: 50:198:111. Formal laboratory that provides practice in designing and testing computer programs based closely on lecture material presented in 50:198:111. Also provides a quck introduction to the Unix operating system including the Unix shell, the file system, and programming tools such as editors, compilers, debuggers, libraries, and other utilities.
Data Structures (Cr.3)
50:198:213:Sec.B2:84013 BSB 107
5/27-7/3 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-12:40pm
Shende
Email: shende@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisites: 50:198:113 and 171. Basic algorithmic analysis asymptotic notation (Big-Oh, little oh, and Theta) for estimating the complexity of a problem, using recurrence relations to analyze the complexity of recursive algorithms. Tree-based data structures: binary search trees, heaps, and balanced search trees; hash functions and hash tables; abstract dictionaries; using data structures to implement basic algorithms (such as searching, sorting, and depth- and breadth-first search in graphs, data compression).
Visualizing Mathematics by Computer (Cr.3)
50:198:487:Sec.H7:81184 FA 242
7/7-8/11 M & W 6:00pm-9:40pm
Toth
Email: gtoth@camden.rutgers.edu
Crosslisted with 50:640:347, 56:645:556. Prerequisite: 50:640:121, 122, 221, or permission of instructor. Recommended also for students majoring in computer science as an elective. A comprehensive introduction to symbolic computational packages and scientific visualization through examples from calculus and geometry. Covers two-dimensional, three-dimensional, and animated computer graphics using Maple, Mathematica, and Geomview. No programming knowledge required.
Introduction to Business Computing (Cr.3)
52:135:201:Sec.A6:81887 CS 110
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
McHugh
Email: mchugh@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: Satisfy mathematics requirement for admission to the college. Introduction to computers and information technology, with an emphasis on personal computers and their applications. Understanding of and hands-on experience with application software including word processors, spreadsheets, database systems, electronic mail, and web browsers. Introductory problem solving and computer programming.
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CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Police and Policing (Cr.3)
50:202:202:Sec.A6:82608 ATG 219
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Howard
Email: sqtdah@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:202:201. History and structure of American police; law enforcement, order maintenance, and service functions; policy misconduct, unionism, affirmative action, and race relations; and careers in law enforcement.
Confinement and Corrections (Cr.3)
50:202:203:Sec.A2:82609 ATG 218
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Caputo
Email: gcaputo@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:202:201. History and organization of American corrections. Emphasis on sentencing, custodial institutions, intermediate sanctions, community corrections, and mechanisms for release.
White Collar Crime (Cr.3)
50:202:326:Sec.J6:84016 ATG 219
7/21-8/12 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
McClain
Email: Lucy.McClain.usdoj.gov
Prerequisite: 50:202:201. History and development of corporate crime, white collar crime, political corruption, and other "upper world" crimes. Emphasis on effective strategies for combating this phenomenon.
The Poor, Minorities & Justice (D)(Cr.3)
50:202:337:Sec.J1:84017 ATG 219
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Baron
Email: elbaron@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:202:201. Critical examination of the treatment of minorities and the poor by the criminal justice system. Focuses on the sources of tension between minorities and the poor on the one hand and personnel in the criminal justice system on the other.
Contemporary Issues in Policing (Cr.3)
50:202:351:Sec.A6:84018 ACCC Mays Landing Q105
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Baron
Email: elbaron@camden.rutgers.edu
Off campus at Atlantic Cape Community College, 5100 Black Horse Pike, US. Rt.322, Mays Landing, NJ. Prerequisite: 50:202:201. Evaluation of new trends I policing plus policy unionism, discrimination, and affirmative action, as well as explanations for misconduct and evaluation of its remedies, e.g., civilian review boards.
Contemporary Issues in Policing (Cr.3)
50:202:351:Sec.D3:84015 ATG 219
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Baron
Email: elbaron@camden.rutgers.edu
COURSE CANCELLED 6/3/08.
Special Topics in Criminal Justice: Introduction to Forensics (Cr.3)
50:202:354:Sec.D1:84067 ATG 219
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Golding
Email: dgolding@comcast.net
This course will address how forensic science plays a role in the criminal investigation process. A variety of forensic methods will be discussed in addition to the historical development of these methods.
Special Topics in Criminal Justice: Terrorism (Cr.3)
50:202:356:Sec.A1:84014 ATG 219
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Anarumo
Email: mark.anarumo@yahoo.com
COURSE CANCELLED 5/19/08.
Service/Internship in Criminal Justice (Cr.BA)
50:202:404:Sec.B6:84019
5/27-7/2 Time by arrangement
Meloy
Email: mlmeloy@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: Permisson of instructor. No more than 3 credits to be counted toward the major. Supervised service-internship in criminal justice agency.
Special Topics in Criminal Justice: Social Justice in Film & Literature (Cr.3)
50:202:454:Sec.D2:82183 ATG 219
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Meloy
Email: mlmeloy@camden.rutgers.edu
Movies and literature reflect and reproduce various aspects and views about our social life and the culture in which we live. These images and messages impact our thinking in meaningful and important ways. In this course, we focus on how films and literature craft images and concepts of social justice. To accomplish these tasks, we analyze movies and other stories about crime and the legal system, and how these depictions of justice relate to gender, ethnicity, race, sexuality, and social class. Furthermore, we contrast relevant empirical evidence with the images and narratives of social justice portrayed in the films and the readings.
Special Topics in Criminal Justice: Federal Criminal Justice System (Cr.3)
50:202:456:Sec.J3:82185 ATG 219
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Murphy
Email: kebmur@comcast.net
COURSE CANCELLED 7/1/08.
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ECONOMICS
Microeconomic Principles (Cr.3)
50:220:102:Sec.A1:82387 ATG 220
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Chiu
Email: ichiu@camden.rutgers.edu
COURSE CANCELLED
Microeconomic Principles (Cr.3)
50:220:102:Sec.A3:84020 ATG 220
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Ahmed
Email: mahmed@camden.rutgers.edu
Economic systems; supply, demand, and role of the market; consumer behavior and utility; firm behavior, cost, and profit; competitive and monopolistic markets for products and inputs; government regulation of markets.
Microeconomic Principles (Cr.3)
50:220:102:Sec.A6:82695 ATG 220
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Candalla
Email: candalla@camden.rutgers.edu
Economic systems; supply, demand, and role of the market; consumer behavior and utility; firm behavior, cost, and profit; competitive and monopolistic markets for products and inputs; government regulation of markets.
Microeconomic Principles (Cr.3)
50:220:102:Sec.J3:82694 ATG 221
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Ma
Email: jinpeng@camden.rutgers.edu
Economic systems; supply, demand, and role of the market; consumer behavior and utility; firm behavior, cost, and profit; competitive and monopolistic markets for products and inputs; government regulation of markets.
Macroeconomic Principles (Cr.3)
50:220:103:Sec.A1:84381 ATG 220
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Chiu
Email: ichiu@camden.rutgers.edu
National income and how it is determined; consumption, investment, and government spending; the monetary system; control of inflation and unemployment; international exchange; alternative economic systems.
Macroeconomic Principles (Cr.3)
50:220:103:Sec.D3:82697 ATG 220
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Ahmed
Email: mahmed@camden.rutgers.edu
National income and how it is determined; consumption, investment, and government spending; the monetary system; control of inflation and unemployment; international exchange; alternative economic systems.
Macroeconomic Principles (Cr.3)
50:220:103:Sec.D6:82698 ATG 220
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Candalla
Email: candalla@camden.rutgers.edu
National income and how it is determined; consumption, investment, and government spending; the monetary system; control of inflation and unemployment; international exchange; alternative economic systems.
Macroeconomic Principles (Cr.3)
50:220:103:Sec.J1:82696 ATG 220
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Hamed
Email: hamed@camden.rutgers.edu
COURSE CANCELLED 7/14/08.
Money and Banking (Cr.3)
50:220:301:Sec.A6:84021 ATG 221
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Hamed
Email: hamed@camden.rutgers.edu
COURSE CANCELLED 5/19/08.
Financial Institutions (Cr.3)
50:220:325:Sec.J3:82611 ATG 220
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Ahmed
Email: mahmed@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:220:102 or 103 or 105 or 106. Roles of banks, insurance companies, investment companies, finance companies, pension funds, credit unions, and such institutions in financial markets, and their impact on how the economic and financial systems function. Lending and borrowing activities, investment portfolio policy, and regulatory environment of each type of financial intermediary examined.
Economic Development (Cr.3)
50:220:339:Sec.D2:82186 ATG 220
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Fanneh
Email: fanneh@fordham.edu
Prerequisite: 50:220:102 or 103 or 105 or 106 or permission of instructor. (Formerly 50:220:314). Economic and social problems of developing countries: poverty, low savings, inadequate investments, unemployment, inflation, and the transfer of technology, and such social problems as education, health, and administration. Examines development theories models and notes interdependence between developing economies and developed countries, particularly with respect to trade, capital and labor movements, and the transfer of technology.
Economics of Investment & Capital Markets (Cr.3)
50:220:363:Sec.J6:84023 ATG 220
7/21-8/12 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Candalla
Email: candalla@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:220:102 or 103 or 105 or 106 or permission of instructor. Analysis of economic investment by using economic tools: value of firms, economic efficient frontier, lending and borrowing, utility analysis and investment selection, market interest rates, correlation structure of security returns, short- and long-term international investments with foreign risks, capital asset pricing model, efficient markets, and investment decision management.
Special Topics on Contemporary Economic Issues: Monetary Economics (Cr.3)
50:220:368:Sec.A2:82612 ATG 220
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Fanneh
Email: fanneh@fordham.edu
Introduction to the study of money, credit, interest rates, and banking, both within and outside of the Federal Reserve System, with emphasis on the structure and operations of commercial banks and activities fo the Federal Reserve System. We will also discuss financial markets, exchange rate regimes and the foreign exchange market, expectations, capital flows, central banking and monetary policy in open economies like the US.
Business Cycles & Forecasting (Cr.3)
50:220:392:Sec.J2:84022 ATG 220
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W, Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Fanneh
Email: fanneh@fordham.edu
Prerequisite: 50:220:102 or 103 or 105 or 106. Nature of economic fluctuations and major patterns of cyclical behaviors. Major theories of business cycles that explain factors determining cyclical fluctuations and econimc growth in the economy. Methods of forecasting business and economic activity presented in relation to empirical studies of the United States.
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ENGLISH
INCLUDES COMPOSITION; WORLD, ENGLISH AND
AMERICAN LITERATURE; WRITING
Please note: English Composition 101-102 are pre-requisites for all other English, American Literature, Film, World Literature courses.
World Masterpieces I (Cr. 3)
50:090:238:Sec.A1:80686 ATG 121
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40pm
Piccolo
Email: piccolo@camden.rutgers.edu
50:090:238:Sec.A3:80400 ATG 201
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
O’Shaughnessy
Email: keithoshaughnessy@hotmail.com
50:090:238:Sec.D1:80399 ATG 201
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Farquhar
Email: johnfar@camden.rutgers.edu
50:090:238:Sec.D6:80695 ATG 201
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Fitter
Email: fitter@camden.rutgers.edu
50:090:238:Sec.J1:80687 ATG 201
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Farquhar
Email: johnfar@camden.rutgers.edu
50:090:238:Sec.J6:81304 ATG 201
7/21-8/12 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40 pm
Meredith
Email: jmeredit@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:350:102. Studies in the great works of world literature from antiquity to the early modern era.
English Comp I (Cr. 3)
50:350:101:Sec.D2:81862 ATG 221
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Miller
Email: michmill@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: satisfactory score on the NJ Basic Skills Placement Test, or successful completion of 50:350:099. Instruction and practice in writing expository prose, including a documented research report.
English Comp II (Cr. 3)
50:350:102:Sec.A1:81863 ATG 221
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Buttler
Email: bbuttler@gccnj.edu
50:350:102:Sec.D6:81436 ATG 221
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Windhauser
Email: BradWindhauser@aol.com
50:350:102:Sec.J2:82187 ATG 219
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Laquintano
Email: aquintano@wisc.edu
Prerequisite: 50:350:101. Continuation of English Composition I.
Introduction to Literary Study (W) (Cr. 3)
50:350:220:Sec.A6:81664 ATG 205
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Meredith
Email: jmeredit@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:350:101. English Majors only. Survey of the research sources and critical approaches to be used in reading and writing about literary texts, including materials available on the Internet.
Literatures in English I (Cr. 3)
50:350:221:Sec.D1:81665 ATG 221
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Piccolo
Email: piccolo@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:350:102. Historical survey of literatures written in English (primarily British and American literatures) from the Middle Ages through 1660.
Literatures in English II (Cr. 3)
50:350:222:Sec.D1:81663 ATG 220
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Meredith
Email: jmeredit@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:350:102. Readings and discussion of the great English writers from Wordsworth to present.
World Masterpieces II (G) (Cr. 3)
50:350:239:Sec.J2:81051 ATG 201
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Piccolo
Email: piccolo@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:350:102. Studies in the great works of world literature from the dawn of the modern age to the present. Satisfies the Cross-cultural requirement for English majors.
Reading and Writing in the Elementary Curriculum (Cr. 3)
50:350:309:Sec.A1:81305 ATG 205
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Cydis
Email: scydis@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:350:102. Analysis of the forms of discourse used by various academic disciplines in elementary education, including methods of research and documentation.
Reading and Writing in the Secondary Curriculum (Cr. 3)
50:350:310:Sec.J2:81306 ATG 221
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Desmond
Email: edesmond@gatewayhs.com
Prerequisite: 50:350:102. Analysis of the forms of discourse used by various academic disciplines in secondary education, including the social sciences, humanities, natural sciences, and mathematics.
Shakespeare I (Cr. 3)
50:350:331:Sec.D3:81867 ATG 205
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Fitter
Email: fitter@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:350:102.The study of plays of the Jacobean period (from 1603 on), with particular emphasis on the tragedies.
Modern British Fiction (Cr. 3)
50:350:358:Sec.J3:84026 ATG 201
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Guedon DeConcini
Email: Deke153@aol.com
Prerequisite 350:102. Satisfies the British Literature after 1800 requirement for English majors. Development of the modern novel through examination of the works of the major writers of the century, with emphasis on Joyce, Lawrence, Woolf, and Becket.
Literature of Childhood (G) (Cr. 3)
50:350:360:Sec.A3:82213 ATG 212
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Guedon DeConcini
Email: Deke153@aol.com
Prerequisite: 50:350:102. A study of classic and contemporary literature read and enjoyed by children and adolescents, including fairy tales and folklore, fantasy, picture books, chapter books, the adolescent novel, and poetry.
Children’s Literature in Print and Film (Cr.3)
50:350:362:Sec.D6:84024 ATG 225
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Hoffman
Email: thoffman@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:350:102. Crosslisted with 56:350:584. This course examines British and American children’s literature of the late 19th and early 20th centuries and film adaptations of that literature produced in the 20th and 21st centuries. Of special interest are the public political discourses into which these texts intervene and issues of intertextuality that are involved in the translation of a literary work from page to screen. Authors and texts include: Alcott, Little Women; Kipling, The Jungle Book; Stevenson, Treasure Island; Barrie, Peter Pan; Burnett, A Little Princess and The Secret Garden; Burroughs, Tarzan.
Women in Literature (Cr. 3)
50:350:388:Sec.D2:82613 ATG 205
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Vial
Email: avial@snip.net
Prerequisite: 50:350:102. Crosslisted with 50:988:299. Satisfies the cross-cultural requirement for English majors. Analyzes the treatment of women in selected world fiction, drama, poetry, and essays.
Multicultural American Literature (D)(Cr.3)
50:352:325:Sec.J3:82813 ATG 205
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Matarazzo
Email: cjmatarazzo@yahoo.com
Prerequisite: 50:350:102. Crosslisted with 50:050:201. Readings in multicultural literature of the United States—for example, Anglo European, African-American, Asian-American, Chicano, Jewish-American, and Native American—with emphasis on relationships between culture and literary form, theme, and language.
Special Topics in American Literature: Passing in American Literature and Film (Cr. 3)
50:352:391:Sec.A2:84029 ATG 205
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Hoffman
Email: thoffman@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:350:102. Crosslisted with 50:050:201, 50:354:391. In this course we will study, in an American context, the phenomenon of passing, i.e., passing oneself off as a member of another group as defined on the basis of ethnicity, race, class, gender, or sexual orientation. We will begin with a narrative about a female slave passing as a white man to escape the South and end with accounts of contemporary scenes of passing on the Internet (including your own). In between, we will encounter non-fiction, fiction, poetry, and film featuring: gay men passing as straight men (and vice versa), women passing as men (and vice versa), wealthy Americans passing as poor Americans (and vice versa), black women passing as white women, black men passing as white women, black men passing as white men (and vice versa), and Jews passing as Gentiles. We will seek to understand the reasons behind passing in the light of the American experience, and will explore issues of power, anxiety, resistance, and desire surrounding the construction of identity in these forms of artistic expression.
World Cinema Celtic Film, Fiction, Folk (Cr. 3)
50:354:320:Sec.J1:84031 ATG 205
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Blyn LaDrew
Email: roslynb-l@comcast.net
From Hollywood's vision of Ireland to new independent feature films in the Irish, Welsh, and even Cornish languages, this course will examine Celtic cinema, especially that derived from folklore or adapted from literature. Topics will include Man of Aran as a pioneering documentary film (or was it?), the Disneyfication of leprechaun lore, and the recent recontextualizing of films about Celtic peoples by the Celts themselves. The role of national film boards and the economics of marketing films in countries with small populations will also be discussed. For a final project, students may do a research paper or make a short Celtic-themed film, subject to the instructor's approval. Some films will have subtitles in English but no knowledge of Celtic languages is necessary.
Special Topics in Film: Passing in American Literature and Film (Cr.3)
50:354:391:Sec.A2:84030 ATG 205
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Hoffman
Email: thoffman@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:350:102. Crosslisted with 50:352:391:A2. In this course we will study, in an American context, the phenomenon of passing, i.e., passing oneself off as a member of another group as defined on the basis of ethnicity, race, class, gender, or sexual orientation. We will begin with a narrative about a female slave passing as a white man to escape the South and end with accounts of contemporary scenes of passing on the Internet (including your own). In between, we will encounter non-fiction, fiction, poetry, and film featuring: gay men passing as straight men (and vice versa), women passing as men (and vice versa), wealthy Americans passing as poor Americans (and vice versa), black women passing as white women, black men passing as white women, black men passing as white men (and vice versa), and Jews passing as Gentiles. We will seek to understand the reasons behind passing in the light of the American experience, and will explore issues of power, anxiety, resistance, and desire surrounding the construction of identity in these forms of artistic expression.
Modern American Grammar (Cr. 3)
50:615:336:Sec.D3:84039 ATG 221
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Epstein
Email: repstein@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:350:102. A linguistic approach to English grammar. Theory and practical implications of English phonology, morphology, and syntax.
Persuasive Writing (W)(Cr.3)
50:989:300:Sec.A2:80688 ATG 207
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Miller
Email: michmill@camden.rutgers.edu
50:989:300:Sec.D1:81519 ATG 205
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Fitzsimons
Email: ChristineFitzsimons@gmail.com
50:989:300:Sec.J6:81666 ATG 206
7/21-8/12 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Green, K
Email: kmgreen@temple.edu
Prerequisite: 50:350:102. The fundamental techniques of argument, demonstration, and persuasion; analysis of sample readings and extensive writing practice.
Art of Writing (W)(Cr.3)
50:989:301:Sec.A3:80841 ATG 207
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Singley
Email: singley@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:350:102. Practice in the art of constructing clear, concise prose, with emphasis on developing a personal style.
50:989:301:Sec.A6:81885 ATG 206
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Krutzke
Email: sonia.krutzke@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:350:102. The Art of Writing: Baseball. Swallow the bitter pill of a general requirement in the sweet context of our national pastime. Practice in the art of reading, writing, and recognizing various rhetorical modes (analysis, argument, cause and effect, comparison, description, etc.) all in the setting of baseball and its relevance to just about everything (cultural diversity, ethics, history, language, mathematics, etc.). Text: Baseball and Philosophy: Thinking Outside the Batter’s Box (Edited by Eric Bronson, Open Court, 2004).
50:989:301:Sec.D3:81667 ATG 206
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Windhauser
Email: BradWindhauser@aol.com
Prerequisite: 50:350:102. Practice in the art of constructing clear, concise prose, with emphasis on developing a personal style.
50:989:301:Sec.J1:81926 ATG 206
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Fitzsimons
Email: ChristineFitzsimons@gmail.com
50:989:301:Sec.J3:84089 ATG 206
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Roskos
Email: eroskos@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:350:102. Practice in the art of constructing clear, concise prose, with emphasis on developing a personal style.
Scientific and Technical Writing (W)(Cr.3)
50:989:302:Sec.A1:80401 ATG 207
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Roskos
Email: eroskos@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite 350:102. Methods of gathering and organizing information, analyzing the purpose and audience of communication, selecting the appropriate organizational pattern and format, and convincing the audience through persuasive techniques.
Writing for the Professions (W)(Cr.3)
50:989:303:Sec.D2:82205 ATG 208
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Spataro
Email: cspataro@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite 350:102. Introduction to the writer's craft that surveys available genres of poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction.
Advanced Writing (Cr.3)
50:989:401:Sec.D1:80525
6/23-7/2 Time by arrangement
Zeidner
Email: zeidner@camden.rutgers.edu
Advanced Writing (Cr.3)
50:989:402:Sec.D1:80402
6/23-7/2 Time by arrangement
Zeidner
Email: zeidner@camden.rutgers.edu
By permission of the instructor. Note special schedule. Crosslisted with 56:200:525/526. The 22nd Annual Writers Conference. Admission by permission – contact Professor Zeidner. An intensive series of workshops and readings in fiction, poetry, and the personal essay, featuring a staff of nationally recognized authors. Please contact the Summer Session Office (856) 225-6098 to receive the application and detailed schedule for the conference, available March 2008, or visit the website at: http://summer.camden.rutgers.edu/writconf.html.
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FILM STUDIES - HONORS COLLEGE
Special Topics in Film Study: The Crime Film(Cr.3)
50:387:280:Sec.D2:84033 ATG 206
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Sorrento
Email: msorrent@camden.rutgers.edu
COURSE CANCELLED 6/3/08.
Special Topics in Film Study: Film Genre: The Horror Film(Cr.3)
50:387:380:Sec.A2:84032 ATG 206
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Sorrento
Email: msorrent@camden.rutgers.edu
COURSE CANCELLED 5/8/08.
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FINE ARTS DEPARTMENT
(Studio Art, Art History, Music, Applied Music, Speech & Theater Arts)
STUDIO ART
Visual Fundamentals (Cr.3)
50:080:102:Sec.A1:81660 FA 236
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Garrity
Email: bgarrity@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite to all upper-level studio classes. An expansive exploration of traditional and contemporary two-dimensional design concepts integrated with discussions and studio work that emphasize the formal elements of design along with issues of identity, culture, collaborative experience, and exposure to metaphor and symbol.
NEW SECTION
Visual Fundamentals (Cr.3)
50:080:102:Sec.J6:84527FA 238
7/21-8/12 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Filbert
Email: jfilbert@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite to all upper-level studio classes. An expansive exploration of traditional and contemporary two-dimensional design concepts integrated with discussions and studio work that emphasize the formal elements of design along with issues of identity, culture, collaborative experience, and exposure to metaphor and symbol.
Three-Dimensional Foundations (Cr.3)
50:080:103:Sec.J3:84006 FA 101
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Demaray
Email: demaray@camden.rutgers.edu
A hands-on exploration of architectural, natural, and digital design in three dimensions. This studio-based class addresses how to create in the physical world and answers the question of why forms take the shapes that they do.
Ceramic I (Cr.3)
50:080:211:Sec.A3:82179 FA 101
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Demaray
Email: demaray@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:080:102 or permission of instructor. Material fee: $35.00. This class is a dynamic, hands-on exploration of clay geared to art majors and non-art majors alike. Through creating works in clay, this course addresses surface treatment, slab-building, hand building, figurative work, glazing techniques, firing processes, and portraiture in ceramic sculpture. Communication through visual mediums and the role of art in society will be covered. For students wishing a Fine Art immersion experience during the summer session, this class has been created as a companion course to Drawing I amd may be taken concurrently.
Introduction to Computer Graphics (Cr.3)
50:080:213:Sec.A2:80933 FA 117
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Bednarik
Email: findme@mattb.tv
Introduction to the use of the computer as a tool for art and design used in the graphic arts and communication industries. Fundamentals of the Macintosh environment and system commands. Illustration, two-dimensional paint, and object-oriented programs. Hands-on experience with the Macintosh computer, laser scanners, and printers. Methods for developing graphic presentations and intangibles that provide originality and variety in a creative field.
Drawing I (Cr.3)
50:080:221:Sec.A1:81857 FA 238
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Demaray
Email: demaray@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite to all upper-level studio classes. Pre or co-requisite: 50:080:102 or permission of instructor. This class is a dynamic, hands-on exploration of drawing geared to art majors and non-art majors alike. Through field trips, group projects and individual studio time, this course covers basics of two-dimensional creation as they relate to the art of drawing. Students will learn how to create depth, perspective and illusion by drawing on-site, drawing from the figure, learning how to work from the imagination and creating portraiture. Communication through visual mediums and the roll of art in society will also be covered. For students wishig a Fine Art immersion experience during summer session, this class has been created as a companion course to Ceramics I and may be taken concurrently.
Figure Drawing (Cr.3)
50:080:223:Sec.D6:84008 FA 238
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Filbert
Email: jfilbert@camden.rutgers.edu
COURSE CANCELLED 6/09/08.
Digital Photography I (Cr.3)
50:080:264:Sec.D6:81661 FA 113
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Hohing
Email: khohing@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:080:261 or permission of instructor. May be repeated for credit with permission of instructor. An introduction to photography using digital technology. State-of-the-art digital cameras and photo-editing software will be utilized. The course will focus on the art of photographic sight with the goal of coherent portfolio creation.
Animation Fundamentals (Cr.3)
50:080:279:Sec.D3:81662 FA 113
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Thivierge
Contact department at 856-225-6176.
Pre- or corequisite: 50:080:213. Prepares students for three-dimensional animation by providing exercises in a variety of key concepts in animation, as well as experience with a number of software programs. May be taken as part of a minor in film studies.
Design of the World Wide Web (Cr.3)
50:080:346:Sec.A6:82217 FA 117
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Whyte, Robert
Email: rwhyte@camden.rutgers.edu
COURSE CANCELLED 5/8/08.
Elementary Art Education (Cr.3)
50:080:355:Sec.D2:84007 FA 238
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Staff
Contact department at 856-225-6176.
Prerequisite: 50:964:354 or permission of instructor. Survey of the artistic growth of children. Survey of philosophies, issues, methods, materials, resources, processes, and strategies for teaching art in the elementary grades and integrating art into the curriculum.
Video and Film Production (Cr.3)
50:080:447:Sec.D6:82181 FA 117
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Emmons
Email: raemmons@camden.rutgers.edu
COURSE CANCELLED 3/14/08.
Special Topics in Art: Pottery Wheel (Cr.3)
50:080:479:Sec.J3:84009
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Filbert
Email: jfilbert@camden.rutgers.edu
Note: Off Campus Course at Filbert Studio - 305 Bensen St. in Camden, NJ 08103. The class will focus on the basic skills of working on the potter’s wheel. This will include making functional vessels, throwing lids, and applying handles. Glaze decorative techinques will also be introduced. The class will be held at Professor Filbert’s studio, five blocks from campus. Street parking.
Special Topics in Art: Art in the Landscape (Cr.3)
50:080:484:Sec.J3:84010
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Hohing/Garrity
Emails: khohing@camden.rutgers.edu or bgarrity@camden.rutgers.edu
COURSE CANCELLED 7/1/08.
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ART HISTORY
Introduction to Art History I (Cr.3)
50:082:101:Sec.A2:82606 FA 217
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Kruckenberg
Contact department at 856-225-6176.
A chronological survey of the visual arts as an expression of the mind and culture of Western civilization. Covers prehistoric, Near Eastern, Egyptian, Greek, Roman, and medieval art and architecture.
Introduction to Art History II (Cr.3)
50:082:102:Sec.J2:84012 FA 217
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Cyril
Email: jwcyril@yahoo.com
COURSE CANCELLED 7/14/08.
Art Appreciation (Cr.3)
50:082:103:Sec.D6:81432 FA 217
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Garrity
Email: bgarrity@camden.rutgers.edu
Introduces the principles, techniques, and approaches to the creation and analysis of works of art and presents an overview of the great landmarks of art from classical Greece through the 20th century.
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MUSIC
Introduction to Music Theory (Cr.3)
50:700:125:Sec.D1:80936 FA 215
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Lally
Contact department at 856-225-6176.
Intended primarily for nonmajors and minors. An introduction to the elements of tonal music. Provides students with an understanding of rhythm, pitch, keyboard, scales, key signatures, intervals, and triads.
Introduction to Music (Cr.3)
50:700:202:Sec.D3:84043 FA 215
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Zavadsky
Email: zavadsky@camden.rutgers.edu
No previous musical experience necessary. An approach toward music appreciation that emphasizes the cultural influences that have determined the varied musical languages throughout the world.
Computer Applications I (Cr.3)
50:700:271:Sec.A3:82617 FA 212
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Downham
Email: dsecede1@yahoo.com
COURSE CANCELLED 5/8/08.
Computer Applications I (Cr.3)
50:700:271:Sec.D3:84041 FA 212
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Downham
Email: dsecede1@yahoo.com
COURSE CANCELLED 6/3/08.
Introduction to Conducting (Cr.2)
50:700:329:Sec.D2:84044 FA 215
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 10:00am-11:50pm
Zavadsky
Email: zavadsky@camden.rutgers.edu
COURSE CANCELLED 6/3/08.
Jazz/Rock/Folk/Pop (Cr.3)
50:700:348:Sec.J6:82197 FA 215
7/21-8/12 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Heffernan
Email: musicmch@camden.rutgers.edu
A survey of contemporary trends in popular music. Outlines the basic features of each type, with examples drawn from outstanding performances of the past and present.
Introduction to Music Composition (Cr.3)
50:700:385:Sec.A2:84042 FA 215
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Staneck
Email: fjs@camden.rutgers.edu
COURSE CANCELLED 5/19/08.
Opera/Musical Theatre (Cr.3)
50:701:350:Sec.J6:84128 FA 224
7/21-8/12 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Wright, Mathew
Email: chauvelin128@msn.com
COURSE CANCELLED 7/1/08.
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APPLIED MUSIC
Music lessons may be arranged for most instruments and voice. Scheduled by arrangement with the Fine Arts Department. Instruction for instruments not listed below is available. For further information, contact the Department at 856-225-6176. Please note: an additional fee of $30 per lesson for private instruction is required.
Piano I (Cr.1)
50:701:161:Sec.T1:80480
5/27-8/13 Time by arrangement
Staff
Piano II (Cr.1)
50:701:162:Sec.T1:80481
5/27-8/13 Time by arrangement
Staff
Voice I (Cr.1)
50:701:169:Sec.T1:80482
5/27-8/13 Time by arrangement
Staff
Voice II (Cr.1)
50:701:170:Sec.T1:80483
5/27-8/13 Time by arrangement
Staff
Guitar I (Cr.1)
50:701:175:Sec.T1:80484
5/27-8/13 Time by arrangement
Staff
Instrumental Methods: Strings (Cr.3)
50:701:478:Sec.A2:84130 FA 229
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Arnarson
Email: stefanar@camden.rutgers.edu
COURSE CANCELLED 5/19/08.
Instrumental Methods: Woodwinds (Cr.3)
50:701:488:Sec.D3:84129 FA 229
6/23-7/3 M,Tu,W,Th 12:00pm-5:00pm
Barclay
Email: pbarclay@chclc.org
COURSE CANCELLED 6/3/08.
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SPEECH
Fundamentals of Speech (Cr.3)
50:950:261:Sec.A2:84079 FA 219
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Ellis, N.
Email: ellis@camden.rutgers.edu
COURSE CANCELLED 5/8/08.
Public Speaking (Cr.3)
50:950:281:Sec.D2:81442 FA 227
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Shockley
Email: Edshockley@edshockley.com
Principles of public speaking. Practice in preparation, composition, and delivery of various types of speeches.
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THEATRE
Introduction to Contemporary Theater (G)(Cr.3)
50:965:201:Sec.D6:82641 FA 219
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Wright, M.
Email: chauvelin128@msn.com
COURSE CANCELLED 6/09/08.
Acting & Directing (Cr.3)
50:965:271:Sec.D3:82642 FA 217
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Staff
COURSE CANCELLED 6/09/08.
Performance (Cr.3)
50:965:301:Sec.J6:84087 FA 224
7/21-8/12 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Wright, M.
Email: chauvelin128@msn.com
COURSE CANCELLED 7/1/08.
Theater and Film in Europe (Cr.3)
50:965:345:Sec.A6:84084 FA 217
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Bernstein, P.
Email: paulbern@camden.rutgers.edu
Examines content and performance styles that are specific to European countries/cultures/individuals. From German performance artist Oskar Schlemmer to the experimental films of Werner Herzog, from theater director Jerzy Grotowski to the moving images of Andrzej Wadj in Poland, there is an experimental realm in 20th-century Europe with influences and sensibilities well apart from our general awareness in the United States. Influences are traced from a present-day perspective of 20th-century European history and colonialism to past and current expressions of unrest in former Eastern bloc countries. Political theater in the United Kingdom will serve as a core for our comparisons between artists, intentions, archtypes, and societal guidelines to be upheld or torn down like the Berlin Wall.
Special Topics: African-American Theater History (Cr.3)
50:965:355:Sec.B6:84086 FA 242
5/27-7/2 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-8:30pm
Shockley
Email: Edshockley@edshockley.com
COURSE CANCELLED 5/19/08.
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FOREIGN LANGUAGES
(French, German, Greek, Italian, Latin, Latin American Studies, Spanish)
FRENCH
Elementary French I (Cr.4)
50:420:101:Sec.A1:80403 ATG 219
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 9:00am-12:30pm
Ellman
Email: nellman@camden.rutgers.edu
Note special schedule. Lab attendance required. For students with no knowledge of French or with no more than two years of high school French. Entering students with previous French study will be placed according to the results of a proficiency exam. Students with three or more years of French in high school may not take 101 for credit. Lays a foundation for speaking, understanding, reading, and writing the language.
Elementary French II (Cr.4)
50:420:102:Sec.D1:81307 ATG 218
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 9:00am-12:30pm
Hippolyte
Email: hippolyt@camden.rutgers.edu
Note special schedule. Prerequisite: 50:420:101 or equivalent. Lab attendance required. For students with little knowledge of French or with no more than three years of high school French. Entering students will be placed according to the results of a proficiency exam. Students with more than three years of French in high school may not take 102 for credit. Note that 102 is the minimum level for fulfilling the college general degree requirement in foreign languages. Continuation of 50:420:101.
French Literature in English Translation: Survey of French Cinema (G)(Cr.3)
50:420:240:Sec.D6:81053 ATG 109
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Ellman
Email: nellman@camden.rutgers.edu
COURSE CANCELLED 6/09/08.
French Literature in English Translation: The French Short Story (G)(Cr.3)
50:420:241:Sec.J2:81868 ATG 205
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Ellman
Email: nellman@camden.rutgers.edu
Satisfies either the literature component of the Literature and Fine Arts requirement or the Diversity/Global requirement for the ’03 and later catalogs. Satisfies the foreign language requirement of pre-’03 catalogs. Course taught in English. Readings in English translation and discussion of short stories by major French authors such as Balzac, Flaubert, Maupassant, Merimee.
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GERMAN
Elementary German I (Cr.4)
50:470:101:Sec.A1:81869 ATG 224
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 9:00am-12:30pm
Rainey
Email: drainey8464@msn.com
Note special schedule. Lab attendance required. For students with no knowledge of German or with no more than two years of high school German. Entering students with previous German study will be placed according to the results of a proficiency exam. Students with three or more years of German in high school may not take 101 for credit. Training in pronunciation, grammar, composition, conversation, and in the reading of simple texts.
Elementary German II (Cr.4)
50:470:102:Sec.D1:84034 ATG 224
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 9:00am-12:30pm
Rainey
Email: drainey8464@msn.com
Note special schedule. Prerequisite: 50:470:101 or equivalent. Lab attendance required. For students with little knowledge of German or with no more than three years of high school German. Entering students will be placed according to the results of a proficiency exam. Students with more than three years of German in high school may not take 102 for credit. Note that 102 is the minimum level for fulfilling the college general degree requirement in foreign languages. Continuation of 50:470:101.
German Literature in English Translation II (G)(Cr.3)
50:470:262:Sec.A1:82814 ATG 225
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Farquhar
Email: johnjfarquhar@comcast.net
For students with no knowledge of German. Taught entirely in English. Surveys German literature from the beginnings to modern times with a study of selected works.
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GREEK
Ancient Greek I (Cr.4)
50:490:101:Sec.B2:82191 CS 202
5/27-7/3 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:20pm
Budin
Email: sbudin@camden.rutgers.edu
Note special schedule. Prerequisite: For students with no knowledge of (Classical) Greek or with no more than two years of high school Greek. Students with three or more years of Greek in high school may not take 101 for credit. Introduction to the fundamentals of ancient Greek grammar and vocabulary, focusing on the dialect used by Plato and Aristotle. Prepares students to read both classical Greek and the New Testament. Textbook: A New Introduction to Greek by Chase and Phillips, 3rd Edition (ISBN 0674616006). Students should have the text book for the first day of class.
Ancient Greek II (Cr.4)
50:490:102:Sec.H2:84035 CS 202
7/7-8/12 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:20pm
Budin
Email: sbudin@camden.rutgers.edu
Note special schedule. Prerequisite: 50:490:101 or equivalent. For students with little knowledge of (Classical) Greek or with no more than three years of high school Greek. Students with more than three years of Greek in high school may not take 102 for credit. Note that 102 is the minimum level for fulfilling the college general degree requirement in foreign languages. A continuation of Elementary Greek I. Textbook: A New Introduction to Greek by Chase and Phillips, 3rd Edition (ISBN 0674616006). Students should have the textbook for the first day of class.
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ITALIAN
Elementary Italian I (Cr.4)
50:560:101:Sec.A1:81932 ATG 105
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 9:00am-12:30pm
DiSanzo
Email: quidnovi2@msn.com
Note special schedule. Lab attendance required. For students with no knowledge of Italian or with no more than two years of high school Italian. Students with three or more years of Italian in high school may not take 101 for credit. Lays a foundation for speaking, understanding, reading and writing the language.
Elementary Italian II (Cr.4)
50:560:102:Sec.D1:81933 ATG 105
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 9:00am-12:30pm
DiSanzo
Email: quidnovi2@msn.com
Note special schedule. Lab attendance required. Prerequisite: 50:560:101 or equivalent. For students with little knowledge of Italian or with no more than three years of high school Italian. Students with more than three years of Italian in high school may not take 102 for credit. Note that 102 is the minimum level for fulfilling the college general degree requirement in foreign languages. A continuation of Elementary Italian I.
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LATIN
Latin I (Cr.3)
50:580:101:Sec.B1:81911 CS 202
5/27-7/3 M,Tu,W,Th 8:45am-10:35am
Budin
Email: sbudin@camden.rutgers.edu
For students with no knowledge of Latin or with no more than two years of high school Latin. Students with three or more years of Latin in high school may not take 101 for credit. Beginning course in Latin language: grammar, vocabulary, and syntax. Testbook: Wheelock’s Latin, by F. Wheellock and R. LaFleur, 6th Edition Revised (ISBN 0060783710). Students should have the textbook for the first day of class.
Latin II (Cr.3)
50:580:102:Sec.H1:81912 CS 202
7/7-8/12 M,Tu,W,Th 8:45am-10:35am
Budin
Email: sbudin@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:580:101. For students with little knowledge of Latin or with no more than three years of high school Latin. Students with more than three years of Latin in high school may not take 102 for credit. Note that 102 is the minimum level for fulfilling the college general requirement (’03 Catalog) in foreign language. A continuation of Latin I. Textbook: Wheelock’s Latin, by F. Wheelock and R. LaFleur, 6th Edition Revised (ISBN 0060783710). Students should have the textbook for the first day of class.
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SPANISH
Elementary Spanish I (Cr.4)
50:940:101:Sec.A1:84075 ATG 108
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 9:00am-12:30pm
Molano
Email: cmolano@camden.rutgers.edu
Note special schedule. Lab attendance required. For students with no knowledge of Spanish or with no more than two years of high school Spanish. Entering students with previous Spanish study will be placed according to the results of a proficiency exam. Students with three or more years of Spanish in high school may not take 101 for credit. Training designed to lay a foundation for speaking, writing, reading, and understanding the language.
Elementary Spanish I (Cr.4)
50:940:101:Sec.A6:80427 ATG 108
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Block
Email:
Note special schedule. Lab attendance required. For students with no knowledge of Spanish or with no more than two years of high school Spanish. Entering students with previous Spanish study will be placed according to the results of a proficiency exam. Students with three or more years of Spanish in high school may not take 101 for credit. Training designed to lay a foundation for speaking, writing, reading, and understanding the language.
NEW SECTION
Elementary Spanish I (Cr.4)
50:940:101:Sec.D1:84587 FA 221
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 9:00am-12:00pm
Raden
Note special schedule. Lab attendance required. For students with no knowledge of Spanish or with no more than two years of high school Spanish. Entering students with previous Spanish study will be placed according to the results of a proficiency exam. Students with three or more years of Spanish in high school may not take 101 for credit. Training designed to lay a foundation for speaking, writing, reading, and understanding the language.
Elementary Spanish I (Cr.4)
50:940:101:Sec.D2:82201 ATG 109
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-2:20pm
Fiedler
Email: fiedler@camden.rutgers.edu
Note special schedule. Lab attendance required. For students with no knowledge of Spanish or with no more than two years of high school Spanish. Entering students with previous Spanish study will be placed according to the results of a proficiency exam. Students with three or more years of Spanish in high school may not take 101 for credit. Training designed to lay a foundation for speaking, writing, reading, and understanding the language.
Elementary Spanish II (Cr.4)
50:940:102:Sec.D1:84076 ATG 108
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 9:00am-12:30pm
Molano
Email: cmolano@camden.rutgers.edu
Note special schedule. Lab attendance required. Prerequisite: 50:940:101 or equivalent. For students with little knowledge of Spanish or with no more than three years of high school Spanish. Entering students will be placed according to the results of a proficiency exam. Students with four or more years of Spanish in high school may not take 102 for credit. Note that 102 is the minimum level for fulfilling the college general degree requirement in foreign languages. Continuation of 50:940:101.
Elementary Spanish II (Cr.4)
50:940:102:Sec.D6:80428 ATG 108
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Block
Email: bblock@camden.rutgers.edu
Note special schedule. Lab attendance required. Prerequisite: 50:940:101 or equivalent. For students with little knowledge of Spanish or with no more than three years of high school Spanish. Entering students will be placed according to the results of a proficiency exam. Students with four or more years of Spanish in high school may not take 102 for credit. Note that 102 is the minimum level for fulfilling the college general degree requirement in foreign languages. Continuation of 50:940:101.
NEW SECTION
Elementary Spanish II (Cr.4)
50:940:102:Sec.J1:84588 ATG 108
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 9:00am-12:00pm
Radon
Note special schedule. Lab attendance required. Prerequisite: 50:940:101 or equivalent. For students with little knowledge of Spanish or with no more than three years of high school Spanish. Entering students will be placed according to the results of a proficiency exam. Students with four or more years of Spanish in high school may not take 102 for credit. Note that 102 is the minimum level for fulfilling the college general degree requirement in foreign languages. Continuation of 50:940:101.
Elementary Spanish II (Cr.4)
50:940:102:Sec.J2:82202 ATG 109
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-2:20pm
Fiedler
Email: fiedler@camden.rutgers.edu
Note special schedule. Lab attendance required. Prerequisite: 50:940:101 or equivalent. For students with little knowledge of Spanish or with no more than three years of high school Spanish. Entering students will be placed according to the results of a proficiency exam. Students with four or more years of Spanish in high school may not take 102 for credit. Note that 102 is the minimum level for fulfilling the college general degree requirement in foreign languages. Continuation of 50:940:101.
Intermediate Spanish I (G)(Cr.4)
50:940:121:Sec.D1:81882 ATG 223
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 9:00am-12:30pm
Ellis
Email: edwine@camden.rutgers.edu
Note special schedule. Lab attendance required. Prerequisite: 50:940:102 or equivalent or sufficient score on proficiency examination. Oral and written practice, emphasizing grammar review, and reading of selected materials.
Intermediate Spanish II (G)(Cr.4)
50:940:122:Sec.J1:81883 ATG 223
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 9:00am-12:30pm
Ellis
Email: edwine@camden.rutgers.edu
Note special schedule. Lab attendance required. Prerequisite: 50:940:121. Grammar review with reading and oral practice. Spanish 122 is a prerequisite for courses at the 200 level.
Civilization of Spanish Peoples (G)(Cr.3)
50:940:151:Sec.D6:81314 ATG 121
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Andrews-Williams
Email: keaw1213@hotmail.com
Satisfies either the literature component of the Literature and Fine Arts requirement or the Global requirement for the ’03 and later catalogs. Satisfies the foreign language requirement of pre-’03 catalogs. May not be used for Spanish major or minor requirements. Course taught in English. A study of the principal characteristics of Spain or Spanish-American countries as manifested in their history, literature, arts and daily life.
Civilization of Spanish Peoples (G)(Cr.3)
50:940:151:Sec.J6:80429 ATG 121
7/21-8/12 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Andrews-Williams
Email: keaw1213@hotmail.com
Satisfies either the literature component of the Literature and Fine Arts requirement or the Global requirement for the ’03 and later catalogs. Satisfies the foreign language requirement of pre-’03 catalogs. May not be used for Spanish major or minor requirements. Course taught in English. A study of the principal characteristics of Spain or Spanish-American countries as manifested in their history, literature, arts and daily life.
Hablando de Cine (Speaking of Cinema) (G)(Cr.3)
50:940:292:Sec.D1:84078 ATG 212
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Laguna
Email: alaguna@camden.rutgers.edu
Conducted in Spanish, this is a conversation class for advanced-intermediate students of Spanish intended to provide an introduction to the world of Spanish and Latin-American film. The course supplies the historical, cultural, and cinematographic background of Oscar-awarded/nominated films that have been selected for their artistic qualities and cultural transcendence.
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GEOLOGY
Introduction to the Earth (Cr.3)
50:460:101:Sec.J6:80404 FA 110
7/21-8/12 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Gambs
Email: JGambs@pit.edu
Satisfies the college’s natural science requirement non-science. A one-term non laboratory description of the earth; processes that affect its composition and architecture; the interaction of solid earth, atmosphere, and oceans. Several field trips may be scheduled.
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HISTORY
Study Abroad in Greece: Greek History (Cr.3)
21:510:299:Sec.H1
7/9-8/12 Time by arrangement
Staff
Corequisite: 21:190:299. Note special schedule. Off campus course. Additional fees apply. This course, taught in Greece during the summer, introduces students to two millennia of Greek art and architecture. Visiting numerous museums, archaeological sites, this course examines sculpture, painting, and architecture from the Bronze Age, Archaic, Classical Hellenistic and Roman periods in particular. It is taught and must be registered in conjunction with Classics 190:299. For more complete information and fee schedule, see the website at http://studyabroad.rutgers.edu/program_greece.html.
Development of the United States I (Cr.3)
50:512:201:Sec.A6:81871 CS 202
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Demirjian
Email: rdemirj@camden.rutgers.edu
Introduction to American history, with emphasis on political, economic, and social factors from the colonial period through the Civil War and Reconstruction periods.
Development of the United States II (Cr.3)
50:512:202:Sec.D6:84036 CS 203
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Pfeuffer-Scherer
Email: dolo@temple.edu
Continuation of 50:512:201, with emphasis on the development of industrial and corporate America, with evolution of politics and reform, and the role of the United States in world affairs.
Introductory Topics in American History: Gender & Sexuality in 20th Century America (D)(Cr.3)
50:512:280:Sec.A2:82194 ATG 221
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Reinhard
dreinhard@temple.edu
Crosslisted with 50:988:299. This course explores shifting cultural definitions of gender and sexuality in the United States throughout the twentieth century. How did various Americans classify "proper" roles for men and women? What characteristics were considered "masculine" and "feminine" at particular moments? How did different people understand and define "normal" and "abnormal" sexual desire and sexual behavior? We will highlight the ways in which class and race shaped and were shaped by gender and sexuality.
Introductory Topics in American History: The African-American Woman (D)(Cr.3)
50:512:281:Sec.A3:82588 ATG 106
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Gallon
Email: kgallon@camden.rutgers.edu
COURSE CANCELLED 5/19/08.
The Age of Jacksonian Democracy (Cr.3)
50:512:315:Sec.D6:82616 CS 202
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Demirjian
Email: rdemirj@camden.rutgers.edu
American society and politics after the War of 1812, featuring economic transformations, political demoncratization, social reforms, sectionalism, and expansion.
Civil Rights Movement (D)(Cr.3)
50:512:340:Sec.A2:84037 ATG 106
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Glasker
Email: glasker@camden.rutgers.edu
Intensive examination of the civil rights movement including the legal strategy of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) to challenge de jure segregation. Focuses on the period 1954-1968.
Special Topics in American History: Slavery, Abolition & American Culture (Cr.3)
50:512:380:Sec.A6:84038 CS 203
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Pfeuffer-Scherer
Email: dolo@temple.edu
COURSE CANCELLED 5/8/08.
Special Topics in American History: The Civil War: A War on Two Fronts (Cr.3)
50:512:382:Sec.J6:82802 ATG 124
7/21-8/12 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Seitter
Email: john@visitsouthjersey.com
This course will study the key military campaigns of the American Civil War and examine their effects on the home fronts of the Confederate and United States of America. We will also examine the long term social, political and economic changes that were experienced in the aftermath of this seminal conflict.
American Lives: History and Biography (Cr.3)
50:512:392:Sec.D2:84004 ATG 106
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Glasker
Email: glasker@camden.rutgers.edu
Crosslisted with 50:014:382. Examines the relationship of history and biography. Explores how the lives of individual Americans can be used to illuminate critical themes in American History and demonstrates how individual lives are shaped by historical forces, including figures such as Dr. Charles Drew, Rosa Parks and Malcolm X.
Introductory Topics in World History: World History (G)(Cr.3)
50:516:280:Sec.J6:82196 ATG 205
7/21-8/12 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Demirjian
Email: rdemirj@camden.rutgers.edu
This course will explore the means by which the far-flung world systems of pre-modern times came into contact with another—both voluntarily and involuntarily—and the resultant consequences which have shaped the past and continue to shape the world we inhabit today. This course will focus on the role of political economy in bringing about these seismic shifts in wealth, power, and demography.
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MATHEMATICS
(SEE ALSO STATISTICS)
Elementary Alegbra (Cr.N3)
50:640:041:Sec.B1:80405 ATG 101
5/27-7/3 M,Tu,W,Th 8:45am-10:35am
Bourne
Email: cbourne@camden.rutgers.edu
For students who do not have the usual background in mathematics for college admission. The system of integers, exponentiation, graphing, solution of equations, and basic notions of geometry.
Intermediate Algebra (Cr.N3)
50:640:042:Sec.H1:80406 ATG 101
7/7-8/12 M,Tu,W,Th 8:40am-10:35am
Zubry
Email: boriszubry@comcast.net
Prerequisite: 50:640:041 or placement by Basic Skills Tests. Study of algebraic operations on polynomials, integral and rational exponents, linear and quadratic equations, systems of equations, and the function concept.
Fundamental Math Systems I (Cr.3)
50:640:103:Sec.D2:80518 ATG 207
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Singh
Email: varun@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:640:042 or appropriate score on mathematics placement examination. Particularly suitable for students of elementary education. Sets, logic, number systems, and algebraic structures.
Fundamental Math Systems II (Cr.3)
50:640:104:Sec.J2:80519 ATG 105
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Anyanwu
Email: athananyanwu@aol.com
Prerequisite: 50:640:042 or appropriate score on mathematics placement examination. Particularly suitable for students of elementary education. Informal geometry, measurement, coordinate geometry, transformational geometry, and introduction to computers.
Introduction to Math Thought (Cr.3)
50:640:106:Sec.J6:80407 ATG 221
7/21-8/12 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Birnbaum
Email: edite@bordent.com
Prerequisite: 50:640:042 or appropriate score on mathematics placement examination. For the student who has serious interest in learning something about mathematical thought and its applications, but who is not planning to major in mathematics. An understanding of the topics chosen for illustrating mathematical thinking within the reach of the student with the usual high school background.
Numbers and Beyond (Cr.3)
50:640:108:Sec.A2:81296 ATG 113
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
D'Antonio
Email: michaeladantonio@aol.com
Prerequisite: 50:640:042 or appropriate score on the mathematics placement examination. This course is designed for students who are considering secondary certification. In addition, it also satisfies the 3-credit mathematics requirement for any other major. Study of the properties and qualities of number systems and spatial relationships in geometry. Topics needed to explore the developmental beauty of mathematics discussed. Some are logic and reasoning; set theory and number theory; function (not limited to linear); sequences; basic concepts from calculus; group and field concepts; and spatial concepts, such as rotations, translations, and geometric objects.
Precalculus for Business, Economics, and Life Sciences (Cr.3)
50:640:113:Sec.A6:80408 ATG 101
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Badame
Email: georgemare@verizon.net
Prerequisite: 50:640:042 or appropriate score on the mathematics placement examination. Credit not given for both this course and 50:640:115. A nonrequired preparatory course for those students who must take 50:640:130. A study of real numbers with regard to algebraic operations and order properties. Introduction to complex numbers and logrithmic and exponential functions.
Precalculus for Business, Economics, and Life Sciences (Cr.3)
50:640:113:Sec.D2:82176 ATG 101
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Gurfinkiel
Email: gurfink@eden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:640:042 or appropriate score on the mathematics placement examination. Credit not given for both this course and 50:640:115. A nonrequired preparatory course for those students who must take 50:640:130. A study of real numbers with regard to algebraic operations and order properties. Introduction to complex numbers and logrithmic and exponential functions.
Precalculus College Mathematics (Cr.3)
50:640:115:Sec.A1:80409 ATG 223
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Huh
Email: euhasu4@yahoo.co.kr
Prerequisite: 50:640:042 or appropriate score on the mathematics placement examination. Credit not given for both this course and 50:640:113. A nonrequired preparatory course for those students who must take 50:640:121-122. Algebraic expressions; algebraic equations; functions; graphing; and exponential, logarithmic and trigonometric functions.
Precalculus College Mathematics (Cr.3)
50:640:115:Sec.J2:81180 ATG 101
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Creel
Email: bcreel@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:640:042 or appropriate score on the mathematics placement examination. Credit not given for both this course and 50:640:113. A nonrequired preparatory course for those students who must take 50:640:121-122. Algebraic expressions; algebraic equations; functions; graphing; and exponential, logarithmic and trigonometric functions.
Unified Calculus I (Cr.4)
50:640:121:Sec.D2:80410 ATG 201
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-2:20pm
Nerurkar
Email: nmahesh@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:640:115 or accepted score on the mathematics placement examination. Students who plan to take more than one term of calculus should follow the sequence 50:640:121-122. Credit will not, in general, be given for more than one of the courses 50:640:116, 121, or 130. An introduction to analytic geometry, differentiation of algebraic and transcendental functions, applications of differentiation, and a brief introduction to integration.
Unified Calculus II (Cr.4)
50:640:122:Sec.A2:80411 ATG 223
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-2:20pm
Buthusiem
Email: gregoryb@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:640:121 or equivalent. An extensive introduction to integration and the definite integral, transcendental functions, methods of integration, applications, and infinite series.
Unified Calculus II (Cr.4)
50:640:122:Sec.J2:80412 ATG 106
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-2:20pm
Nerurkar
Email: nmahesh@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:640:121 or equivalent. An extensive introduction to integration and the definite integral, transcendental functions, methods of integration, applications, and infinite series.
Calculus for Business, Economics and Life Sciences (Cr.3)
50:640:130:Sec.A2:80413 ATG 201
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
More
Email: paulmore@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:640:113 or appropriate score on the mathematics placement examination. Students who plan to take more than one term of calculus should follow the sequence 50:640:121-122. Credit will not, in general, be given for more than one of the courses 50:640:116, 121, or 130. A one-term survey of the elements of calculus with emphasis on applications in business, economics, and life sciences. Topics covered are basic algebra, derivatives, maximum/minimum problems, integration, and partial differentiation.
Calculus for Business, Economics and Life Sciences (Cr.3)
50:640:130:Sec.D2:84040 ATG 222
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Freeman
Contact Math Dept at 856-225-6076
Prerequisite: 50:640:113 or appropriate score on the mathematics placement examination. Students who plan to take more than one term of calculus should follow the sequence 50:640:121-122. Credit will not, in general, be given for more than one of the courses 50:640:116, 121, or 130. A one-term survey of the elements of calculus with emphasis on applications in business, economics, and life sciences. Topics covered are basic algebra, derivatives, maximum/minimum problems, integration, and partial differentiation.
Calculus for Business, Economics and Life Sciences (Cr.3)
50:640:130:Sec.J6:80414 ATG 101
7/21-8/12 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Ma
Email: dangyuan@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:640:113 or appropriate score on the mathematics placement examination. Students who plan to take more than one term of calculus should follow the sequence 50:640:121-122. Credit will not, in general, be given for more than one of the courses 50:640:116, 121, or 130. A one-term survey of the elements of calculus with emphasis on applications in business, economics, and life sciences. Topics covered are basic algebra, derivatives, maximum/minimum problems, integration, and partial differentiation.
Unified Calculus III (Cr.4)
50:640:221:Sec.A2:80415 ATG 109
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-2:20pm
Toth
Email: gtoth@camden.rutgers.edu
Prerequisite: 50:640:122. Solid analytic geometry, partial differentiation, multiple integrals, and applications.
Elementary Differential Equations (Cr.3)
50:640:314:Sec.D6:80416 ATG 219
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Leiderman
Email: regularset@yahoo.com
Prerequisite: 50:640:221 and 250, or permission of instructor. Theory of ordinary differential equations. Power series methods and existence and uniqueness theorems. Applications to problems in economics, biology, chemistry, physics, and engineering.
Visualizing Mathematics by Computer (Cr.3)
50:640:347:Sec.H7:81657 FA 242
7/7-8/11 M & W 6:00pm-9:40pm
Toth
Email: gtoth@camden.rutgers.edu
Crosslisted with 50:198:487, 56:645:556. Prerequisite: 50:640:121, 122, 221, or permission of instructor. Recommended also for students majoring in computer science as an elective. A comprehensive introduction to symbolic computational packages and scientific visualization through examples from calculus and geometry. Covers two-dimensional, three-dimensional, and animated computer graphics using Maple, Mathematica, and Geomview. No programming knowledge required.
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NURSING
Nutrition (Cr.3)
50:520:255:Sec.J2:81872 ATG 206
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Nielsen
Email: jmniels@juno.com
Prerequisite: Nursing majors: 50:160:107-108. Nonnursing majors: permission of instructor. An examination of the basic principles of nutrition as applied to the needs of people from all age, cultural, and economic groups.
Issues in Nursing (Cr.3)
50:705:491:Sec.D1:80417 ATG 406
6/18 (W) 5:00pm-9:00pm; 6/23 (M), 6/26 (Th), 6/30 (M), 7/1 (Tu) 9:00am-4:00pm; 7/2 (W) 9:00am-5:00pm
Frame
Email: BunkyFrame@aol.com
Note special schedule. Open only to senior year Nursing students. An overview of issues that face the profession, including union or professional representatives, client advocacy, continuing education, moral and ethical concerns, and accountability. As new issues arise and old issues are resolved, course content is altered.
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PHILOSOPHY
Introduction to Philosophy (Cr.3)
50:730:111:Sec.A3:81437 ATG 206
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Young
Email: phillipy@camden.rutgers.edu
An exploration of philosophical problems, such as truth, justice, mind, and person, with a view to surveying the field and locating such particular philosophical specialties within it as logic, ethics, and metaphysics.
Introduction to Philosophy (Cr.3)
50:730:111:Sec.B6:81683 ATG 218
5/27-7/2 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-8:30pm
Pollitt
Email: epollitt@verizon.net
An exploration of philosophical problems, such as truth, justice, mind, and person, with a view to surveying the field and locating such particular philosophical specialties within it as logic, ethics, and metaphysics.
Introduction to Logic (Cr.3)
50:730:201:Sec.J1:81689 ATG 106
7/21-8/12 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Sacks
Email: bksacks@yahoo.com
An introduction to modern symbolic logic, with an emphasis on methods for the evaluation and construction of deductive arguments, and on the concepts of validity, consistence, and implication. Topics selected from among the following: informal fallacies, logic and ordinary language, induction, the scientific method, the logic of Aristotle, and the relation between logic and other areas in philosophy.
Eastern Philosophies (G)(Cr.3)
50:730:215:Sec.J6:84045 ATG 105
7/21-8/12 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Magyar
Email: magyar13@earthlink.net
Eastern Philosophies is an introduction and review of significant perennial issues in philosophies from India,China, Tibet, Japan, and the Middle East. The course aims at developing an appreciation of Eastern cultures, an awareness of perennial issues in philosophy, and an introduction to significant Eastern philosophers and philosophies. We will be reading primary sources in Eastern philosophy as well as secondary sources.
Contemporary Moral Issues (Cr.3)
50:730:315:Sec.D2:81873 FA 217
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Young
Email: phillipy@camden.rutgers.edu
A consideration of such issues as prejudice and discrimination, abortion and fetal research, poverty and hunger, crime and punishment, war and death, suicide and euthanasia.
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PHYSICS
(SEE ALSO ASTRONOMY, GEOLOGY)
Elements of Physics I (Cr.3)
50:750:131:Sec.D1:80848 ATG 222
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Gurfinkiel
Email: gurfinkiel@camden.rutgers.edu
Pre/Corequisites: 50:640:121, 50:750:133. Intended for physics and engineering majors, but open to other qualified students. A calculus-based introduction to classical physics: mechanics, heat, wave motion, sound, electricity, and light.
Elements of Physics Lab I (Cr.1)
50:750:133:Sec.D2:80851 BSB 420
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Brooks, E
Corequisite: 50:750:131. Lab fee: $25. The laboratory illustrates phenomena and concepts studied in the lecture.
Elements of Physics II (Cr.3)
50:750:132:Sec.J1:80849 ATG 222
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Gurfinkiel
Email: gurfinkiel@camden.rutgers.edu
Pre/Corequisites: 50:640:122, 50:750:134. A continuation of Elements of Physics I.
Elements of Physics Lab II (Cr.1)
50:750:134:Sec.J2:80850 BSB 420
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Gurfinkiel
Email: gurfinkiel@camden.rutgers.edu
Corequisite: 50:750:132. Lab fee: $25. The laboratory illustrates phenomena and concepts studied in the lecture.
General Physics I (Cr.3)
50:750:203:Sec.D2:80418 ATG 123
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Nordberg
Email: mnordber@camden.rutgers.edu
Corequisite: 50:750:205. For biology, chemistry, premedicine, predentistry, and preveterinary medicine students, but may be taken by others. An introduction to mechanics, heat, wave motion, sound, light, electricity and magnetism, and selected topics from modern physics.
General Physics Lab I (Cr.1)
50:750:205:Sec.D1:80420 BSB 420
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Nordberg
Email: mnordber@camden.rutgers.edu
Corequisite: 50:750:203. Lab fee: $25. Illustrates phenomena and concepts studied in the lecture.
General Physics Lab I (Cr.1)
50:750:205:Sec.D3:80485 BSB 420
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Nordberg
Email: mnordber@camden.rutgers.edu
Corequisite: 50:750:203. Lab fee: $25. Illustrates phenomena and concepts studied in the lecture.
General Physics II (Cr.3)
50:750:204:Sec.J2:80419 ATG 123
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Nordberg
Email: mnordber@camden.rutgers.edu
Corequisite: 50:750:206. For biology, chemistry, premedicine, predentistry, and preventerinary medicine students, but may be taken by others. A continuation of General Physics I.
General Physics Lab II (Cr.1)
50:750:206:Sec.J1:80421 BSB 420
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 8:00am-10:40am
Nordberg
Email: mnordber@camden.rutgers.edu
Corequisite: 50:750:204. Lab fee: $25. Illustrates phenomena and concepts studied in the lecture.
General Physics Lab II (Cr.1)
50:750:206:Sec.J3:80522 BSB 420
7/21-8/13 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Nordberg
Email: mnordber@camden.rutgers.edu
Corequisite: 50:750:204. Lab fee: $25. Illustrates phenomena and concepts studied in the lecture.
Energy and the Environment (G)(Cr.3)
50:750:374:Sec.D6:84047 FA 110
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Gambs
Email: Jgambs@pit.edu
COURSE CANCELLED 6/09/08.
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POLITICAL SCIENCE
Introduction to International Politics (Cr.3)
50:790:211:Sec.A6:84049 ATG 105
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Ayubi
Email: sayubi@camden.rutgers.edu
Basic concepts underlying theories of international relations (such as national power, balance of power, deterrence, war and peace); forces shaping international relations (such as nationalism and ideology, including democratic and communist); national as well as international instruments or institutions through which international relations are conducted (such as foreign policy, international law, and international organization).
Introduction to American Politics (Cr.3)
50:790:215:Sec.A2:84048 ATG 201
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Brenner
Email: ctbrenn@camden.rutgers.edu
COURSE CANCELLED 5/19/08.
Geography and the World (Cr.3)
50:790:284:Sec.A6:81659 ATG 223
5/27-6/19 M,Tu,W,Th 6:00pm-9:40pm
Ojea
Email: patriciaojea@aol.com
50:790:284:Sec.D3:81876 ATG 207
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 1:40pm-4:20pm
Ojea
Email: patriciaojea@aol.com
Examines how political and social developments have transformed natural environments and how natural environments influence political and social phenomena.
Politics and Culture (D) (Cr.3)
50:790:304:Sec.D2:81438 ATG 124
6/23-7/17 M,Tu,W,Th 10:50am-1:30pm
Shienbaum
Email: shienbau@camden.rutgers.edu
Note: Web-enhanced course with limited in-class sessions. As America makes the transition to a nation with no single ethnic group in a majority, Americans, like citizens of many other nations, are locked in a debate about what it means to be an "American". This course begins by examining the differences and similarities between American political culture and the political cultures of other nations. Is American political culture unique? Can we identify a traditional set of common political values and attitudes that have bound our nation together to create /E Pluribus Unum/? Should these values, which underlie our political culture, change as our population becomes more diverse? Will our commitment to diversity undermine, or enhance, our cohesion as one nation? The course will also analyze and examine how America changed, why America changed , identify the forces changing America and assess the various conceptions of the America of Tomorrow. Note: once the class begins (but only once it has begun), please use the email contact